Fujitsu LifeBook N6460 Laptop Features

April 23rd, 2008 | by admin |

Fujitsu LifeBook N6460 LaptopFujitsu’s new flagship desktop replacement laptop spoils graphics professionals with a stunning desktop and tons of storage. This is a great thing it has in common with his predecessor, the Book of Life N6420, but the newest N6460 is also the best unit of entertainment. The battery life is short - he ran out of juice in less than 1 hour in our recent tests - and it still leaves Bluetooth fans in the cold. But everything added, Fujitsu LifeBook N6460 is an improvement over N6420.

The N6460 is bulky, measuring 2 inches thick and weighing nearly 10 kilograms when configured with a single hard disk. However, both creative professionals and discerning home users will appreciate its rich design. The 370-nit, 17-inch screen is normal, even in base configuration $ 1499. The screen is twice as bright as screens, with bright colours and easy to see the details, making it more fun and entertainment close working more comfortable.

This machine makes no attempt to insult the intelligence to be beautiful or unnecessarily “custom” (something can be customized if it is mass produced? Perhaps this is what Apple’s deal is all about engraving). As a result, it is great, is grey, is well built, is not offensive, but even this is inspiring.

One size keyboard and separate lets you know you’re on the desktop replacement land, beyond the obvious, 17-inch screen resolution 1440 x 900 glossy that legitimately dominates the view.

Ports dot the left, right and rear, but wisely there is nothing on the front. The air vent at the rear does not mean hands will be cooked over the use of rats outside.

The LifeBook N6460 features a robust, reasonably large gray case. Its size is not surprising considering the amount of hardware within the same. About the case from the outside are a ton of hook ups for each type of device imaginable. It has five USB 2.0, IEEE 1394, a memory card reader that accepts Memory Stick, SD, XD, a PC Card slot and an Express Card slot. The N6460 also has a wire Fire port, RCA audio, composed, and S-Video out, VGA and HDMI ports, which come in handy for a variety of functions video. It is also the first lifebook to come with a disc drive Blu-ray. Blu-ray discs are capable of storing five times as much information as a regular DVD, so that this feature is very attractive.

The LifeBook N6460 of the screen is wide, 17 inches in size with a resolution of 1440×900 pixels. The keyboard is full size with a separate numeric pad similar to those normally reserved for desktop keyboards. The keyboard of N6460 also on a four dedicated media button that can be customized for any number of open programs. Another feature is a fancy keyboard Visual Optimizer button. This allows the computer to switch from PC mode so video, to provide the best for both visual settings regular applications for PC and video use.

Fujitsu’s LifeBook N6460 uses an Intel chipset PM965 with a Core Duo processor 2. It includes an ATI Mobility Radeon 2600 HD video card that supports DirectX 10. The LifeBook N6460 is available with up to 500 gigabytes worth of storage is provided through two hard drives.

Annoyingly the speakers had a propensity for the occasional squeal because the hard drive activity when not in use, and at the same time, there was a subwoofer in the background, it does not appear to contribute greatly to the overall sound. The speakers are placed in front of the notebook was also a bad design decision, as the sound is muffled when you enter.

The N6460 has done well the benchmarks however, busting a respectable 3DMark06 in 3630, and also a respectable PCMark05 in 5170.

For the battery things were a little sad, as always with desktop replacements, clocking in a tiny on 31 minutes and 36 seconds when playing a DVD, all options off saving energy and all settings pushed to maximum. Although this is a particularly grueling test, it shows you vai not want to take this thing away from the wall for a long time. The space in which you can insert a battery is limited, but also, namely the possibility of upgrading to a battery juicier has been effective nixed.

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