Hands-on with the Motion Computing CL900 Rugged Oak Trail Tablet

Today, Motion Computing announced its ruggedized 10-inch Oak Trail-based tablet. Dubbed the CL900, this slate is designed for the enterprise market and will cost upwards of $1,000 when it ships in March, but is probably the best Windows tablet we've seen to date.

At 10.9 x 7.1 x 0.6 inches, the Motion Computing CL900 is about the same size as the ViewSonic G Tablet, but weighs an even heftier 2 pounds to the G Tablet's 1.55 pounds.

While it may not look it, this tablet is fully ruggedized. The front is made of Gorilla Glass, so it can withstand a good number of scrapes. It has an IP52 rating, meaning its rubber-sealed ports are water, dust, and splash resistant. Inside, the components sit on shock-absorbed aluminum frame, so it can withstand drops from 48 inches.

The tablet's 10-inch display has a resolution of 1366 x 768, so it can fit even more of web pages and apps. Along the right side is a small door that opens to reveal a nicely sized stylus. The left side has the ports: USB, headphone/mic, micro HDMI, and an SD card slot. The front features a 1.3-MP webcam, while the rear has a 3-MP camera.

The Motion Computing CL900 packs a 1.5-GHz Intel Atom Z670 processor, 1GB of RAM (expandable to 2GB), a 30GB solid state drive.(customers can opt for 62 or 128GB SSDs) and runs Windows 7 Professional. Connectivity includes 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, Gobi mobile broadband, Bluetooth 3.0, and a SIM card slot.

Motion Computing estimates that the tablet's 43-Watt-hour battery will get up to 8 hours of endurance. Stay tuned for a full review, but first check out the hands-on video and gallery below.

Laptop Reviews Editor

Michael was the Reviews Editor at Laptop Mag. During his tenure at Laptop Mag, Michael reviewed some of the best laptops at the time, including notebooks from brands like Acer, Apple, Dell, Lenovo, and Asus. He wrote in-depth, hands-on guides about laptops that defined the world of tech, but he also stepped outside of the laptop world to talk about phones and wearables. He is now the U.S. Editor-in-Chief at our sister site Tom's Guide, where he oversees all evergreen content and the Homes, Smart Home, and Fitness/Wearables categories for the site..