Hi Everybody!
As a current Fujitsu S6510 I just wanted to get some thoughts from past, present and future Fujitsu owners. I've noticed the Fujitsu board doesn't get much action as the others so might as well try and spark an interesting discussion
For past and present owners: Did or do you like your Fujitsu laptop? What model was it? How much did it cost?any plans for future upgrades? How long did your laptop last? Likes and Dislikes?
For future owners: What model are you interested in?
Laptop Model: S6510
Specs: 2.2ghz Core 2 Duo, 2gb RAM, 120GB HD, Running Windows 7 Professional 64 bit
upgrades: Add 2gb of RAM, 320gb 7200rpm HD
System Status: Got some scratches on hood of laptop but its still running strong after two years
Paid: $1429
Likes/Dislikes: Well built, Beautiful screen, good battery life, decent weight. One thing I don't like about the laptop is the keyboard. Its a little too mushy for my taste. I prefer the crispness of my T61
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Just got mine right now new
T5010
P8600, 4GB RAM, 160GB HD
Hoping to upgrade the HD sometime soon. Its well built, amazing screen, very nice keyboard, a bit fisher price on the touch pad buttons but good touchpad. Good weight and should be great for college. -
Present owner here..
Model: Lifebook T5010
Specs: C2D Penryn T9400 2.53Ghz, 2GB DDR3 RAM, Montevina GM45 Chipset, 320 5400RPM SATA II HDD, Vista Business
Upgrades: None yet, currently keeping an eye to Intel new SSD.
System Status: Heat heat and heat problem. Everything else is great.
Paid: $2400
Likes/Dislikes: Well built (although not the best IMHO), No other tablet could beat its screen presently, design doesn't meet my taste.
@stringbean
7 Pro? is that RTM edition? -
Looks like both of you are tablet owners. Lemme guess requirement by engineering dept at your college?
RaZZnuts
$2400?! Looks like your in the lead for most expensive Fujitsu for now. I'm definitely curious to see what others paid.
Yeah its the final version that my school made available for download last Friday! Took like 48 min to install. Still trying to work out the whole installing drivers stuff since Fujitsu hasn't released official ones yet. -
Oh Euquility
What kind of HD you thinking of upgrading to? -
@String
Nah, I'll be starting my college about next year
Last year high-school..
Actually I'm quite sure the real price is only about $2000-ish, but you see Custom, Tax, and other blahblah charges in my country contribute the $400
Tips: Provided Vista driver still works on 7
But some utilities won't work due to your 64-bit choice.
Try this, and make sure you run the installer in Vista compability mode.
http://www.pc-ap.fujitsu.com/support/drv_lb_vista64_s6510.html
Oh and I think it's also worth to check Intel website. -
Thanks for the tip Razz...yeah I was able to run all of the 64bit drivers earlier via vista compatibility mode. Everything is running well except for the on screen display...volume works perfectly but screen brightness shows that its stuck on one bar even though the screen can be brightened or dimmed.
Enjoy ur last yr of high school! I miss those laid back days. I still have a yr left in grad school. That makes me super old! haha. What country you from? -
Maybe it's because my previous work notebook was a MacBook Pro, but I like the anonymity. It flies completely under the radar. I've had at least two coworkers see my new notebook and ask why I didn't get something like [x] with my research budget. Invariably, they suggest something that isn't half as capable as what I did get.
Paid about $1750 (w/ organizational discount) for the specs below and 3yr warranty. I added an Intel X-25M SSD.
Likes? Display offers retina-burning brightness and reasonably good contrast, Performance (PCMark Vantage > 6200!), Size/Weight, graphics performance isn't great, but it's respectable. Battery performance. Not having to use an adapter for VGA projectors. Keyboard is actually growing on me.
Dislikes? I still wish the display were matte. The keyboard was a trampoline when it arrived from the factory. I considered returning it, but it settled down - literally. I don't know what happened, but I'm not complaining. S-video out? Sure, my TV has an s-video port, but I'd prefer to have a digital out - especially since the other port is VGA.
Future? Might consider the ultra-light P series in the future, but price-performance situation would need to get better.
