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Fujitsu Lifebook P7010 (D) - Enderet's Review

post #1 of 32
Thread Starter 

Fujitsu Lifebook P7010D Notebook Review


I received my P7010D today and I must say I am definitely impressed. As some of you may know, I am an ultraportable fan, and just came back to Pentium-M, after having abandoned it for about 6 months. I am also a previous Fujitsu Lifebook P5020D owner, so I am not entirely new to the good quality of notebooks that Fujitsu makes. I am going to be quite critical of my little notebook and will try to make this a good review. It will be somewhat of a work in progress, and it will be updated frequently, as I put the P7010D through different tests, besides benchmarks and such.

So, be patient, it might take a while for this review to be finished.


P7010D Detailed Specifications


Processor
Intel® Pentium-M® Processor Ultra Low Voltage 733 (1.1 GHz, 2 MB on-die L2
cache, 400 MHz system bus speed), 32-bit architecture

Display
10.6" wide XGA Crystal View TFT LCD (1280 x 768 resolution) 240 nits LCD
brightness, 150:1 contrast ratio

Memory
256 MB minimum, 512 MB, 768 MB or 1 GB maximum; two DIMM slots,
micro DIMMS, DDR333, PC2700

Hard Drive
256 MB minimum, 512 MB, 768 MB or 1 GB maximum; two DIMM slots,
micro DIMMS, DDR333, PC2700

Video Controller
Intel® 855GME video graphics chip; maximum internal display resolution:
1280x768, 16M colors; external monitor: 1600x1200 resolution, 16M colors;
simultaneous and dual support for external monitor and internal display

Audio
Realtek ALC203 with 16-bit stereo audio; Optical Digital Out (SPDIF); headphone and microphone jacks;
Dolby® Headphone Utility to emulate realistic surround sound using conventional stereo headphones

Media Drive
Modular DVD/CD-RW combo drive or modular Multi-Format DVD Writer
(DVD±RW and DVD-RAM) or modular battery or tv tuner

Communications
Integrated dual-band Atheros Super AG wireless LAN (802.11a+b/g);
antenna ON/OFF switch; CCX and WPA certified;
Multinational4 56K5 V.90 modem5 and 10/100 Base-TX Ethernet

User Interfaces and Fingerprint Sensor
Touchpad with scroll button; 82-key keyboard with 18 mm key pitch and 2 mm key stroke;
AuthenTec Inc fingerprint slide sensor (AES2501) with TruePrint Technology;
15cm/sec slice speed, dimension: 0.54 in x 0.2 in

PC Card and Media Slots
Type I or Type II (one slot); 32-bit PC CardBus architecture;
One shared slot for Memory Stick, Memory Stick PRO
and Secure Digital (SD) Card; one slot for Compact Flash card

Battery/life
Lithium ion battery; 7.0 hours with standard high-capacity battery, 4800 mAh, 6 cell, 49.6 Wh (max.);
10.5 hours with standard high-capacity plus modular second bay battery, 2300 mAh, 3 cell 23.7 Wh (max.)

Dimensions/Weight
10.27" x 7.83" x 1.26"/1.38"; approximately 3.3 lbs. with standard high-capacity
battery and DVD/CD-RW combo drive;
approximately 3 lbs. with standard high-capacity battery and weight saver

My Configuration

- Intel M 733 (Dothan) 1.1GHz
- 2MB on-die L2 cache @ 400 MHz
- 512MB DDR 333 172PIN MDIMM Memory
- 60GB (5400RPM) Hard Drive
- 10.6" CV (Crystal View) WXGA TFT Display (1280 x 768)
- Modular DVD/CD-RW combo drive (Modular Battery and TV Tuner Capable)
- Built-in Fingerprint sensor security
- 56K V.90 Global Modem & 10/100mbps LAN
- Type I or Type II (one slot); 32-bit PC CardBus & One Compact Flash Slot
- Super ABG Atheros wireless LAN (802.11a+b/g) CCX and WPA certified
- One shared slot for Memory Stick, Memory Stick Pro and Secure Digital (SD)
- Touchpad Pointing Device (Scroll Function built-in)
- 1 Year International Warranty (Transferable)
- Windows XP Pro


I didn't really review anything here, but I will post this up and then add to it.

