Skip to main content

Twinhead Adds Two Shock-Ready Durabooks

Some consumer electronics companies may want people to think selecting a computer is all about sleek design, the latest and greatest chips, and choosing a color scheme which matches your decor. But sometimes big and tough is a far better solution than fast and flimsy, and if you’re the sort of person who puts a notebook through a beating, Twinhead has added two new Durabooks to its lineup—the D13RI and D14RI—which meet military specs for shock, drop, and spill resistance.

“In the real world, people use their notebooks in all types of environments which may cause accidental damage to the system. One mishap such as a drop or a liquid spill and the portable user soon discovers that a ‘bargain’ notebook is no bargain at all if you have to keep repairing or replacing your system,” explained Steven Gau, Twinhead’s President, in a statement. “Durabook notebooks more than pay for themselves.”

Twinhead’s new Durabook systems offer spill resistant keyboards and magnesium alloy cases which are up to 20 times stronger than traditional plastic cases uses on many notebook systems. The systems each meet the military 810F spec for drop resistante, pass military standards for shock and spill resistance, and Twinhead’s design offers additional protection for internal components inclinding the LCD screen, CPU, hard drive, and battery circuitry. A patented DVD/CD tray lock prevents accidental ejection of optical media.

But horsepower…well, these Durabooks aren’t on the Intel Core bandwagon. The systems sport Intel Pentium M 740 or higher processors with a 533 MHz frontside bus and 2 MB of L2 cache, or a Celeron-M 3450 CPU with either a DVD/CD-Rw combo drive or DVD dual drive. Add 802.11b/g wireless, a max 2 GB of RAM, Intel integrated graphics, gigabit Ethernet, two USB 2.0 ports, one Type II PCMCIA slot, built-in 56K modemm, and built-in speakers and the systems start to take shape. The D13RI ships with a 13.3 inch widescreen display, while the D14RI comes with a 14-inch LCD display. But where you’re missing the latest processors, you might be saving money in durability and out-of-pocket costs: the D13RI is priced at $1099, and the D14R starts at $999. Might make you feel better about taking the notebook snowboarding. Or mountain biking. Or to construction sites. Or….

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
I review laptops for a living, and these are two under $1,000 I always recommend
Asus Zenbook 14 Q425 front view showing display and keyboard.

Midrange laptops have undergone a quiet renaissance, with options in the $1,000 range (or slightly less) offering performance, build quality, and displays that rival laptops costing twice as much a few years go. If your budget is limited, but you still need a great laptop, you're in luck.

Two recent laptops I reviewed fall into this category. The Asus Zenbook 14 Q425 and Lenovo Slim 7i Gen 9 offer the same fast Meteor Lake chipsets and excellent OLED displays, but they're not identical. Which wins in a head-to-head comparison?
Specs and configurations

Read more
How to add audio or video to Google Slides
Grid view in Google Slides.

Google Slides is a great way to add style and flare to your everyday workplace presentations. It’s also a great tool for the classroom, that’s easy to adapt for students of all ages. Packed with graphics, animation tools, and other immersive features, Google Sheets even lets you upload your own audio and video to your slideshows.

Read more
How to add and remove apps from the Dock on Mac
The MacBook Air on a white table.

One of the main interface elements of the macOS experience is the Dock. Located at the bottom of the screen by default, the Dock is your Mac or MacBook’s nerve center. It’s where all of your most used apps are located, and having the ability to just click an icon to launch a program is quite the convenience. But how do you customize the Dock to display the apps you love?

Read more