Ladies, do you feel that laptop manufacturers just aren't catering for your needs? Well, stop worrying your pretty heads! Fujitsu has come to the rescue! Michelle Starr is CNET's science editor, and ...
I have been using this new laptop for about a week now, and I am very pleased with it. There have been a couple of minor irritants, as is always the case with a new computer, but overall I don't think ...
TL;DR: Fujitsu is reintroducing optical drives in new notebooks amidst Japan's growing demand for Windows 11 PCs that support playing physical media, as people abandon their old Windows 10 hardware ...
Staggered product releases? Perish the thought with Fujitsu, who just launched twelve (count 'em) products into the Japanese market -- including laptops, AIO PCs and a tablet, all sporting Windows 8.
The new Fujitsu is, well, really very pretty. It’s extremely slim. And it’s shiny too. Which I like. Weighing in at 1.38kg, it’s got a 10.6-inch, widescreen SXGA display, a lightweight titanium and ...
We may not love the austere devices that are foisted upon us for our daily 9-to-5, but at least Fujitsu's trying to make our late-night commutes a little less unpleasant. The company has outed a trio ...
Fujitsu announced two new LIFEBOOK laptops built for business. The LIFEBOOK U9311 and U9311X feature audio from Dirac. The laptops run on up to an Intel Core i7-1185G7 processor and have Intel Iris Xe ...
The Fujitsu LifeBook T4310 is a convertible tablet PC for consumers that combines multitouch input with the Home Premium edition of Microsoft’s Windows 7, which is said to complement touch ...
Pretty much everything you need from a bigger laptop smashed into a nice-looking tiny tot of a machine, the Fujitsu T70M weighs about 2 1/2 lb. and comes with a 1.2Ghz Pentium CPU, 60GB of hard drive ...
Fujitsu's environmentally friendly laptop prototype uses cedar wood for the case and bio-plastics produced from renewable sources for parts Could this be the environmentally friendly laptop PC of the ...
Fingerprint scanners may be all the rage in device security, but Japanese hardware company Fujitsu thinks it has an even better hand to play: yours. The company is working on palm readers for ...