Anyone looking for the best laptop or the best business laptop will likely have come across some of Panasonic’s designed-for-experts models, including the Let’s Note series, which is extremely popular in Japan.
We last met the Panasonic Let’s Note in 2023, specifically the Let’s Note SR 12.4, which launched in October 2023 with a lot of very interesting features, most notably a circular trackpad that breaks a lot of the conventions of Western laptop designs.
And now Panasonic is out with a brand new refresh (webpage in Japanese) to the iconic Let’s Note lineup, bringing them squarely into 2024.
New cards, new colors, same circular trackpad
The new models, named the Let’s Note FV5, Let’s Note SR4, and Let’s Note QR4, will be available starting on June 14 in Japan, costing upwards of around £1,500 (or $1,900).
Availability outside of Japan is often very limited, especially for new models. Older models do appear on eBay and other third-party sellers, however, although the default version of Windows 11 is in Japanese.
All of the Let’s Note models come with Windows 11 Pro as standard, something you would expect from a business-focused device. In terms of the design, Panasonic has retained the boxy chassis and circular trackpad that makes the laptop so iconic.
On the inside of the device, everything has been refreshed: all of the models get Intel’s new Core Ultra 7 processors (except the low-end model, which gets Core Ultra 5), and the bundled Intel Arc GPU. Users can choose between 16GB and 32GB of RAM, and there are 512GB, 1TB, and 2TB SSD configurations.
Panasonic has retained the 14-inch 2160 x 1440 resolution display for all models, and as such the weight of the laptops is kept relatively low at around 1.1kg. There is also Wi-Fi 6E, a nano SIM card slot, and SD card slot, which are nice additions in our MacBook-dominated lives. 5G connectivity also is there for the ride.
The company says users can expect battery life of around nine hours of typical usage, which is fairly good, and since most users are likely to be using a Let’s Note in the office, and then occasionally in a car or on a train, that is likely to be enough. Battery life does vary by each model and its respective CPU and GPU versions.
As a final flourish, Panasonic is also rolling out two new colors – Floral Gold and Matte Violet – to compliment the very business-like grey colour of old.
In Japan, Panasonic is running a variety of discounts (webpage in Japanese) at launch, offering money off for those who complete a quiz, and off the price of Microsoft Office.
More from TechRadar Pro
- Meet Japan’s weirdest laptop — Panasonic’s extraordinary 1kg Let’s Note takes two SIMs, has a round touchpad, and holds on to a 35-year-old tech so that you can run four monitors
- Check out our full Panasonic Toughbook 55 Mk3 review
- These around the best business laptops around right now
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