CES 2012. Visitors from the Future by Fujitsu
Every year I find the Fujitsu showcase to be one of the most
fascinating. This Japanese company seems to be mocking other
manufacturers presenting gadgets that are already on sale in Japan but
can easily blow a mind of an outsider. What comes into your mind when
you hear 'protected phone'? You probably imagine something massive with
round angles, rubber bumpers and protective lids. But Fujitsu proves
that protected phones can be slim and elegant. Why make users carry
heavy bricks if Fujitsu engineers can put a protected phone into a
regular body?
The first thing you see in the Fujitsu showcase is a fish tank
with a bunch of phones inside and a girl beside it asking you not to try
and fish the phones out (there was a number of volunteers). A bit later
the tablet in the water began playing a video and you could totally
hear everything even though the speakers were submerged.
I was disappointed when I learned that the touch features of
Fujitsu screens don't work under water. Listen to me, I was so impressed
by this demo I though they can do everything but these phones are
groundbreaking as is. I liked that they even let you dip their phones
into bowls with waters and then open the phones up and see if any damage
was done – check out this video:
Most Fujitsu phones regardless of their looks and design are
waterproof protected class IPX5/IPX8. The first standard (IPX5) stands
for protection against water jets only (though it is a lot tougher than
IPX4). IPX8 can withstand complete submersion into water for a
considerable period of time (each manufacturer provides its own
specifications concerning the max depth, water type etc.).
You have got to respect the manufacturer when you see regular
phones operating underwater. But water resistance is not the only
special feature of Fujitsu phones. Most their phones have glossy
surfaces which are very fingerprints prone and it is especially obvious
at an expo where people use them all the time. However, I after cleaning
one of them up and working with it for ten minutes I found that they
are not that easily soiled as I though at first thanks to the Fujitsu
Ultra Touch guard plastic which has an oleo phobic finish and is very
scratch resistant.
After learning that I tried to scratch one of them and in any
other showcase the reps would probably try to stop me before I ruin
their phones but a rep at Fujitsu actually apologized for not bringing
any sharp tools with them so that everyone could try to scratch their
phones. The rep was so nice he even held the phone while I was trying to
scratch it but failed.
They demonstrated how the protective finish works with an abrasion
test with a hundred and two hundred abrasion iterations and the
difference is well seen on the photos:
As if it was so mundane Fujitsu presents an Android smartphone
prototype with a quad core Tegra 3 GPU, a 4.6” HD display and a 13.1
MPix camera with the ISO value of 25600 (a Sony product that does not
yet have a name with inverse back light) making no drama or a big deal
out of it while this prototype simply humiliates all smartphones known
in the US and Europe. It seems Fujitsu are so sure in this product they
don't feel like advertising its prowess. The display specs alone make
knowledgeable people faint (it is a new gen LCD screen with picture
quality higher than that of HD IPS I mentioned in the review of the LG
showcase).
I believe in Fujitsu simply because they have proven that they
can make such products a reality. As of today the company's smartphone
series is called Arrows. The flagship is called X LTE (I always
mispronounce it as X Lite but it is an LTE phone actually). This phone
has recently surpassed iPhone 4s sales in Japan and is currently number
two leaving Apple iPhone on the third place in sales. This is a really
big achievement for Fujitsu.
It is an Android smartphone with the F05-D index with Android 2.3
onboard (newer versions will be available later), it measures in
129х64х9.8 mm/5x2.5x0.4 in and weighs 124g/4.4oz. It is relatively small
and even tiny as compared to other LTE phones. It is also fully dust
and water resistant and can be submerged into water.
It features a 1280x720 4.3” screen and its graphic accelerator
provides a 60Hz refreshment rate so animation is really smooth. Besides
it features something called 'Smooth Touch panel' that anticipates your
actions on the touchscreen so the phone renders your gestures a lot
faster (it considers the angle of swiping and the orientation the phone)
unlike regular phones when an action follows a finished gesture. It
reacts so fast (in a matter of a fraction of a second) that it greatly
enhances the user experience and the level of comfort.
This phone is built on the TI OMAP4430 chipset so it has a
1.2GHz dual core CPU, also 1GB of system memory, 8GB of storage space
and a microSD slot. It supports all modern wireless standards including
NFC which is a rare thing for Japan.
The main camera uses the Sony Exmor chip and a Milbeaut Mobile
chip dedicated to photo rendition. The later one is a Fujitsu own
technology and it is currently the 6th generation of these processors.
The latest Milbeaut processors are two coupled ARM processors with
inbuilt codecs. It is a rather fast solution that also contributes well
to photo quality as you can see on the samples below made with its
13.1MPix camera at the expo:
Compare these pictures with the ones I made with Fujitsu F03-D
outdoors to get the idea how well it does in natural light. Some of the
pictures were edited in the phone's photo editor:
I find the quality to be very good even though I cannot say it is
the best. Anyway, all Fujitsu phones have very decent photo quality.
Now to this most interesting part of it – the battery. Slim phones
are prone to having very very short battery life but Fujitsu gives the
following life time numbers: 200hrs (LTE), 290hrs(GSM), 490hrs(3G).
These numbers look good and the reps assured me that the phone can
easily hold for a whole day (but Japan has got a really nice cell
coverage so in other countries the battery life will probably be
shorter).
