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Toughest Notebook Challenge

Trips, drops and spills, oh my! Panasonic, Dell, Toshiba and Acer put their notebooks to the test. Which one survived?

CRN logo By Edward F. Moltzen, Mario Morejon, ChannelWeb

12:00 AM EDT Mon. Oct. 15, 2007
From the October 15, 2007 issue of CRN
Page 1 of 2
There's the solution provider who outfitted a major metropolitan area police department with notebooks for its patrol cruisers, only to see them die under the bump, strain and heat that goes with keeping the hot summer streets safe.

There's the pop music star who, sitting on a pier in Key West, Fla., while writing a novel, stood up and saw the notebook slip into the salty water below.

Then there's the average business user whose kid trips over the laptop's power cord and sends the entire thing crashing down to the floor, destroying untold hours of work, invaluable data and a lifeline to the working world.

(above) The Test Center's Mario Morejon, with Shiv Kumar of solution provider ZSL, watching, sends a notebook falling.

SLIDE SHOW: CRN TOUGH NOTEBOOK TEST
Our first-ever CMP Channel Tough Notebook Challenge finds which notebooks can survive ugly, real-world executive disasters
.

Different scenarios call for different levels of tough. Not everyone needs a notebook that meets the U.S. military's MIL-STD-810F standard for ruggedized equipment, which includes tests under extreme conditions including high altitude, low altitude, high pressure, low pressure, heat, subfreezing, hard rain and fungus. (Yes, fungus. Don't ask.)

But notebook vendors are putting more emphasis and research dollars into making laptops tough enough for extreme everyday use. CRN put out a call to a number of different notebook vendors for those willing to put their products to the test: Give us a mobile PC, priced at no more than $2,500, that we can beat the daylights out of, that we could spill stuff on, that we could drop down a flight of stairs.

Four gutsy PC makers responded. A few ignored us. Some wanted nothing to do with it.

What happened next was CMP Channel's first-ever Toughest Notebook Challenge. Acer, Dell, Panasonic and Toshiba entered the ring. Systems from Acer and Panasonic came out alive. The results, taken together, tell the story of how the PC industry is racing to keep up with changing work habits, how it is faring and how much work still needs to be done.

The Challenge
CMP Channel's Test Center put an Acer TravelMate 4720, a Panasonic Toughbook CF-Y5, a Toshiba Tecra A9-S9017 and a Dell Latitude D630 through the tough notebook challenge tests: being pulled off a desk by the power cord; dropped from three and a half feet; having four ounces of soda spilled onto the keyboard; and then, the grand finale, being dropped down a flight of stairs.

Hewlett-Packard and Lenovo, invited to provide notebooks that could take part in the test, each declined participation.

The environment used for the tests was typical of an office. The desk furniture and carpeted floor in the test area provided real-world conditions for three of the tests—tripping over the power cord attached to the notebook, spilling soda and dropping the notebook. The tests done on the desk simulated various accidents users can have when working in an office. Before the notebooks were banged up, engineers ran PassMark tests. All of the banging up and spilling was done when each notebook had the power on.

The tripping-over-the-cord test simulated a user passing a desk, accidentally tripping over the cord and having the notebook fall to the floor. The test was easy to do, but hard to watch. It consisted of pulling the power cord while attached to the notebook.

The drop test simulated having a notebook fall from a person's hands. The distance of the drop was about the height of the desk—about three and a half feet.

Spilling soda on the notebooks was the most fun and hardest for the notebooks to pass. Because soda is a good conductor, any pin-size hole located between a keyboard and the inside of a notebook can shortcircuit the electronics.

The last test simulated dropping a notebook bag with the notebook in it down a flight of stairs.

The tests were monitored by two solution providers: Nick Gigante, an account executive with Future Tech Enterprises, Holbrook, N.Y., and Shiv Kumar, executive vice president of ZSL, Edison, N.J. After each test, Gigante and Kumar gave us their expert opinions on whether the system survived. The VARs looked for cracks in the LCDs and body. They shook each notebook to see if anything was loose. They booted each to make sure it could power up. They also moved the mouse and used the keyboard to make sure that the notebook was usable.

"These tests are real-world," Kumar said. "We put them through the challenges, what we see on a real-world basis."

Next: The Tests,?strong>

 
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