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This isn’t a market that moves particularly quickly, given the certifications required and the testing and validation needed to meet those standards. Not to mention, these PCs are usually deployed in tougher environments and need to operate in the field daily for many more years than the standard PC used in an office. So, Panasonic’s new TOUGHBOOK 56 is quite a big deal for this market niche, especially when you consider that the last major TOUGHBOOK release came in 2019 with the TOUGHBOOK 55.
The new TOUGHBOOK 56 is highly configurable, with six user-replaceable areas — which Panasonic refers to as xPAKs — that allow for customization or replacement if components are damaged or broken. Panasonic says that there are 5,760 possible configurations with these six different xPAKs, ranging from USB-A or -C ports, MicroSDXC slots, VGA, Ethernet up to 10G, or serial ports all the way to optical drives. Panasonic’s TOUGHBOOKs are also very popular among law enforcement officers (LEOs) and are commonly docked in their vehicles. Panasonic has accounted for these long lifecycles with backward compatibility with TOUGHBOOK 54 and 55 vehicle docks, which date back over a decade. Speaking of compatibility, the TOUGHBOOK 56 ships with both Windows 11 Pro and RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) 10.1, covering all the relevant software bases.
Panasonic also went for gold with the CPU, GPU, and memory configuration, opting for an Intel Core Ultra 2 series codenamed Arrow Lake. This does mean that the NPU performance on the TOUGHBOOK 56 is a bit on the weaker side, but that doesn’t seem to be as much of a concern for this type of user quite yet. Panasonic allows you to configure the Core Ultra 2 series up to the Ultra 7 vPro 265H, which boosts up to 5.3 GHz — quite respectable for a rugged laptop. The default GPU is an embedded Arc 140T and is upgradable to discrete graphics, an AMD Radeon PRO W7500M with 8GB of VRAM specifically for high-end graphics and AI applications. The memory configurations range from 16GB up to 64GB, which makes sense when you consider that the Core 2 Ultra Lunar Lake chips only went up to 32GB, which is likely not enough for some of the applications that Panasonic’s customers need. For storage, the TOUGHBOOK 56 supports up to 4TB via dual SSD slots.
For connectivity, the TOUGHBOOK 56 is configurable with up to three Ethernet ports, including 2.5 Gbps and 10 Gbps, which is an industry first. For wireless, it supports Wi-Fi 7 for the first time, offering speeds up to 2.4x faster than Wi-Fi 6E. The new model also supports Bluetooth 5.4, which isn’t the latest standard but is recent enough to offer good connectivity. For cellular connectivity, there are optional 4G and 5G modems, and the 5G module is already pre-qualified on AT&T, FirstNet, T-Mobile, and Verizon. There is also an optional dedicated GPS for location-sensitive applications, as well as an optional dual-antenna pass-through, usually for improved connectivity when docking with vehicles.
The display is a TOUGHBOOK-first 14-inch, 16:10 WUXGA (1920 x 1200) panel with up to 1,000 nits of brightness (350 nits by default). The display also supports capacitive gloved touch on the brighter model and uses an IPS panel, Corning Gorilla Glass 3, and a raised bezel for LCD protection. The laptop also supports up to three displays beyond the laptop’s own display, and it has concealed and night modes for better use in low-light conditions. Surprisingly, there’s no privacy screen, but maybe that’s an aftermarket add-on for security reasons. It does have a built-in 5MP webcam (up from 2MP) with a privacy cover and infrared for Windows Hello biometric authentication. Speaking of security, this laptop also has a bunch of security features, including Intel Hardware Shield, TPM v2.0, encrypted SSDs, optional fingerprint readers, smart card readers, and many BIOS features.
The battery is a 12-hour hot-swappable unit with an optional second battery, offering up to 24 hours of continuous battery life. At 10.8V and 6,500 mAh, that makes each battery roughly 70 Wh, but I would say that a 70 Wh battery, even with a very low power display, is unlikely to achieve 12 hours of battery life. I think that any organization deploying these laptops would require some real-world evaluation to assess battery life, especially since Panasonic used MobileMark (a long-outdated benchmark) to find those figures. This package starts at 4.66 pounds (4.99 pounds with the touchscreen option) and comes with IP53 certification and MIL-STD-810H certification, including testing to show it can withstand drops from three feet.
While AI hasn’t hit rugged devices as hard as corporate PCs, I do believe that it is still wise to consider AI performance and connectivity when buying a rugged notebook. Thanks to their robust design and engineering, these machines live in the field for much longer than any other type of PC, so it pays to think ahead about AI capabilities you might want in the years to come. The ruggedness also means the new TOUGHBOOK comes with a standard three-year warranty and a starting price of $3,325. The configuration on Panasonic’s site with the highest-spec CPU sells for about $6,150, but it features only 32GB of RAM and a 1TB OPAL SSD. So, there are likely more expensive configurations if you want to customize.
Since the launch of the TOUGHBOOK 56, Panasonic has made some additional announcements about more capabilities for it. It achieved Anterix Active certification for its wireless broadband capabilities, allowing it to leverage a 900 MHz private network connection specifically designed for utilities and field service. This just adds more credibility to Panasonic’s efforts to make sure the TOUGHBOOK is the industry standard for rugged applications. In addition to the Anterix Active certification, Panasonic also announced Tough Command, which is a data platform that leverages Panasonic TOUGHBOOKs as secure edge-to-cloud gateways. This allows enterprises or government agencies to collect more real-time data from their personnel, vehicles, and infrastructure with the goal of supporting better decisions in real time — and essentially turning the TOUGHBOOK into a critical hub for everything around it. I believe it will further reinforce the need for the TOUGHBOOK to have local AI compute if it starts to behave like a portable edge AI gateway.
Panasonic is clearly focused not only on offering unmatched modularity, which it has already demonstrated with its xPAK system and thousands of configurations, but also on bringing industry-first innovations in connectivity. Wi-Fi 7 and multi-gig connectivity via 2.5 Gbps and 10 Gbps Ethernet ports offer a compelling opportunity to leverage the TOUGHBOOK as an industrial computer, in addition to the many applications it already has in field technical support, defense, and law enforcement. While TOUGHBOOK’s competitors all offer discrete graphics, the W7500M is a unique offering that might yield interesting AI and graphics performance enhancements, especially given its 8GB of VRAM versus 4GB in the others.
I believe that Panasonic’s release of the TOUGHBOOK 56 will add competition to a sector that hasn’t seen much lately. The rugged market continues to grow as demand for local computing finds its way into more industries. With the growth of satellite technologies like Starlink, AST SpaceMobile, and Amazon Leo, I expect we’ll see even more rugged computers as ubiquitous satellite connectivity enables them to be useful in far more locales. I expect that AI will also be a driver, though I believe we might still need to see a vendor like Getac embrace SoCs with high-performance NPU compute. Getac recently adopted AMD Ryzen AI processors, and it might adopt Intel’s Panther Lake or future Nova Lake processors to have an NPU powerful enough to run most AI applications without using the GPU. It will be interesting to see how long it takes Panasonic and other rugged PC vendors to follow suit.
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