Jan 31, 2011 08:24 GMT  ·  By

There are many ways by which a company can have its products stand out amongst their peers, but Toshiba seems to have used a fairly unusual method when it put together the Dynabook Qosmio T750.

Like so many other IT players, Toshiba has been quite active over the past months, and it seems that it doesn't want to let January finish without doing something truly uncanny.

There are various sayings about beauty and the eye of the beholder, or about perceptions and perspectives.

Toshiba's newest product seems to prove quite a few of them through its use of multiple nano-technology layers applied on the display lid.

Toshiba implemented a specially-coated display lid which, depending on the angle it is looked at from, it is colored differently.

By applying the aforementioned layers atop one another, some angles will show ocean blue, while others will relay a shade of purple, and so on.

Of course, such design efforts would not be worthwhile if the hardware itself wasn't at least decent, which is why Toshiba went for the Core i5-480M Calpella processor.

This CPU has a clock speed of 2.66 GHz and is backed up, in this case, by 4 GB of RAM, its own integrated graphics handling the display itself.

Said screen has a size of 15.6 inches and the native resolution of 1,366 x 768 pixels, plus a fingerprint proof layer over the aforementioned color-changing display lid.

Toshiba also threw in a hard disk drive with a storage capacity of 750 GB, a pair of USB 2.0 ports, Harman Kardon speakers, Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11n WiFi and an HDMI output.

Unfortunately, only Japaneses stores will get to sell this unusual newcomer, and there isn't any clear word on how much it costs. What remains to be seen is if other regions eventually get their own share of it.