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Fujitsu LifeBook T1010

By Alex Kidman, CNET.com.au on 14 October 2008 04:26 PM

Tags: fujitsu, lifebook, t1010, tablet, centrino 2, touch screen

The Fujitsu T1010 has tablet features and a somewhat striking price point, but the rest of the package feels a bit lifeless.

Design
The LifeBook T1010 is a curious creature from a design perspective. Open it up in traditional notebook style, and it looks rather like the current Macbook — all white plastic and not much in the way of an adorned logo. At the same time, the black highlights give it the curious look of 1970's technology &mash; this is a system you can't mistake as being made from anything but plastic. Close the lid, and you're struck by the white striped pattern that adorns the back of the T1010. It's one of those design features that you'll either love or hate &mash; one passer-by commented that it looked rather like a boiled sweet, an image we've been unable to shed.

Features
But is this a boiled sweet that you should suck upon, or spit out? From a features perspective, the T1010 doesn't offer a great deal to get too excited about. It runs on Windows Vista Business (with an XP Tablet Edition Downgrade disc in the box), features an Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 2.26GHz processor, 2GB of memory, a 250GB SATA hard drive, multi-format DVD writer and integrated Intel GM45 graphics. The display is a 13-inch panel with a top resolution of 1,280x800, and as a tablet, it'll flip and twist down into a slate configuration.

On the networking front, the T1010 carries a Centrino 2 badge, so it utilises Intel's own home-grown WiFi Link 5300 chipset for 802.11b/g/n compatibility, along with Bluetooth and gigabit Ethernet. Three USB ports, one VGA port, standard microphone/headset inputs and a modem port finish out the T1010's connectivity options.

Performance
The T1010 offers an interesting mix of components, and so we weren't that shocked by its test results. Its score of 4,766 PC Marks in PCMark places it quite well amongst its tablet brethren, and points to a decent productivity machine. Put it up against standard notebooks and bear in mind the asking price and it's less interesting, however. The T1010's 3DMark 06 score of 907 PC Marks is what we'd expect out of its integrated graphics chip, but a clear sign that this isn't a multimedia powerhouse.

One area where the T1010 did manage a good showing was in our battery life test, where it managed a very solid two-and-a-half hours of DVD playback. That should be enough to get you through most movies, but critically, it also points to enough power to keep working for a solid period of time in between recharges, given that the DVD playback does test the battery in a pretty hard fashion.

Fujitsu offers a two-year nationwide pick up and return warranty, which is comparatively generous in the modern notebook marketplace, where single-year warranties (with paid extensions) are far more common.

Tablets do still command a price premium — something's got to pay for the touch panel, not to mention the modifications needed to have a screen that flips and works — but we couldn't help but come away from the T1010 feeling ultimately unimpressed. For the asking price of the T1010 you could clearly have a more functional system if you could forego its tablet capability. Even within the tablet family there are systems that pack in more punch than this, so if you're interested in a tablet system we'd certainly suggest shopping around.

Talkback 2 comments

    Loving my new Fujitsu Lifebook ...Brian Wright -- 24/10/08

    Loving my new Fujitsu Lifebook T1010 laptop/ tablet pc!

    The good: Build quality, looks, design, connection, speed, display, size, battery life, keyboard, durability, product as a whole This computer is definitely built to last, and built just right; you can feel that it is from the very first time you handle it and pick it up and hold it.

    The bad: The only con that I see is that it doesn't use or have internal WWAN connection; but that isn't really a big deal, because I dont really use WWAN; but it is worth mentioning, because I would still love to have that option; I guess I just love for things to have all the bells and whistles. Other than that minor thing, this laptop is flawless, sleek and sexy looking, and built to last.

    I'm returning mine and paying ...Amanda -- 06/11/08

    I'm returning mine and paying the extra few hundred bucks for a better tablet...

    OKAY if you don't need the tablet function that much, but horrible for note taking or drawing.

    The good: Good battery; pretty/shiny; functions; not terribly slow.

    The bad: Uses a passive digitizer. Before I bought this thing, "passive digitizer" meant nothing to me, so I'll explain. [EXPLAIN] Normally a tablet pc uses a stylus which requires a battery so that the stylus can interact with the screen. That's called an "active digitizer" for better detail/functionality. A passive digitizer means that the tablet uses a glorified plastic finger for a stylus.[/EXPLAIN] Writing is laggy, not very accurate or smooth. Also, it has an issue that if you rest your hand on the screen when you write sometimes it will sometimes confuse the two signals for a jumbled stroke.

Add your opinion

Overview

» Enlarge

The good:
  • Good battery life
  • Tablet functionality
  • Optional XP downgrade
  • Two-year warranty
The bad:
  • Vista Business is a memory hog
  • Poor touchpad buttons
  • Low top resolution
The bottomline:

The Fujitsu T1010 has tablet features and a somewhat striking price point, but the rest of the package feels a bit lifeless.

Editors’ rating:

6.9/10

RRP: AU$2299.00

Related topics:

fujitsu, lifebook, T1010, tablet, centrino 2, touch screen

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