Screen:

The screen makes use of Fujitsu's CrystalView screens. This is the first of the P-series notebooks to use it. While I plan on posting pictures of the notebook, I doubt that I will be able to take pictures good enough to show off how spectacular the CrystalView screen is. However, forum member Michae42 took some pictures of his Fujitsu N6010 notebook which also has the same screen technology and I believe they do the screen justice:

http://notebookforums.com/showthread.php?t=54942

While the screen is glossy, it is not as glossy as Xbrite screens and thus reflections are not really a problem. Movies looks great on it, as do the few videogames that I played on it. While some people might be skeptical about the size of things on a small 10.6' widescreen, I have no problems with it. However, keep in mind, that I am an ultraportable enthusiast and have probably grown accustomed to the small screens on these notebooks.

One bad thing about my screen is that it came with 2 dead pixels. 1 green and one red. They are invisible until a background is black and to my great fortune, they are located above the black bars in movies, meaning, they dont show when I am watching widescreen movies. Besides that, viewing angles are great, especialy when compared to those found on the Compal CL56 and HP/Compaq TC1000. Horizontal, as well as vertical, viewing angles are both superb, something that is probably due to the P7010D's screen being wide.

Noise:

Whenever the time comes for me to buy a new notebook, the sound emitted by the unit is of real importance. I have had to skip on some notebooks because of fan noise, but I jumped on the P7010D without having seen or heard one in person, as I assumed it would be the same as the P5020d (its predecessor). With most other notebooks that I have owned/used, fan noise has not been a problem because SpeedSwitch or its equivalent in Transmeta processors have always saved me, by allowing me to downclock the processors. The same is true of the P5020D which would get hot and turn on its fan, if not locked on to 600MHz. But, with the P7010D, even downclocking the notebook to 600MHz does not stop the fan from coming on, or at least this has been my experience so far. I was really surprised by this and hope to look further into this, because I see no reason for this to be happening, if it is downclocked at 600MHz.

The fan is not always on and in fact, for the most part, is is completely off. However, it will come on after a short while of surfing then net. This is a matter that need to be studied further and I will report back here again.

Update - 2/3/05

My previous observations concerning the fan have not changed. I have been thinking about what I am to do with the notebook, and I have decided to keep it for the moment. I got an extremely good deal on it and despite the fact that I could sell it and gain some profit, I really do like it and am willing to make do with the fan noise. In fact, just right now, I had the notebook beside me idling while typing this message on my desktop, the notebook is downclocked to 600mhz, with the screen off, and all I have open is aim and a FireFox window. Keep in mind that the notebook has been sitting there for about 10 minutes without any interference on my part, and the fan just turned on. The fan only stays on for about 75 seconds. In the initial 15 seconds the fan goes from a really faint hum to what I believe to be the medium-high setting. Then it cuts off completely and you are left with a dead silent laptop (except for the hdd).

2/8/05

Yesterday... I had the unit on for about an hour, continuously streaming videos from ign.com while having several windows open and not once did the fan turn on I dont know how this happened. One possible explanation is that having uninstalled the newest version of speedswitch and installing the previous one could have worked somehow.

Update - 2/10/04

I believe this will be the final update to the fan section of this review and I will now be ablet o move forward with the rest of the sections that are yet to be made. As I stated earlier in my thread, I employ SpeedswitchXP to handle heat/fan problems, with most of the notebooks that I have owned. I had previously been using the latest version of speedswitch and would set it at "Max Battery," which I believed was the best setting with which to keep the processor speed load at a low. After uninstalling the newest version of SpeedSwitchXP and installing the previous version, I decided to read through the site and make sure that I was not overlooking some other option that would allow me to better control my notebook. Sure enough, it turns out that "Battery optimized" is the one that worked.

I took the notebook with me to a meeting of about 7 people, sitting in a small enclosed room with only one table in the center. I had about 8 different Microsoft Word windows open as well as FireFox, and not once did the fan turn on, in the two hours that I was there. I can now say that I am truly happy with the notebook and I in no way regret my purchase.

Build Quality:

The quality of the notebook is quite good. as is expected from Fujitsu notebooks, but there are some flaws in the overall build quality. The Fujitsu P5010/5020 both suffered from the cheap plastic feel of the notebook. While they were pretty sturdy, you could feel the plastic flexing if you tried holding the 3-4lbs notebooks with one hand. Unfortunately, the same holds true with the P7010D, to a certain extent.