From the other thread: I live in the US. Fujitsu offers a 'Chrome 430 ULP' GPU in the Lifebook S. It's very basic: performs like an ATI mobility 3450 or nvidia 9300m gs. -
probably getting a Indilinix 128GB SSD once they fix their darn firmware issues
might opt for an intel instead but i only have about 2 weeks to get one -
I have a 4220 and a P1629 right now and almost forgot a P1120 too.
I do not like the build quality as compared to Panasonics which I abuse every day in the field but there is something about the Fujitsu' that I can not stay away from too?
The screen quality is nice but I don't really like the touchscreen sensitivity and that I almost need a stylus for the 1620.
I can live without the Fujitsu's but not the Toughbooks.
Ed -
I got fujitsu e8420
specs
2.26 ghz p8200
2 gig ram
100 gb 5400 rpm
15.4 in
win7 ultmate x64
upgrades
2 gig ram so now 3 gb ram
price $1500
good laptop. no issues. just need more 64 bit drivers. -
Count me in!
Laptop Model: S6410
Specs: Vista Business 32-bit, Core 2 Duo T7500 2.2GHz, 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD, Fingerprint Sensor, 1.3MPix Webcam, Intel WiFi Link 4965AGN, Internal Sierra Wireless 3.5G Module, and Port Replicator
Upgrades: Added 2GB of RAM, bought the secondary Bay Battery for longer computing time w/o bringing the power brick and Weight Saver for traveling light, upgraded Sierra Wireless MC8780 internal 3.5G module firmware from 3.6Mbps to 7.2Mbps with GPS capability
System Status: Has become stay at home laptop connected to Dell S2409W 24" LCD monitor, Microsoft Entertainment Desktop 8000 (Bluetooth keyboard and mouse), and USB Digital TV tuner; cooled by CoolerMaster NotePal Infinite and backed up by WD My Book Studio Edition 1TB
Paid: ± $2,000 (November 2007)
Likes: Light (one of the lightest 13.3" laptops which came out in 2007), good battery life, full with features which are often used (a lot of USB ports especially with the bundled Port Replicator, Bluetooth, PC Card/PCMCIA slot, memory cards slot, FireWire port, WiFi 802.11n, Gigabit, and 3.5G module) and not so used (dial-up modem, infra-red)
Dislikes: Touch pad area is hot (although rarely used lately since paired with MS Entertainment Desktop 8000), standard HDD is slow, LCD cover/hood easily scratched, and on-board Intel X3100 Graphics is not powerful enough even for watching movies especially H.264 encoded HD720 and HD1080 since used with 1920x1080 Dell S2409W LCD monitor
Future Upgrades: Intel WiFi Link 5300, Faster and bigger HDD (most likely be 7200RPM one but might be SSD if there's sudden price drop), Penryn Core 2 Duo T9500 2.6GHz Processor and Win 7 64-bit OS (maybe) -
When I first started coming to this board the Fujitsu board on this forum was much more lively. The ThinkPad T4x and the Fujitsu S6xx0 were pretty much neck and neck in popularity on this board. It was just a matter of whether you wanted a matte or a glossy screen.
Fujitsu has it seems to me and I haven't followed too closely, to have missed the fact that most manufacturers have cut their prices in half, which is why their brand doesn't seem to be doing as well, at least here in the US. I think they're more popular in Europe and Japan where notebook prices are higher. It's also why the Fujitsu board here has become less active.
I used to have a Fujitsu A series notebook with a Turion x2. It had the 450 nit glossy LCD, which was gorgeous and by far its best feature. The build quality was decent, but the keyboard was terrible, the fan pretty run all the time and battery life was like an hour. I ended up selling it. -
I think the reason why other laptop prices have been cut is because fujitsu keeps theirs made in japan while others are made in china.
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I wonder how much of Fujitsu's computer business comes from 'regular' notebooks and how much comes from tablets. The notebooks are definitely pricey compared to their competitors. The tablets look like they're a bit more competitive on price. It's not like X200ts are cheap, either.
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Heh, the T5010 in my sig was purchased on pre-order and was delivered in the first week of August when the T5010s just shipped. $2600 or so. The RAM upgrade killed the price significantly as SODIMM DDR3 prices didn't drop till late-August or so. Lame though that my CC didn't cover electronics/computers in their price protection policy. But all in all, it's still cheaper than a similarly configured T5010 in Canada after taxes.
