Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Fujitsu Introduces 'wind powered' Green Laptop with IT Family


Fujitsu launches a green laptop in Japan that will have its energy consumption offset by the company purchase of wind power "green energy credits" for each model sold. The tiny laptop is among the company's smallest models and features a 5.6-inch screen that can swivel around and fold back on itself into a tablet PC-like form factor. The price will be about 50 percent more than comparable laptops.

The move is a first in the Japanese market and seeks to tap into a growing eco-conciousness among Japanese consumers.

Fujitsu's calculations are based on an assumption that the computer will be used for 4.5 hours each day, left on-charge for a further 4.5 hours and switched off for 15 hours for each of 240 days each year over four years. The resulting amount of electricity is 45.55 kilowatt hours and that's equivalent to 18 kilograms of CO2 emissions.

The result is a PC that in theory at least is powered by wind energy.Of course none of this comes free. The green PC will cost ¥113,800 (US$1,160) compared to ¥76,800 for a similar PC that doesn't include the green energy credits. That's a premium of ¥37,000 for the green energy version.

In addition the computer complies with current EnergyStar standards and the new standards that come into effect in July.It has 5.6-inch screen that can swivel around and fold back on itself into a tablet PC-like form factor. While not positioned as a netbook it runs the Intel Atom processor that is common in most other machines of the same size. Other features include 1GB of memory, up to a 120GB hard disk drive and built-in cellular modem card in some models.

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