Fujitsu Launches New U772 and UH572 Ultrabooks
by Jarred Walton on June 6, 2012 2:41 PM EST- Posted in
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- Ultrabook
Fujitsu isn’t one of the companies we at AnandTech usually encounter in the realm of laptops; for whatever reason, their presence in the US market is decidedly limited. Nevertheless, they sent us news letting us know of their two latest Ultrabooks, the 13.3” LIFEBOOK UH572 and the 14” LIFEBOOK U772. The specs follow the familiar pattern, which we’ll cover in the table below, with a few exceptions.
The biggest differentiator is that Fujitsu’s LIFEBOOK offerings generally target the business sector more than the consumer market, and Fujitsu calls the U772 a “commercial Ultrabook”—the UH572 is more of a consumer model. That should mean build quality is generally higher, though we haven’t handled it so we can’t say for certain. You also get a fingerprint scanner as part of the package on the U772 and it has support for a port replicator. For now, the UH572 is only available in one configuration while the U772 is a user configurable (with a lower priced preconfigured model due in late June).
Fujitsu LIFEBOOK Ultrabook Specifications | ||
Model | UH572 | U772 |
Processor |
Core i5-3317U (1.7GHz/2.6GHz Turbo, 3MB L3) |
Core i7-3667U (2.0GHz/3.2GHz Turbo, 4MB L3) Core i5-3427U (1.8GHz/2.8GHz Turbo, 3MB L3) Core i5-3317U (1.7GHz/2.6GHz Turbo, 3MB L3) |
Chipset | Intel HM76 | Intel HM76 or QM77 |
Memory |
Motherboard Mounted (2x2GB DDR3-1600) (2x4GB via service by Fujitsu) |
1x SO-DIMM (Up to 8GB DDR3-1600) |
Graphics |
Intel HD 4000 (16 EUs) 1050MHz Max Clock |
Intel HD 4000 (16 EUs) 1050 (3317U) or 1150MHz Max Clock |
Display | 13.3" 768p (1366x768) | 14" Glossy or Matte 768p (1366x768) |
Hard Drive(s) |
500GB 5400RPM HDD 32GB SSD Cache |
320/500GB 5400RPM HDD with 32GB SSD Cache, or 128/256GB SSD |
Battery |
4-cell Lithium-Polymer Up to 5:50 hours battery life |
4-cell 45Wh Lithium-Ion Up to 7:00 hours battery life |
I/O Ports, etc. |
HDMI 2 x USB 3.0 (1x Anytime Power) 1 x USB 2.0 Headphone jack Intel 2230 802.11bgn WiFi Bluetooth 4.0 (Intel 2230) Intel WiDi SD/MS Flash reader HD webcam 65W AC adapter |
HDMI 2 x USB 3.0 (1x Anytime Power) 1 x USB 2.0 Headphone jack Intel 6205 802.11agn WiFi Bluetooth 4.0 (Optional) Mini LAN (Adapter cable required) SD Flash reader HD webcam 65W AC adapter |
Dimensions |
12.72" x 9.21" x 0.71" (WxDxH) (323mm x 234mm x 18mm) |
12.87" x 8.85" x 0.69" (WxDxH) (327mm x 225mm x 17.5mm) Note: 0.61”/15.5mm without feet |
Weight | 3.5 lbs (1.59kg) |
3.15 lbs (1.43kg) with SSD (3.18 lbs/1.45kg with HDD) |
Operating System | Windows 7 Home Premium 32/64-bit | Windows 7 Professional 32/64-bit |
Pricing | $999 MSRP |
Configurable starting at $1299 Preconfigured MSRP $1149 (late June) |
Considering both models come from the same OEM, some of the differences between the two offerings are quite odd. The UH572 is a 13.3”-screen chassis while the U772 is a 14”-screen chassis, and yet the dimensions of the U772 are only 0.15” wider while being 0.36” shallower and slightly thinner. The U772 also weighs 10% less than the UH572 when equipped with an SSD (or 9% less if both use HDD+SSD storage). Other differences include the OS, flash memory support, the wireless chipset, the lack of mini LAN and the fingerprint scanner on the UH572, and the memory setup (e.g. onboard vs. SO-DIMM).
Of course, there’s a reason for the above differences: the UH572 starts at $999 while the least expensive configuration of the U772 (the preconfigured i5-3317U model that won't be available until late June) starts at $1149. As noted above, the U772 is also targeting business users with additional features for that market. Images of the two Ultrabooks are in the gallery below, along with some schematics drawings (though some of the schematics on the UH572 appear incorrect as they mention elements not present on the actual laptop).
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Blindsay04 - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
1366x768? ill pass, and probably a TN panel as well.hp79 - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
But.. but.. it's a "commercial Ultrabook"! They must be nuts to use these crap resolution on a 14 inch "commercial Ultrabook".MrSpadge - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
Yeah.. who in their right mind would try to actually work on some commercial Ultrabook!IvanAndreevich - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
My god, look at that BEZEL! Wow.JarredWalton - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
Edge-to-edge glass covering the LCD panel, actually, so I'm not sure how much space is really bezel. I wouldn't go by the gallery shot of the keyboard either, as it looks like a rendered image rather than a photo.hp79 - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
haha, are you referring to the 13" or the 14"?Wow for the 13"s enormous fat bezel (fugly), and then another wow for the 14" that has virtually no bezel at all (really nice).
hp79 - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
You mean to say SSD weighs 10% less than a HDD. Overall, it looks like SSD option weighs 1% less weight.JarredWalton - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
No, I mean that the U772 with an SSD weighs 10% less than the UH572 (which has an HDD+SSD combo -- 9% less if we equip both with the same storage).hp79 - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
Now the sentence makes sense. Cool :)It's kinda weird that the 14" ultrabook is lighter than their own 13" ultrabook. I think everyone would go for the 14" unless budget is the only problem. But the ugly screen resolution spoils everything on that sexy 14".
ajp_anton - Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - link
Nowadays I just skip to the screen spec, and stop reading if it's 1366x768. Saves a lot of time, you should try it.