To date, I've purchased quite only extra accessories for it. Another main lithium battery, 2 extra Fujitsu stock pens, 2 extra Motion Computing pens, and some other tid bits.
I like Fujitsu due to the fact that they're MIJ and they have higher quality standards than the typical company. I stay in touch with a distributor and he rolled out ~400 Fujitsu tablets to a firm. Not a single one were DOA or had any issues upon deployment. Disappointing that Lenovo is made in China and you can tell especially when going from a X41t->X60T/X61T/X200T. The X41t was definitely better in terms of build quality.
I do dislike the fact that Fujitsu steers only in the business direction. They need to implement the following imo:
-Standard HDMI ports
-A revamp of the warranty system (too pricey compared to Dell/HP considering the screen warranty, on-site warranty, standard warranty). Just implement it like Lenovo does
-Better quality speakers...honestly, mine sounds like they're $2.
-Offer more laptops with better graphics solutions. Hell, even one would be fine.
-Decrease the thickness of the laptops, especially the tablets. The screen is understandable but the base of the laptop? Can Fujitsu not get a slimmer DVD drive burner? -
I like Fujitsu, always have. I like Toshiba's with Fujitsu Hard Drives, (boy, am I biased or what?!)...
In fact I was going to purchase a lifebook A11130 for my last two semesters of school, but Fujitsu treats the 5% student discount as a promotion and not an add on promotion. You can use only one promo at a time, the student discount doesnt come off of as a second promo, you just have to choose what you like better. The $50 coupon everyone gets for registering, the promo at the time or your student discount. They are the only manufacturer that treats their student discount this way....
I may ask for a supervisor and just ask for the current promo and the student disc on top of it....got nothing to lose. -
Laptop Model: Lifebook C2220
Specs: 2.4ghz Pentium 4m, 512MB RAM, 30GB HDD, ATI Radeon IGP 340m, Windows XP Pro.
Paid: Est. $1500 (6 years ago).
Likes: SXGA+ LCD, Magnesium chassis & lid, well built & rugged, Optical audio output, 4 USB 2.0 ports, super blue LCD status display and Made in Japan.
Dislikes: It's heavy (close to 8 lbs.) and its a bit big. Speakers location ( they get covered by my wrists when I type). 768 MB RAM limit (we will see).
Upgrades: More RAM i hope. -
Laptop Model: S6240
Specs: Pentium M, 2GB RAM, 80GB HD, WinXP Home
Upgrades: Changed RAM from 500MB to 2GB
System Status: Few scratches on the body. I use it at home or at coffee shops almost daily for browsing, movies, music, office apps, photoshop, games, etc., no cooling pad, no a/c in my dusty room, sometimes I leave it on overnight for downloading. I’m a former smoker, so I sort of expect some cigarette dust under its’ hood. I’m impressed with the abuse it has taken and it’s still still chugging along and it still looks pretty.
Paid: US$1,000 (November 2006) -- it was on sale, 3 years warranty, 1 year international warranty
Likes: Light, Durable (it's almost 3 years old), Looks attractive (even with age), Crisp screen, Fingerprint scanner, Service center has no line (it took 5 minutes to remove a bug under a key), Perfect size, Support answers me within a day or two for email queries
Dislikes: service & parts out of warranty are expensive and no stock parts, not enough USB’s, fingerprint magnet.
The only problem I encountered within 2-1/2 years was that the laptop didn’t go on standby when I closed the lid, but it was fixed after updating.
All-in-all, this is pretty good for my 1st laptop. US$ 1,000, no major problems & no headaches for 2-1/2 years. Now, I’m thinking about replacing it with whatever S-series Lifebook is on sale for US$1,000 by November/December. Nothing’s wrong with it, but it’s starting to feel a bit slow and battery life is starting to show its age. -
I've owned two in the past 2 years, one Celsius H250 and one H270. This is the result:
http://gunadeluxo.blogspot.com/2009/01/fujitsu-siemens-celsius-h250-and-h270.html
And I've actually owned, for a short while, a Stylistic ST5112. I've ordered it according to my specs directly to Fujitsu and I got something else. Besides, it was a refurbished laptop which they sold me as new, not a new one. It was already scratched and had bread crumbles. Most probably a machine that someone returned and that they wanted to get rid of. -
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Especially regarding the speaker -
Seconded (thirded, I guess). My notebook's speakers are wretched. I'm debating whether to pick up something lightweight and portable to throw in the bag.
