Panasonic's Toughbook line has long been hyped as a sleek and sophisticated alternative laptop for the accident-prone. But durability (which meets the MIL-STD 810F drop test spec) comes at a price: Toughbooks are neither powerful (1.2GHz Core Solo processor and 512MB of RAM), nor cheap. You can now add looks to the list of drawbacks: Some may find the design – distinguished by a tumor-like bulge on the back of the LCD – to be quirkily cute. Frankly it's one of the ugliest laptops I've ever seen. Extreme battery life (4 hours, 49 minutes) and integrated cellular wireless give the CF-W5 a few small plusses, but most buyers should balk.
Review: Panasonic CF-W5 Toughbook
Panasonic’s Toughbook line has long been hyped as a sleek and sophisticated alternative laptop for the accident-prone. But durability (which meets the MIL-STD 810F drop test spec) comes at a price: Toughbooks are neither powerful (1.2GHz Core Solo processor and 512MB of RAM), nor cheap. You can now add looks to the list of drawbacks: […]
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WIRED
Responsive, Verizon-powered wireless access. Exceptional battery life is near the best in its weight class.
TIRED
Despite military certification, still feels flimsy; we had to bust out a screwdriver to realign a misattached panel on the laptop's underside. Underpowered, with bare-minimum specs and unacceptably low RAM. Circular touchpad is awkward, compounded by odd, tiny buttons. Average brightness display has relatively low resolution and isn't widescreen. Loud, clacking optical drive. Underpowered speaker (that's right, one speaker).
- RAM Size: 512 MB
- Clock Rate: 1.2GHz
- Hard Drive Size: 60 GB
- Screen Size: 12.1 inches
- Screen Resolution: 1024 x 768 (XGA)