Panasonic Announces Two New Toughpad Tablets
By
siliconindia | Tuesday, 08 November 2011, 18:26 IST
Bangalore: Panasonic launches its 10-inch Android 3.2-powered Toughpad tablet, the Toughpad A1, and B1 will be available in 2012. Pricing is at
64, 266. The Toughpad A1 is ideal for work in extreme outdoor environments such as aviation and construction sites.
The tablet will weigh 2.13 pounds, and will have a 5MP rear-facing camera and a 2MP camera in the front. Inside, the A1 will run Android 3.2 Honeycomb on a 1.2 GHz dual-core processor, offering 16GB of storage (with optional storage of up to 32GB), and 1GB of RAM. A1 offers an enhanced level of security, including hardware and software encryption, enhanced VPN, dual factor authentication, trusted boot, and device management.
The tablet will provide a very bright, multi-touch, and daylight-viewable screen and can withstand a variety of temperatures useful to mobile workers, such as those in the military, who spend much time outdoors and need a device to adjust well to severe weather and lighting conditions.
Panasonic also announced the 7-inch Touchpad B1 tablet which is slightly cheaper and share many of the same specifications and the same price. Both tablets will live up to their ToughBook heritage, with daylight-viewable displays, military-grade resistance to drops, dust, and water, and integrated hardware-level security that's rated for use in healthcare and government.
64, 266. The Toughpad A1 is ideal for work in extreme outdoor environments such as aviation and construction sites.
The tablet will weigh 2.13 pounds, and will have a 5MP rear-facing camera and a 2MP camera in the front. Inside, the A1 will run Android 3.2 Honeycomb on a 1.2 GHz dual-core processor, offering 16GB of storage (with optional storage of up to 32GB), and 1GB of RAM. A1 offers an enhanced level of security, including hardware and software encryption, enhanced VPN, dual factor authentication, trusted boot, and device management.
The tablet will provide a very bright, multi-touch, and daylight-viewable screen and can withstand a variety of temperatures useful to mobile workers, such as those in the military, who spend much time outdoors and need a device to adjust well to severe weather and lighting conditions.
Panasonic also announced the 7-inch Touchpad B1 tablet which is slightly cheaper and share many of the same specifications and the same price. Both tablets will live up to their ToughBook heritage, with daylight-viewable displays, military-grade resistance to drops, dust, and water, and integrated hardware-level security that's rated for use in healthcare and government.