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My 1st was Amilo Pa 1510 with AMD Turion TL-50 x2, ATI Xpress 1100 with 256 share memory, 100GB HDD(upgraded to 200 7200RPM) with 1GB or Ram (upgraded to 2GB) WinXP Home Edition (upgraded to WinXP 64bit). I bought it 3 years ago when they just came out, for 950 Euro(in Greece). I gave it to my border to by a new one, witch i was waiting about 3 months, and is my new one Amilo Sa 3650+GB
I love it
Only think to upgrade is HDD to SSD in a future. And the OS will be of cores Slackware (linux system) with Windows 7 x64 for gaming.
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I have a Fujitsu A6020 Lifebook. When my mother first purchased for me about 2 years ago it was about $800, dual 1.86/1.87 gigahertz processors, a DVD/CD RW drive, and 120 gb HD. It's 15.4" screen and other features are designed to last for a long time. I use my laptop for everything. I do not play games or use graphics intensive applications so I do not know how that part is. However, for movie displays, it is fine! Since I am into watching movies, I have had to add an external sound card and earbuds to enhance the sounds. The battery seems to have weakened quite a bit since first use, and I just plug it in all the time anyways. If I didn't love God, Jesus Christ, with all my heart, I would say that I love my laptop. I had always thought SONY was the top of the line for everything, but I have either grown used to or biased to my computer. I do have an old SONY and tested an almost identical featured model SONY to that of my current Fujitsu A6020 laptop. Seeing that the SONY is about 2.5 times the cost of FUJITSU, there must be something that sets the price up so high. Maybe it is just the paying for the brand name. Maybe the engineering is longer lasting and the battery won't run out as quickly. Maybe it looks better. No matter what it is, I love my Fujitsu A6020 Lifebook! Now, if I had a SONY laptop instead of a Fujitsu, I might feel the opposite. Well, I don't know what else to call my feeling for my Lifebook except love. It could also be strong liking, but that would seem to be less than the word that I am looking for! I guess all the good that was built into the laptop has finally reached its customer, me! I am satisfied needless to say. I am a happy owner. I might not be proud as if I had a SONY, but I am humble and happy. I hope if you are not happy with your Fujitsu that you find a model that makes you as happy as I am. Thank you for your time. I am a nobody expressing my gratitude for this great computer which has served me well even in the present.
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I have purchased a custom built E8210 for about 2K over 3 years ago or so from Fujitsu. The laptop is great. Very durable, looks like new still. I take very good care of it
Issues:
1) After bios update (I suspect at least) the Bluetooth module went missing. Settings for it have disappeared from Bios>>advanced>>internal devices configuration.
2) Have two batteries: High Capacity Main battery and Modular battery (inserts into dvd-drive slot)
With both batteries in, fully charged, initially I had 5.5-6 hours of working time.
Now it only lasts about an hour or so.
3) The screen gets lit up not uniformly. There are slightly darker areas and slightly lighter ones around the corners.
4) ATI drivers for mobility radeon x1400 are very old, and because ATI has agreement with OEM's including fujitsu, catalyst drivers form ati site do not work. Using mobility modder I was able to install up to v9.5 Catalyst. However several games work only with v9.3... -
I would suggest that you keep you computer and get accustomed to it. Some of the components may not work and needs a fresh restore. So keep everything especially the restore discs. The BIOS seems to be very delicate so be careful. Programming the BIOS can take a long time so keep the computer plugged in while doing so. The best thing seems to not upgrade or downgrade and keep whatever has been preinstalled on your system. As an example, when I have had downgraded to XP from Vista, it has no driver for certain hardware for that operating system. When I upgraded to Windows 7, my current driver for a webcam did not work. So the adage of too much and too little applies everywhere!
