MWC: Panasonic unearths Toughpad tablet with phone functions

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Panasonic's Toughpad tablet was revealed at MWC 2014 Source: IDG

24 February 2014

Panasonic has unveiled a 5″  industry-oriented tablet with phone functions that can take a beating or a dunking in water.

Aimed at users such as construction workers and delivery staff, the tablet is the latest in Panasonic’s Toughpad lineup.

It looks as sturdy as a brick and weighs about 430 grams. Aside from the 5-inch shatterproof touch screen, the ruggedised casing houses a bar code scanner and an 8MP rear camera.

The FZ-E1 version runs Windows Embedded 8 Handheld on a Qualcomm 2.3GHz processor, while the FZ-X1 runs Android 4.2.2 on a Qualcomm 1.7GHz processor.

They are the first tablets to have 3G and LTE in the Toughpad lineup, which includes seven additional tablets with screens ranging from 7″ to 20″. The latest Toughpads can also be described as ‘phablets,’ a recent category of tablets that have smartphone features.

The 5″  Toughpads will first go on sale in Japan for about ¥130,000 (€924), Panasonic said. The FZ-E1 will launch in June, and the FZ-X1 will launch in August.

The company also plans to launch it overseas, but it has not decided on a timeline yet.

“We believe there will be a growing market for a small-sized tablet that has phone functions,” said Yasuharu Enda, a spokesman for Panasonic System Networks, which developed the latest Toughpad. “That would replace having to handle a large tablet and a phone separately.”

Panasonic emphasized that the Toughpad can be set up to suit user needs.

“We decided to use Windows Embedded 8 Handheld instead of Windows Phone 8 because it offers more customizability,” Masaki Mutou, general manager at Panasonic System Networks’ Terminal Systems Business Unit, told a press conference in Tokyo.

Apart from being dustproof and waterproof, the Toughpad can withstand being dropped onto a concrete floor from a height of 3 meters and being submerged in 1.5 meters of water for 30 minutes. Its screen won’t crack even if a 400g steel ball is dropped onto it.

Its drop and shock resistance is rated to US military MIL-STD-810G standards and it can operate in a temperature range of -20 to 60 Celsius, according to Panasonic.

It also boasts a 100-decibel speaker system (about as loud as a motorcycle engine), 14-hour battery and the ability to swap batteries while the device stays on for a few minutes. Other features include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC (near field communication), USB 2.0, Micro USB and microSD.

After posting losses at its mobile phone business, Panasonic withdrew from making smartphones for consumers last autumn. It has since focused on feature phones such as clamshell devices, which still command a following in Japan.

IDG News Service

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