All in all, I can certainly say that Arrows X LTE is a real
flagship packed with hi-tech. Unfortunately, we don't see this level of
technology in phones on sale in Europe while this Fujitsu phone is
really mind boggling and it is not the only prodigy in the family.
Arrows Ultra Slim 6.7mm is the thinnest 3G phone in the world
measuring 127х64х6.7 mm/5x2.5x0.26in and weighing in 3.7oz. It has a
5MPix camera, 1GB of system memory, 2GB of storage and a memory card
slot. It uses the Qualcomm MSM8255 platform with a 1.4GHz CPU. As you
might have already guessed this phone is also protected and it has a
Gorilla Glass cover for its 4” AMOLED screen (a new generation with
fantastic 0.2ms response time vs. 24ms in regular TFT screens). It is a
phone for everyone not a Batman gadget and it also has Android 2.3
onboard.
Fujitsu have worked a lot on tweaking the standard Android: some
of the controls got bigger, they added the app folder feature and the
graphic key feature for app launch. There added a lot of new stuff but
tried not to mess with the core only make cosmetic changes which is a
very pragmatic approach as it allows to save their UI when newer
Android versions are available.
Another technology that used in all Fujitsu phones is the Human
Centric Engine. The thing is, our hearing changes with age as we lose
the ability to hear certain frequencies. Fujitsu solved this conundrum
very simply – in the settings you can specify your age and gender. This
information will be used by the media player and the calorie calculator
(it counts how many calories you burn walking). It is simple and it
works.
Fujitsu phones also have special sound settings for noisy
environments which have already became standard for the company and now
it became more personified – the phone plays you a number of tracks and
you choose which one you like the best then the phone adjust the
settings according to your choice.
Next stop – the Globe-Trotter smartphones created in cooperation
with the British suitcase manufacturer also available in Limited
Edition. On the pictures you can see that they have different battery
lids, screens and interface while the rest of hardware is identical. I
see no pint enumerating their specs – these are regular mid range
phones.
Fujitsu also remember that there are women out there and
specially for them designs womanly versions of their phones: modest ones
for women of all ages (white, pink, golden) and with a touch of bling
for younger ones (hearts and ribbons) like this phone below available
with different body styles:
In the first body the buttons are made of crystals but they don't
look like too much besides they have different color indication for
specific events which is very convenient. These phones can also be
charged via a wireless inductive charger (purchased separately).
These femphones also have a special app called Beauty Body Clinic
that can suggest you an exercise program depending on your age, your
flexibility etc. it is not a mere set of exercises the phone can
actually assess the state of your health – it is a very useful
interactive fitness guide.
Fujitsu has some other features that contribute to their Human
Centric Engine. An example of this is the inconvenience to switch
between keypad layouts to begin handwriting recognition or simply to add
an emoticon. In Fujitsu phones you can simply swipe a smiley face to
add it to your text.
And the last feature that blew my mind – Fujitsu decided to
reinvent the alarm clock. Just think for a second what can possibly be
improved in alarm clocks. The answer is the sleep phases – if we are
woken in the wrong phase we will feel tired the whole day. To avoid that
the phone monitors your breath and your movements by means of the
motion sensor (I don't quite understand how this works, apparently it
must be somewhere near you to do that). And it will only wake you when
you are in the right phase to get up. You set the desired time to wake
up and the phone will wake you up 5-10 minutes earlier or later
depending on your sleep phase. There is a time limit after which the
alarm clock will go off regardless of the sleep phase. This feature is
called Sukkiri Alarm.
I think all the features I mentioned here are worth a separate
article I merely tried to put them all in one. Now I want to add a few
pictures of Fujitsu IT12S, a Windows Phone 7.5 smartphone with a 13.1
MPix camera, fully water resistant and featuring an unusual design. This
phone is exclusive for the Japanese market only.
A bunch of other phones designed only for Japan:
Fujitsu also presented an LTE femtocell:
I don't want to go into details concerning Fujitsu's mHealth
system I just want to say that it features a number of apps for
smartphones and tablets that can collect your body readings from
external sensors, analyze and store them on the dedicated web service.
Below is a chart explaining how it works:
I saved this for dessert: a bunch of concepts from the Fujitsu
showcase. The first one is a modular laptop called Crowd that displays
your friends' info on its surface. The idea is not new but it looks
pretty cool:
I like the futuristic crutch Aid with sensors that can read your
blood pressure, pulse etc. It features an SOS button and a satnav
system. The tiny screen displays your health information. I think it's a
great device and hope it gets into production one day.
And the last prototype that may one day become real the Integral
Cord. It is a wire that has cameras and lasers on its inner side and
depending on your need you can make a screen of any size and shape. One
form factor for work and another one for public transport:
Instead of a conclusion I want to say that every company and
every employee has a dream. Some dream of mundane stuff, others think of
impossible. And you can totally see the difference in thinking in the
products they make. Fujitsu dram of other worlds and dimensions that is
why their products are so dramatically different. I am hugely impressed
by what I have seen in their showcase and most of all by their sense of
balance and pragmatic logic. The company concentrates their efforts on
things unnoticeable but that make all the difference. This is real
hi-tech and it is not measured in MHz or GB.
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