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Fujitsu S2110
Its got an older AMD processor and a 13.3in screen. Pretty light but the bottom gets hot despite the felt bottom. Screen quality is A+. Perfect viewing angles, bright, with excellent color reproduction. Still fairly fast for things like web browsing.
Held up pretty well but the power adapter plug in the laptop broke off. Partly due to me tripping over the adapter cord a couple of times and partly due to a bad design.
Some of the keyboard appliques wore off after several years of use. Other than that its been rock solid *knock on wood*.
Also I like the fact that there are exposed screws you can use to tighten the resistance of the LCD screen. Some laptops are a pain to tighten up.
I like Fujitsu laptops but its getting harder to justify the extra cost of them even though they have better screens than the competition. -
My Fujitsu A6020 battery is wearing out after about 3 years of constant plugged-in use! It doesn't hold a charge anymore [actually, I am lucky if I get 10 minutes]. The good thing is that batteries can be replaced. The bad thing is that you have to shell out the cost. I guess I really don't need it anyways. I will just have to keep it plugged in forever. haha I really have no complaints with my laptop. It does what it is supposed to. I just recently installed Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition and found it was missing too many of the drivers that I could end up using. It was a pain to install the drivers piece by piece!! So, make sure you keep your restore disc which usually has the drivers preloaded for you. Now, I am back to what originally came with my system... Windows Vista Home Premium. Ahh... it feels good to have full use of all my devices again. I felt crippled with the missing drivers in XP! It is a good thing that many brands seem to be compatible with one another. Like my Apple iPod Classic can connect with my Fujitsu to update songs, movies, etcetera. My CREATIVE SOUND BLASTER sound card is connected to my Lifebook as well. So is an HP printer, scanner, copier machine!!! As long as it all works, it is fine. Otherwise, I would have pride. Since, I have so many different brands, there is no pride in having one brand over another. I am happy to have it work.
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I'll scare all of you I purchased a Lifebook 530T in feb 1996 it was my first laptop that I bought myself paid $1490. in 99 I gave it to my mom and dad for thier snowbird travels in western US. In late 2006 I got it back when my dad died.
The darn thing still works to this day P133, 80mg ram(fujitsu said max 40 but if you found the right 64meg chip it would work.), 6.4 gig HD, 2x cd-rom,
11.3" tft display, battery still holds about a 45min. charge (was only about 1.30 when new).
Christmas 2008 bought my son an N6460 for $760. NEW after 200 rebate still running great. -
A current Fujitsu Lifebook user, bought mine in 2008
Price: HKD $8480 (~USD$1,091.55, Originally priced at ~$16000, 50% off due to student price)
Model: A6210
CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 2.26 GHz
RAM: 4 GB DDR3 (Comes with 2 GB)
GPU: ATI Radeon HD 3470
OS: Windows 7 Ultimate (Original: Windows Vista Home Basic)
What I enjoy being a Fujitsu user is the superior repair service (When compared to other brands, in Hong Kong anyway) and the good phone support system.
Future: Not buying another one.
I've bought my laptop 2 times to the repair in the short 2 years of operation. Comparing with my friends HP (All Pavillions and bought it around the same time as I did), their machine never broke, and theirs were way cheaper.
Another problem is the price. Fujisu machines are luxury goods, as my friends would put it: "A Rip-off", the system is way under powered for it's price (even at that time). Next time, I maybe better off getting a Lenovo Thinkpad (3 Years on-site service for ~$5000) or a HP Probook (Light and cheap). -
Past and present owner.
Past system: (it was a long time ago, so I'll try to remember)
Fujitsu Lifebook C-Series
P3 1.1GHz
15" matte lcd screen @ 1024x768
40GB HDD
CD burner, Floppy disc drive (yup, it was that long ago)
Paid around $3000 CDN when I bought it. Used it heavily for 4 years and loved it the entire time. My brother used it for another 2 years after I was done with it.
Current system can be seen in my sig. Got it on sale @ Costco last month, so it cost me $1225 CDN including shipping to my door, and Costco extended the warranty to 2 years. I like everything about it so far. -
Hi,
Laptop Model: q2010 executive
Specs: 1.2ghz Core solo ULV, 1gb RAM, 64Gb Photofast ssd, Running gentoo with 2.6.32 kernel
upgrades: replaced the original 60GB 4200rpm hdd by the ssd.
