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Product Reviews : Notebooks : Intel prefers suede
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Intel prefers suede
By CNET News.com
02/12/2005


Intel and Toray Ultrasuede have designed a concept laptop that features a microfiber suede fabric. The skin is integrated directly into the casing of Intel Centrino laptop PCs.
Credit: Intel
"Chic" was the word on Intel's lips this week as it showed off a new line of concept laptop PCs that the chipmaker believes brings a luxurious personal touch to mobile computing.

Acting some years after Apple Computer made the iMac and the iPod into fashion icons, Intel has decreed that the laptop does not have to be "confined to a world of monotone grays and blacks."

Now soft-skin laptop PCs are poised to break into the fashion spotlight, Intel claimed. The company has teamed up with Toray Ultrasuede, made up of self-described "leaders in technology and fashion," to come up with a selection of suede-covered laptops.

The concept Intel Centrino-based laptops fit "ultramicrofiber Ultrasuede fabric" directly into their casing. There are no current plans to release the notebooks to the public.


Tulip Distribution International Holding showed off this leather E-Go laptop at a fashion show during the CTIA Wireless 2005 show in New Orleans, which ran from March 14 to 16. Along with other fashionable portables from Tulip, the notebook is expected to be released in North America in early 2006.
Citing research, Intel said 73 percent of U.S. adult computer users want to buy technology products that reflect their personal style. Of those who admit to glancing at others' laptop PCs, 76 percent are checking out its style or design, the chipmaker said.

Forty percent of U.S. adult computer users think their current laptop is generic, boring, dull, sterile or lackluster, and 60 percent would like to be able to "customize their laptop with options such as color, patterns and fabric," Intel said.

"Intel's technology innovation, coupled with the plush luxury of Ultrasuede fabric, offers a marriage of form and function with unlimited potential for fashionable personal expression," according to Jodi Geniesse, consumer mobile education manager at Intel.

But Intel will face some competition if it ever tries to target the high-end laptop market. For example, the Acer Ferrari already offers Italian styling and Ferrari Formula One chic.


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