Dell on Tuesday is expected
to launch its first ruggedized notebook that meets all U.S. Department of Defense
standards for durability and operation in extreme conditions.
With a hardened cover, the Latitude XFR D630 notebook is shock-resistant and
resists moisture, high altitude and high temperatures, said Brett McAnally,
director of product marketing at Dell. The notebook has been tested to conform
with standards established by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) for laptops
to operate in extreme environments, McAnally said.
It can run in environments from -20 degrees (-9 degrees Celsius) to 140 degrees
Fahrenheit (60 degrees Celsius). It also runs at altitudes as high as 15,000
feet. The laptop is sealed to resist moisture and dust.
The XFR D630 is available with a variety of dual-core Intel Core 2 Duo processors
as fast as 2.4GHz with 4M bytes of cache. It includes integrated graphics processing,
wired and wireless networking, a shock-resistant 80G-byte hard drive and a 14.1-inch
LCD (liquid crystal display) screen with a hardened cover. It can be equipped
with as much as 4G bytes of RAM and runs Windows XP Professional or Windows
Vista.
The laptop weighs about 8.98 pounds (4 kilograms) and measures 2.6 by 13.9
by 10.2 inches (6.6 by 35.3 by 25.9 centimeters). It is priced at US$3,899 and
will be available in the U.S. starting Tuesday. International availability has
not yet been determined, a Dell spokesman said. "As we broaden customer
engagement around the product, we'll evaluate expansion," he said.
The laptop is a more rugged version of Dell's Latitude D630 laptop, which complies
with some of the DOD's rugged laptop requirements, but not all. The earlier
laptop will remain on sale. The XFR D630 is targeted at an audience including
the military, public-safety first responders and enterprises such as oil and
gas exploration companies.
The XFR D630 laptop can use the same BIOS or firmware upgrades as conventional
PCs, simplifying IT maintenance, McAnally said. It will let organizations extend
computing to new environments, he said.
The fact that it can use a standard software configuration may make the XFR
D630 compelling for Dell customers, said Roger Kay, founder and president of
Endpoint Technologies Associates.
It also gives Dell a chance to compete against companies such as Panasonic,
which is known as the rugged laptop leader with its Toughbook series, Kay said.