Editor's Rating:
The Good: Nice Screen, huge hard drive capacity
The Bad: Hefty, short battery life
The Bottom Line: Hey, it's a desktop replacement! Who cares about weight and battery life?
There's a breed of company that makes notebook computers but typically doesn't compete in the personal computer arena. Its agenda is wooing the consumer away from traditional desktops. These guys are starting to get the job done.
The products are called "desktop replacements." For a notebook computer, they're pretty big, but they still take up less space than traditional desktops because they can be folded up and put away. What's more, they're far more portable than desktops—though not nearly as portable as your typical "thin and light" notebook (see BusinessWeek.com, 6/19/06, "Desktop Replacements—in Hefty Size").
The good news is that these larger notebooks are beginning to pack some of the high-end entertainment features you'd expect from a midrange desktop system, making them suitable for demanding applications like gaming and simple video editing. I've spent the last few days with a high-end notebook offering from Fujitsu, a Japanese outfit that generally doesn't play in the traditional desktop PC market, but has a healthy business selling notebooks. Fujitsu's main market is businesses, but it has a small retail presence as well.
The notebook is the 17-in. LifeBook N6410, and I like it. It comes equipped with some powerful internal components, an impressive display, a good-sized keyboard, and many other features that make it a worthy contender in an increasingly crowded market. It also merits inclusion in our series of reviews of high-end laptops (see BusinessWeek.com, 6/19/06, "Sony's Pretty, Pricey Picture").
First, it's big and heavy, weighing in at 10 lbs. At that heft, you can lug it from one room to another, but you'll hate schlepping it through the airport as carry-on cargo. There's a lot packed inside the machine to weigh it down. First is the 17-in. screen, which is nice and bright and shows a great amount of detail for looking at pictures or watching movies on the DVD player. The screen's resolution is 1,440 pixels wide by 900 pixels high, which is the same as machines with similar sized screens from Dell ("DELL") and Gateway ("GTW").
The machine is powered by an Intel ("INTC") Core Duo T2400 processor, which is one of those dual-core chips you may have heard about, meaning it has two central brains instead of one. At 1.83 Ghz, it's not the very fastest in the Intel stable, but it's among the speediest Intel offers for notebooks.
The screen also has a smooth sheen that gives it a more a cinematic look. This type of screen is suddenly very fashionable in notebooks, and also shows up in models from Apple ("AAPL"), Sony ("SNE"), and Toshiba ("TOSBF"), among others. (A Fujitsu rep claims his company was the first to try it.)
What sets this kind of display apart from standard LCD displays is that during manufacturing, a layer of coating that would otherwise be applied is left off, giving it the smooth texture. The effect is pleasant and well suited to gaming and watching movies. I generally like it less for more pedestrian computing tasks.
Fujitsu's LifeBook also has a lot of storage capacity: 320 gigabytes, to be exact. This requires two not-so-light 160-gig hard drives. Adding to the machine's heft is the six-cell battery. The beautiful screen drinks up a lot of power. The company says you can expect about an hour and a half. That's the amount I got, except when playing a DVD movie with the screen turned up to full brightness. Then I got a little less.