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October 26th, 2009

Dell unveils 12.1" rugged multitouch tablet PC, Latitude XT2 XFR; withstands drops, spills, sand, children

Posted by Andrew Nusca @ 9:01 pm

Categories: Computers, Dell, Laptops

Tags: Dell Computer Corp., PC, Tablet PC, Dell Latitude, Latitude XT2 XFR, Notebooks, Tablets, Hardware, Notebooks & Tablets, Andrew Nusca

Dell on Tuesday unveiled a 12.1-inch rugged convertible tablet PC, the Latitude XT2 XFR, the first multitouch tablet PC that can withstand ballistic shock, extreme temperatures, dust, sand and moisture.

The Latitude XT2 XFR joins the fully-rugged Latitude E6400 XFR and the semi-rugged Latitude E6400 ATG laptops in Dell’s extreme computing family.

If you’re wondering who needs a system like this, it’s probably not for you. (Answer: military, police, border patrol, field service organizations, factory fulfillment and first responders — pretty much anyone who works in a harsh environment.)

As you can imagine, the basic innards of the device are shared with Dell’s standard-issue Latitude XT2 tablet.

Ruggedized specs for the Latitude XT2 XFR, after the jump:

  • 1.5 in. thick and starts at 5.4 pounds with four-cell battery and solid state drive.
  • Meets MIL-810G standards for operation in harsh environments
  • Compression-sealed and rugged I/O doors, LCD, and keyboard, provide an IP54 level of “Ingress Protection” — that is, resistance to moisture and dust.
  • Ideal for installation in police or first-responder vehicles where space is at a premium
  • Intel Core 2 Duo processors with up to 5GB of DDR3 1066 MHz memory
  • QuadCool Thermal Management System for extreme temperatures from minus 10 degrees to 140 degrees Fahrenheit
  • Four-, six- and nine-cell battery options
  • Standard data security features: Dell ControlVault, Dell ControlPoint. Optional: solid state and spinning disk drives with full disk encryption
  • Impact resistant, sunlight viewable, 12.1-inch wide LED display with capacitive multi-touch gestures-enabled. Resistive touch screen (e.g. using gloves on the job) optional.
  • Optional hot-swappable modules: GPS (coming soon), webcam
  • Optional expansion sliver provides camera/light, serial, and RJ11 inputs
  • Wireless LAN 802.11 a/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 and mobile broadband
  • Optional mobile rugged docking and mounting hardware

The XT2 XFR will be available in the U.S., Canada, France, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and Italy online and via Dell’s PartnerDirect program. It starts at $3,599.

Andrew NuscaAndrew J. Nusca is an associate editor for ZDNet and SmartPlanet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 7 Talkback(s)
Toshiba?
I was actually thinking Panosonic and their Toughbook lineup. (Read the rest)
Posted by: rivalary Posted on: 10/28/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
This is the kind of stuff Apple's Baubles can't match  Qbt | 10/26/09
not to mention  paladin2 | 10/27/09
Will the hinge break?  Earthling2 | 10/26/09
Several years behind Toshiba, but .....  kd5auq | 10/27/09
Toshiba?  rivalary | 10/28/09
Limited Demand...  TeamDrunkenPanda | 10/27/09
Where is my thin and cheap 11" nettouch?  Earthling2 | 10/27/09

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