While it does feel somewhat more sturdy and tighter than the 5010/20, the notebook is still made out of plastic. This results in some creaking while holding the notebook with one hand, especialy when holding it on the left side. This is a result of the plastic body and also of the fact that it is hollow below the left hand rest, as the hard drive is on the right, and the Compact Flash slot, is right below. Even pressing on it with one's thumb makes the left hand rest bend in somewhat.

While I realize that these things are found in a lot of other notebooks, I dont feel that makes it right. I can only assume that the plastic chasis was chosen because of price, weight, and maybe heat dissipitation. But these things aside, the notebook is very solid and the quality is as good as other Fujitsu notebooks.
LL
post #2 of 32
Good on you!! Looking forward for the pics and your personal thought after using this machine, as I've planned to get this machine as well, but still a bit expensive though it's $3,500 is Australia
post #3 of 32
Holy mother of Cow that screen is nice. How bad really is the fan noise?
post #4 of 32
Thread Starter 
Well, I know that you dont mind the noise from the S5n, so I dont think the noise on the P7 would bother you. However, I was used to running my TC1000, which would never turn on its fan, unless I had it on something other than locked at 300mhz.

However, yesterday... I had the unit on for about an hour, continuously streaming videos from ign.com while having several windows open and not once did the fan turn on I dont know how this happened. Once possible explanation is that having uninstalled the newest version of speedswitch and installing the previous one could have worked somehow.

I was quite happy with it yesterday.
post #5 of 32
Wow, I have to say good thing I did a search on the forum for this. I got my P7010D on Tuesday, and was wondering if I should do a review but I guess you beat me to it . You posted the same thing for Memory and Hard drive btw up there . But just to compare both of our notebooks, my config has the:

80GB HD
1GB DDR RAM

Screen:

I got it on Tuesday, and when I first opened up the lid without even turning it on, I was like WOW , this screen is GORGEOUS. The wide screen takes a little getting used to for me, but so far I'm not complaining. My screen so far has not shipped with any bad pixels. I hear Fujitsu has a low tolerance level on bad pixels so maybe you should call them up? But yep this screen is gorgeous, I would take some pics but my digital camera is unfortunately a piece of junk

Fan

Cant say the noise is too noticeable. Theres a very very slight whine coming from mine. Unless its pretty quiet, then I dont even hear it. Fujitsu has so far handled the heating problems common of ultraportable laptops pretty well. So far the only hotspot that I have is under my right palm, where the hard drive is ( I'm assuming ). On a scale of 1 - 10 ( 10 being the hottest ) I would say it is maybe around 6-7. Its a little hotter than warm but not unpleasantly so.

Fujitsu in my opinion has the right idea, they covered up 1/2 of the peripheral ports, etc. with a thin piece of plastic. This prevents dust and what not, but only gripe is that the plastic feels cheap or at the very least flimsy. Nothing to get bent out of shape about tho .

The keyboard I have to say is a much better improvement than my Sony X505 ( of course almost any keyboard is better ). Not quite as good as a Dell or IBM Thinkpad T or A line( I didnt try the X line yet so I cant comment on that ). The right shift button is a bit small and its very easy for me to hit the up arrow so thats a bit of an annoyance for me. Also the 'B' and 'N' keys sometimes sticks on this. Has that happened yet so far for you Ender?

Just these minor gripes, otherwise Fujitsu has done a very superb job on designing and implenting this laptop. Tiny package with great features.
post #6 of 32
Just another minor gripe but for some reason the DVD-RW is damn picky. After I got the laptop I immediately did a clean install of XP ( I do this for any system I get ), didnt even bother booting into factory installed Windows. I then pop in some programs that I burned onto CD-RW and it reads it fine the first time. Then afterwards, it wont even pick it up at all. Doesnt even see the CD
post #7 of 32
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by g3neration
Also the 'B' and 'N' keys sometimes sticks on this. Has that happened yet so far for you Ender?
What do you mean by stick? As in, the notebook registers several B and N key presses, even though you are not pressing it? Or do the keys sort of stay pressed after you lift up your finger?

So far, I have had no problems whatsoever with the keyboard or any of the keys. No abnormal behavior from my B or N keys.
post #8 of 32
Actually the more I use the keyboard the more I notice its my spacebar that "sticks". As the spacebar is raising after I press it sometimes it would raise 1/2 way. Just something minor, doesnt happen a lot, every now and then.
post #9 of 32
Thread Starter 
That doesnt seem right... I think you should call Fujitsu or wherever it is that you bought it from to get it fixed.
post #10 of 32
Got it from Fujitsu, but as I said its not a biggie. Happens once every so often. But I'm enjoying the P7 immensely. Not as sexy as my X505 granted but otherwise its probably one of the best ultraportable notebook on the market. Getting the Shinza sleeve today for it.
post #11 of 32
Thread Starter 
The 11 inch?

