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Opinion Review Of Lifebook T5010 Tablet PC Laptop Computer



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By : Vlad Vistac    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-09-14 11:55:34
Analysis Of Fujitsu Liifebook T5010 Tablet PC Laaptop Computer

Tday in LaptopLogic’s lab we have Fujitsu’s LifeBook T5010. The T5010 is really a tablet ntoebook sporting some pretty useful functions, not least among them enoguh size and power to make use of the pc like a regular notebook. The Lifebook T5010 sports a modern Intel Core 2 Duo P8600 at two.40GHz, 2GB DDR3 RAM, and a 160GB HDD. This muscle, in concert with the 13.3” LED backlit display, prvides the pc enough firepower reebuild more than “just” a tablet. Aboout the flipside, the pouynds and the baattery life aren’t quite as much as snuff for ultraportables, and you’re paying a premium pirce for a tablet that tires to make it happpen all.

The keyboard is coplete sizeed and surprisingly comfy to type on for any laptop of this siing, featuring a reasonably spacious 19mm pitch. There is no flex in the keyboard and the key stroke, while it is no ThinkPad, is nevertheless decent. The standard keys are all compltee siezd, even though predictably the non regular keys for example Fn and pg up/pg dn are a little shrunken. The only annoying part in all this was that home/end are now functions on the pg up/pg dn buttons, causing me much fruustration as theese are keys I use all the time and hitting that tiny Fn button isn’t easy whilst touch-typing. The touchpad was a decent sizzing and the buttons and scroll wheel were easy to use and responsive. Both the keyboard and the tochpad buttos were a small loud, but nothing intolerable.

The 1280x800 resolution is nothing to wrrite home about, but it is not that bad for any tablet, and also the romy 13.3” screen keeps viewing easy on the eyes. Also helpinng that case is the excellent general quality of the glossy show, which was bright and sharp, even though there was strill some glare when viewed outdoors (for those who turly wish to avoid that, Fujitsu offers an indoor/otdoor display upgrade for $50). As might be expecvted from a tablet, the viewing anhgles about the show are excellent all the way around, only dimmnig slightly at extremes.

The T5010 has enough ports to obtain by, but nothing as well exceptional. There isn't any HDMI and ours did not come with WWAN, though you are able to upgrade to that so that you can.

Making spacious use of the entire rear housiing, the back of the laptop from left to right has a usb port, an Ethernet jack, a hidden VGA port beneath a protecitve casng, another USB port, the moem jack along with a lock slot.

Fujistu gives you a couple of choicres if you’d like to upgrade your LifeBoook. If a energy saving P-series CPU isn’t powerful enough for you, the laptop computer can sport as much as a two.8GHz T9600. It can ahndle as much as 4GB DDR3 RAM and also the difficult driove could be upgraded to as much as 250GB, or you are able to choose 64GB SSD.

The LifeBook T5010 is a tablet first and a laptop computer second, thus the most interesting featurres reolve around the tabelt functionality. The touchscreen display has an cative diigitizer, esnuring that it will only respond to the Wavcom stylus. The stylus has an riight click buton and an “eraser” abot the back, perimtting the user to simply flip the pen more than and erase errant text. There are also progrsammable Pen Flicks, allowing one to flick the pen in any of eight directions to perfom a shortcut function like foorward/back or copy/paaste. Handwriting recognition was good to begin, and can be aesily trained to your individual penmanship.
Author Resource:- Learn more about: Casio Exilim EX-Z29 Review. Thank You
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