Fujitsu is known for some pretty ground-breaking products like the
world’s first laptop to bundle palm vein authentication.
But this new Fujitsu notebook concept envisioned by Yanko Design will
certainly knock your teeth off. They have come up with the Lifebook, a
laptop which has a detachable camera and also integrates a smartphone
and a tablet.
While devices integrating a smartphone aren't exactly news (see the
newly launched PadFone Infinity Lite), the idea of a detachable tablet
and camera is something fresh.
Fujitsu Lifebook concept shows laptop bundled with camera, smartphone
and tablet
Enlarge picture The slate is actually the virtual keyboard that can be
attached via a 16-pin connector.
That’s because the Lifebook doesn't have its own dedicated keypad, so it
will rely on the tablet for this purpose.
As soon as the tablet is integrated into its dedicated slot, the slate
will turn into a full-size touch-based QWERTY keyboard. Now imagine how
fun that could be.
The idea behind this unifying device is creating a bridge between our
different devices, in an attempt to synchronize all data stored on them.
As the official Yanko Design page explains.
“The proposed Lifebook is a laptop computer concept based on the
principle of ‘shared hardware’. Currently a lot of hardware is wasted
when we use separate devices, as there is often a lot of ‘repeat’ of
data stored and features.”
Fujitsu Lifebook concept shows laptop bundled with camera, smartphone
and tablet
Enlarge picture “For example if I have my songs on my music player, why
do I have to block the same amount of storage on my laptop? Similarly,
if I have a processor sitting in my tablet, why can it not also
run/assist my laptop? If I have a fully functional camera with its own
memory and image processing power, why do I need to have it repeated in
my laptop?”
Apart from the design feats, there’s not much info about the laptop’s
specs, but we can spot a few ports in the pics. The Lifebook should have
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth and draw power from an Intel Core iX CPU.
Furthermore, the screen-size we’re envisioning here is somewhere between
13- and 16-inches with at least HD resolution, but we know Fujitsu can
do a lot better. Would you pick up such a device?
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