Also, what do you plan on doing with your x505?
post #12 of 32
Hey, Enderet

First of all, just to let you know, I posted a link to this thread in the Fujitsu P forum (www.leog.net/fujp_forum) regarding how you fixed your fan noise problem, I hope you don't mind

Secondly, I tried uninstalling Speedswitch 1.4, and installed 1.3, and set it on battery optimized, but the change seems to be minimal, if any at all. Did you do anything else in Speedswitch other than setting it to battery optimized?
Also, is 1.3 the version you re-installed, or was it an even older version?

Thanks for your help in advance!
post #13 of 32
Thread Starter 
hshau,

I too am a member of leog, but had not thought about posting something about this. Well, regarding the fan and what I did. Yes, I did install 1.3. I dont remember doing anything differently, besides what I posted on here. What exactly do you do with your P that makes the fans turn on? Like I said, I mainly have IE/FireFox windows open and some word windows open. The heaviest I have done is streaming videos with several windows open. I am thinking about it right now and not once has the fan turned on during normal use since I made these small changes. It does turn on when I initialy bring the computer back up from hibernation, or when I restart it, but besides that, it has not turned on a single time, even after hours of use.

When I did have 1.4 installed I made some chnages i some of he options, but I do not know if they were set to default once I uninstalled it and installed 1.3

I also changed some of the options in the BIOS. I was still planning on going on writing what my settings are set at.

The fan debate regarding the P7010D is really baffling and the owners/users over at leog cant seem to come to a conclusion either. Some get eradict fan noise, others dont.

I will go ahead and post my BIOS settings later on today.

If you have any other questions, do let me know.
post #14 of 32
Thanks for your prompt reply!

It seems that just opening one Firefox browser window is enough to get my fan spinning on and off. Even while just on the desktop with nothing open except for MSN (among other things in the system tray). I've disabled all Windows service I've deemed useless to me, including Indexing, but I have yet to disable Automatic Restore, which some tell me is also a big resource hog.

I'm now running Speedswitch 1.3, and have it set to Battery Optimized, but I didn't set any disk spinning down, stand-by or hibernate.

I haven't touched any settings in the BIOS

The fan is going pretty loud now even as I'm typing this post.

Thanks again for any insight you can provide to me!
post #15 of 32
Thread Starter 
Ok,

Sorry the update took longer than I expected.

Under CPU Features, which is in the "Advanced" tab of the BIOS, I have SpeedStep enabled and have the "On Battery" setting, on "Battery Optimized".

Then, if you go back to the Advanced tab and go down to Miscellaneous COnfigurations, I have "Chipset Setup" on Power Save.

Those were the only things I changed in the BIOS to try and reduce the fan activity/noise. Also, one thing that I dont feel I might have made as clear as possible, is that the reduction in fan activity that I spoke of in previous posts, and in the updates to my review, is only while on Battery and not while plugged in.
post #16 of 32
Thanks again for you reply.

So do you find you still get some sporadic fan noise every so often on AC?

And does setting the chipset on Power Save also apply to AC, or just on battery?

I guess I'm still getting fan noise because I'm plugged in. Oh well, all's good, as long as it doesn't spin up like crazy in lectures on battery.

Oh, and reps to you for all your help, not that it matters, since you already have a mass amount
post #17 of 32
I have the same problem with the fan on my Acer, but I couldn't get over the fact how loud the fan is.
post #18 of 32
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by hshau
Thanks again for you reply.

So do you find you still get some sporadic fan noise every so often on AC?

And does setting the chipset on Power Save also apply to AC, or just on battery?
Yes, on AC, the fan still comes on and off quite frequently.

If you need anymore help, or have any other question just let me know.
post #19 of 32
Thread Starter 
Just wanted to add a small update and say that I installed World of Warcraft on the P7010D and it is indeed playable At 10-20 fps Its actualy not that bad, but I will report more on it later on.

I did no tweaks or anything of that kind to have it work. It installed without a single problem and played with it also.

Keep in mind, that this is with the game at 800x600.
post #20 of 32
Enderet, is it true you need you need to send in the laptop if you want to upgrade the HDD because it's not easily accessible?
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