Panasonic Adds Ultra-Mobile PC to Toughbook Series
Panasonic’s latest PC offering is small abundant to cradle in one hand, yet strong sufficient to handle the rough and tumble of extreme environments.
Japan’s Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., whose Toughbook series of rugged laptops is used by U.S. police, military and utility workers, on Wednesday unveiled a compact, “ultra-mobile” version that is practically as easy to handle as a PDA but with all the features of a standard PC.
And like other Toughbook models, it’s made to survive.
The CF-U1 mini-tablet emerged unscathed after demonstrators Wednesday dropped the device 120 centimeters (3.9 feet) face down, thereupon dunked it in four quarts of water.
Its batteries last 10 hours, in part considering it runs on Intel’s new, low-power Atom microprocessor. It measures 184 mm (7.2 inches) wide, 151 mm (5.9 inches) tall and 57 mm (2.2 inches) deep.
Shigeo Okuda, general manager of Matsushita’s marketing group, said the CF-U1 broadens the reach of rugged laptops, which have been too
The tablet features a 5.6-inch touch-screen display, a thumb-operated keyboard, Bluetooth and wireless Web. With a handstrap in the back, the CF-U1 is held like a flat camcorder.
“This will be used in different ways than the Toughbook now,” Okuda said. “This is a completely new category of rugged PCs.”
Through its Panasonic type, Matsushita holds a leading 61-percent share of the rugged-PC market worldwide, according to the company. It sold 574,000 units in 2007, and hopes the CF-U1 will extend its dominance.
The company will launch overseas sales of the 2.3-pound device in August, and start sales in Japan in October for an unspecified price. It aims to sell 90,000 CF-U1 units overseas and 10,000 units in Japan in a year.
Matsushita’s strategy in the competitive PC market has been to focus exclusively on business- and field-use…
Original post by Top Tech News
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