Fujitsu-Siemens LifeBook Q2010
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Average of 11 scores (from 14 reviews)
Reviews for the Fujitsu-Siemens LifeBook Q2010
Source: Pocket Lint Archive.org version
There is an important fact you need to know about this notebook: it isn’t a notebook, it’s a status symbol. Fujitsu Siemens has designed it in collaboration with a number of executives, who are it’s target market here, asking them what they need and want to see from a tool they’d willing pay the best part of £3000 for. The result is the Fujitsu-Siemens Lifebook Q2010, a 1.1kg machine that is as light as you’ll find in a fully-fledged notebook. So, does the Fujitsu-Siemens Lifebook Q2010 justify the asking price? Only a limited number will be made and as status symbols go, it’s an appealing choice. It’s not the most cost-effective notebook out there but if you’ve money to burn you’ll enjoy spending it on this notebook.
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7 von 10
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/02/2006
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: PC Mag Archive.org version
For several months now, Fujitsu has been giddy about an ultraportable that's no thicker than a magazine and can be carried just like one. True to that promise, the Fujitsu LifeBook Q2010 is officially the lightest notebook I've ever seen with a 12.1-inch screen. This portability, however, comes at a high price ($3,199 direct). The LifeBook's feathery 2.2-pound chassis barely applied any pressure to my scale. With the AC adapter, the travel weight is still only 3 pounds.
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3.5 von 5
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 07/31/2006
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: CNet Archive.org version
The Fujitsu LifeBook Q2010 ultraportable laptop is small enough to fit in even the most cramped coach seats, but at more than $3,000 for a well-configured model, anyone who can afford one is probably flying first class anyway. It's lighter than other ultraportables, such as the Dell Latitude X1, the Lenovo ThinkPad X60s, the Panasonic ToughBook W4, and the Sony VAIO TX. If you demand the utmost in portability--and are willing to spend quite a bit to get it--consider the LifeBook Q2010. Otherwise, look to the Editors' Choice award-winning ThinkPad X60s, which is only a bit thicker but much faster and more than $1,000 cheaper. The LifeBook Q2010 is a sleek and stylish machine.
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6.1 von 10
User Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 07/21/2006
Rating: Total score: 61%
Source: Laptop Mag Archive.org version
When you pick up the Fujitsu LifeBook Q2010, your first reaction will be disbelief at how little it weighs. Your second reaction will be to hand it to someone else to see their reaction. That’s how light the Q2010 feels. If smallness and lightness are your primary concerns when buying a laptop, the Q2010 will delight. Just be aware of the trade-offs this 2.2-pound, three-quarter-inch-think chassis necessitates. Happily, one trade-off is not the size of the display. Fujitsu includes a sharp, clear 12.1-inch glossy widescreen. In fact, the company correctly claims that the Q2010 is the slimmest, lightest 12.1-inch notebook on the market.
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3.5 von 5, Preis/Leistung teuer, Display gut, Mobilität zufriedenstellend
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 07/19/2006
Rating: Total score: 70% price: 50% display: 85% mobility: 75%
Source: Notebookreview.com Archive.org version
If you're looking for a small laptop for your business traveling, don't hesitate and spend the money! If you can afford this, I'm sure you won't regret it. It has all the security you can want and the portability is truly unbeatable. If you're working at work and at home, just leave the docking station at work, which makes the desktop complete. If you want to stand out from the crowd, you will have to spend a lot of money to achieve that, but the Q2010 certainly does this. Fujitsu-Siemens people are always very kind and really try to help whenever I've called for support. It's quite fast getting through too.
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Preis/Leistung teuer, Mobilität gut, Display gut
User Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 07/02/2006
Rating: price: 50% display: 85% mobility: 85%
Foreign Reviews
Source: PC Professionell DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 03/05/2007
Rating: Total score: 90% performance: 99% features: 76% ergonomy: 99%
Source: ZDNet DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 12/13/2006
Rating: Total score: 75% price: 60% performance: 70% features: 80%
Source: Chip.de DE→EN Archive.org version
Comparison, online available, Very Short, Date: 11/04/2006
Rating: Total score: 89% price: 60% performance: 58% features: 92% display: 100% mobility: 100% ergonomy: 78%
Source: PC Professionell DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/01/2006
Rating: Total score: 95% performance: 75% features: 95% ergonomy: 95%
Source: c't DE→EN Archive.org version
Comparison, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/01/2006
Rating: mobility: 85%
Source: mobile Zeit DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, , Length Unknown, Date: 09/15/2006
Rating: Total score: 66%
Source: Tecchannel DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 09/01/2006
Rating: Total score: 50%
Source: Connect DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 08/15/2006
Rating: Total score: 83%
Source: Business & IT DE→EN Archive.org version
Single Review, , Length Unknown, Date: 07/16/2006
Comment
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950 is an integrated (onboard) graphic chip on Mobile Intel 945GM chipset. It is a faster clocked version of the GMA 900 and supports no hardware T&L (Transform & Lightning) accelleration (which is required for some games).
These graphics cards are not suited for Windows 3D games. Office and Internet surfing however is possible.
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
Intel Core Solo: Single core version of the Core Duo and successor of the Intel Pentium M; Because of the 65nm reduced structure width also smaller current consumption than Pentium M (maximally 27 Watts); the performance is comparable with the equivalent clocked Pentium M (somewhat faster because of a few improvements).
U1400: » Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.
12.10":
This range of display format is largely the upper limit for tablets and the lower limit for subnotebooks.
The advantage of subnotebooks is that the entire laptop can be small in size and therefore easily portable. The tiny display has the added advantage of requiring little power, which further improves battery life and thus mobility. The disadvantage is that reading texts is exhausting for the eyes. High resolutions, which one is used to from a standard laptop, are almost not usable.
The same applies to tablets in this size range.
» To find out how fine a display is, see our DPI List.Fujitsu-Siemens: Fujitsu, founded 1935, is a Japanese company specializing in semiconductors, air conditioners, computers (supercomputers, personal computers, servers), telecommunications, and services, and is headquartered in Tokyo. Fujitsu employs around 160,000 people and has 500 subsidiary companies. The partnership with Siemens AG was established in 1999 in the form of Fujitsu Siemens Computers (FSC), one of Europe's largest IT hardware suppliers, and owned 50/50 by Fujitsu and Siemens. 2009, this cooperation was terminated, FSC ended to exist. In future, no laptops will be sold with the brand "Fujitsu-Siemens" but only "Fujitsu".
74.45%: This rating is poor. More than three quarters of the models are rated better. That is rather not a purchase recommendation. Even if verbal ratings in this area do not sound that bad ("sufficient" or "satisfactory"), they are usually euphemisms that disguise a classification as a below-average laptop.
» Further information can be found in our Notebook Purchase Guide.