System Status: Bought used with some scratched on the top, plan to clean it but i prepare it carefully
Paid: $870
Likes/Dislikes: Saw it first time in news announcement, so slim, clean in design, no noise, nearly most well tech when he come out. Just a bit warn in usage and cpu voltage a bit high (even with undervolt). But still one of the most beautiful, work like a charm. -
Hi All,
I'm a future (soon to be) Fujitsu laptop owner.
I'm going for the following.
Laptop Model: NH570(FPCR61311) LifeBook
Specs:
Operating System Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
CPU Type Intel Core i5-430M 2.26GHz
Screen 18.4"
Memory Size 4GB DDR3
Hard Disk 500GB
Optical Drive DVD Super Multi
Graphics Card NVidia GeForce GT 330M
Video Memory 1GB
Card slot 1 x Express Card
Battery Life up to 3.5 hours
Dimensions 17.2" x 11.3" x 1.2" - 1.8"
Weight 7.9 lbs.
Other Features Embedded dust filter allows periodic cleaning to keep dust and lint from blocking the vents, prolonging the operational life
CPU Type Intel Core i5
CPU Speed 430M(2.26GHz)
CPU FSB 1066MHz
CPU Support 3 MB L3 cache
Turbo Boost Technology up to 2.53 GHz
Screen Size 18.4"
Resolution 1680 x 945
LCD Features Crystal View technology
Operating System Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
GPU/VPU NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M
Video Memory Dedicated 1GB
HDD 500GB
HDD RPM 5400rpm
HDD Interface SATA
Memory 4GB
Memory Speed DDR3 1066
Memory Spec 2GB x 2
Memory Type 204-Pin DDR3 SO-DIMM
Memory Slot (Total) 2
Memory Slot (Available) 0
Optical Drive Type DVD Super Multi
Optical Drive Interface Integrated
LAN 10/100/1000Mbps
WLAN Atheros XSPAN 802.11BGN wireless
Card Slot 1 x Express Card
USB 4
Video Port 1 x VGA
HDMI 1
Other port 1 x eSATA
Audio Ports Yes
Audio Built-in digital microphone
Speaker Internal Speakers
Touchpad Yes
Keyboard Standard spill resistant keyboard with separate 10-key keypad
Card Reader Memory Stick/SD Card slot
Webcam 1.3 Megapixel
Battery Lithium ion (8-cell, 14.4V, 5200 mAh)
Battery Life up to 3.5 hours (We shall see)
Dimensions 17.2" x 11.3" x 1.2" - 1.8"
Weight 7.9 lbs. (Yup, it's heavy)
Warranty Parts/ Labor 1 year limited (Wish it were longer)
Upgrades:
Memory Crucial 8GB (2 x 4GB) 204-Pin DDR3 SO-DIMM DDR3 1066 ($pendy but hopefully worth it)
OS Windows 7 Professional upgrade w/ XP Mode Download
Alt. OS Linux Mint Isadora (As soon as the final release comes out)
System Status: n/a
Cost: $1080
Likes/ Dislikes: I'm not a gamer but want a dedicated graphic card for CAD and movies, I tend to multi-task a lot so the processor should handle that well. I currently own a Sony VAIO VGN-fs920 which is still fine but a bit behind the curve in terms of memory and hardware so this should be a nice upgrade (I should think so going from 2GB to 8GB Ram, Onboard Intel to Nvidia card and from a 15.5" screen to an 18.4" screen). I'm hoping the Fujitsu is a little sturdier build than the Sony. The Fujitsu will be heavy but I use it mainly at home. Wanted a combination work/ fun computer so I hope I made a good choice. I'll keep you posted on how I like it. -
I have a stock Fujitsu Lifebook T4310 Tablet PC with a combination of Active Digitizer for pen input and multi-touch capacitive screen (like the iPad.) It has factory specs and I love it. I paid $1150 + Tax and it's my best purchase so far.
The T4310 is a PC that tries to be several. things at once, and manages to do it succesfuly with no major glitches. The only possible complain I have about my Lifebook is that the startup sound of Win 7 stutters when starting up, but it doesn't affect sound performance thereafter. I also have gone to my local electronics store to check out their display model and the sound does the exact same thing during start up, so I would venture a guess most other T4310s work the same way so I'm not worried.
