Panasonic's 20-inch 4K Toughpad tablet
Panasonic's 4K Toughpad
tablet initially debuted at CES in January, but
here at IFA in Berlin, the company is finally ready to
shed some light on availability. Speaking at a press conference focused on the
device, GM Jan Kampfer detailed the giant slate, which includes a fiberglass
housing and sports a 3,840 x 2,560 (230 ppi) power-efficient IPS display with
176-degree viewing angles. The UT-MB5 supports 10-finger touch and includes a
Bluetooth-enabled optical Anoto Live Pen with a six-hour battery life and palm
rejection. The Toughpad was designed with creative types in mind, such as
artists and architects -- though we wouldn't mind having one around as a
fantastic (albeit pricey) portable 4K movie viewer.
There will be two models:
a Standard flavor that weighs in 2.3kg and includes 4GB (expandable to 8GB) of
RAM and a 128GB SSD, and a 2.7kg Performance model with 8GB RAM (expandable to
16GB) and a 256GB SSD. The company is targeting design pros with that latter
version, such as those working with 3D modeling tools, while the lower-powered
spec would be a better fit for healthcare users, retail or sales professionals.
Panasonic aimed for workstation performance here, so both devices include Intel
Core i5 processors and run on Windows 8.1. There are three USB 3.0 ports, HDMI
out, an SD card slot and an optional desktop cradle and mounting point adapter.
They're also quite durable, and are reinforced to survive 76 cm (2.5 ft) drops.
The Standard model will ship in November, while the Performance slate is
expected in early 2014.
Microsoft is reporting that the device
will ship in the US and Europe beginning this Saturday, September 7th, but
Panasonic executives at the IFA event are confirming a November timeframe. The
Toughpad on stage is being described as a "prototype," further
reinforcing that the slate is not ready to ship.
Panasonic reps
quoted pricing for the standard version at €4,508 (about $6,000), with the
Performance version MSRP to be announced. The optional pen will retail for €280
(about $370).
via Engadget
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