I take my PC wherever I go. Chances are if you meet me, my tablet will be in its case behind me hanging form my shoulder ^^u
Pros: Excellent hybrid Laptop/Tablet. Descent for drawing with Photoshop and Manga Studio Pro with Pen input. The multi-touch screen is awesome. It works just like the iPhone and iPad when zooming in and out on webpages. The Japanese got it right with this thing. I have no complains, it is a sturdy fellow. I don't know about the T5010, but the speakers in my T4310 work like a charm. The sound quality is amazingly crisp considering they are 3/4" by 3/4"
Con: Display angles not as good as T5010. It doesn't bother me most of the time as I can just switch the view but it is noticeable sometimes when I get in the wrong angle. Finish is too glossy, juts like an iPhone or iPad, so it's fingerprint galore if you know what I mean. They provide you with a micro fiber cloth to wipe it clean, for the same reason I suppose. It looks pretty amazing, all shiny and new when it's clean otherwise. I also didn't like the fact that it won't do my laundry but then again no laptop out there today can do that yet, so I will forgive it this time, don't do it again, T4310. There's a good lad.Last edited by a moderator: May 8, 2015 -
I just received a donation of a 13" MacBook Pro from my uncle, Dr. Thomas Vu (located in San Antonio). Although it is newer, I like it as much as the Fujitsu A6020 LifeBook. I am not picky.................... I am disabled and am lucky that people are so generous! Please visit my uncle if you need something. He is Catholic and a very good person.
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Past owner of Amilo M of Fujitsu and as my signature says - never ever again!
Very cheap quality and materials!!! And I look after my laptops like after a baby!
Paid 1100 euros at the time, but the quality turned out to be worse than ACER!
This brand is out of question for me! As I said - Acer is pretty much the same, but still better and cheaper. I would avoid both though! -
T2010, u7500, 4gb ram
CPU is a little slow (1ghz), but everything else is really nice
unlikely to get another fujitsu though, macbook pro and thinkpad will likely be my next setup -
video clarity is very nice compred with othermodels.
O.S.:Win-7 -
I am owner of a ``dead´´ T3010D
intel pentium M 1,4 Ghz
1 GB RAM 333Mhz
intel graphics
8 GB HDD
WACOM touchscreen
WXP 32-BIT
It died last year because the chipset according HDD control always crashes and the HHD locks up/ hangs. -
Current owner of T2020.
IPS screen is excellent which was the main reason I chose this tablet over the Lenovo tablets which are a bit too dim and grainy for me. It's been excellent for taking notes although the laptop definitely lacked the processing punch for me to use it as a main laptop.
Would I buy another Fujitsu again? Perhaps. Their prices tend to be on the expensive side and although build quality was decent, I think they could have done better for how much they charge. Driver support is kinda crummy as well. -
Through JESUS CHRIST I come to THE LORD GOD to ask that I write you what you need to know. Amen+!!
So, here goes: I am supersticious!! I have placed and written onto the laptop that I have all sorts of prayers and it seems that I am rewarded with a machine that is able to work with Skype even though it is over 4 to 5 years old!! I can hear people on Skype as if they were in the same room when there is no one in my apartment!!hehe I hope I continue to have cool stuff like this for the rest of forever forward!!hehe
All the things that I do not deserve goes to someone else who could use them!! -
Well, it is THE HOLY SABBATH day or complete rest. Remember to obey all the laws all the time [forever forward]!! In any case, I hope this Fujitsu A6020 LifeBook last me anyways since it may be the ONLY laptop I have left. I am on disability income and it barely covers my living expenses. Anyways, I just got a virus so make sure you keep and make a backup of your recovery disc(s). I would have 2 to 3 of them laying around just in case. Well, Fujitsu A6020 LifeBook is the laptop that has been given me so I better take perfect care of it. Thank THE LORD GOD JESUS CHRIST that it is still working.
Fujitsu laptop owners: Past, Present, and Future
Discussion in 'Fujitsu' started by stringbeans85, Aug 18, 2009.