October 27th, 2008Toshiba Satellite E105

Every once in a while, a technology company will develop a product outside of its traditional product line, just to meet consumer demands. (For an example, see Intel’s Dual-Core Pentium chip.)

So it is with the new Toshiba Satellite E105, which, at least appearance-wise, sticks out among Satellites. The laptop’s light color and flat edges make it look like an NR or CR series Sony Vaio. And its backlit keyboard certainly calls to mind the MacBook Pro. But Toshiba has added a few elements–such as a two-year warranty and 5.5-hour battery life–to make the Satellite E105 stand apart from the pack.

The laptop features a 14.1-inch WXGA display, which nicely balances usability and portability. (In fact, the Satellite E105’s weight starts at just 5 pounds.) Inside the case you’ll find the latest Centrino 2 components, including a 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 processor, Intel GMA 4500M HD integrated graphics, and Intel’s 802.11a/g/n Wi-Fi. In a nice touch, Toshiba equips the Satellite E105 with 4GB of RAM and 64-bit Windows Vista to take advantage of it. There are also some welcome high-end connections, including S/PDIF, HDMI, and eSATA, and all the USB ports incorporate Toshiba’s Sleep and Charge feature.

With pricing around $1,250, the Satellite E105 is aggressively aimed at home users who want a solid all-around laptop with plenty of battery life and a lengthy warranty. Expect to see it go on sale later this month.

October 27th, 2008Pavilion dv3500t

If 12 is too small and 14 too big, HP now has a laptop to sell you. With the Pavilion dv3500t, the company has slotted a 13-inch model into its already crowded laptop lineup. The dv3500t features a choice of four Intel Core 2 Duo processors (up to the T9400), up to 8GB of RAM, a 512MB Nvidia GeForce 9300M GS graphics card, and up to a 400GB hard drive. The 13.3-inch display features a 1280×800 resolution, and an LED-backlit display is offered for an added $100, which HP indicates will shave nearly a half pound off the system’s 4.1-pound weight. Unlike most of HP’s laptops, the Pavilion dv3500 does not offer a parallel AMD version (a dv3500z, say, to the Intel-based dv3500t).

The only color option is HP’s bronze finish, which brings to mind the Pavilion dv6985se we saw earlier this year. And like the Pavilion dv5, the dv3500t features an HDMI port, an eSATA port (housed inside one of the system’s USB ports), and a remote control that you can store inside the ExpressCard slot. A Webcam and fingerprint reader come standard, as does a four-cell battery. We’d recommend spending the extra $29 for the six-cell option.

The $999 baseline configuration features a Core 2 Duo T5800 CPU, 2GB of RAM, GeForce 9300M GS graphics, and a 160GB hard drive. Look for our review of the retail $1,199 HP Pavilion dv3510nr later this month.

HP now sells 12-, 13-, 14-, 15-, 16-, 17-, and 18-inch laptops. Add the 9-inch HP 2133 Mini-Note PC to the equation, and product gaps at 10- and 11-inch sizes are suddenly revealed. Get on that, HP.

It’s an ultraportable whose sexy looks are made possible by some hot new tech. Not only is the Toshiba Portege R500 Series incredibly svelte and lightweight for a laptop (at 8.5 by 11.1 by 0.7 inches and 2.4 pounds), but no other ultraportable this light manages to accommodate a built-in optical drive. And despite its compactness, it manages to integrate a full-size keyboard.

Toshiba spent two years developing the R500 out of its previous iteration, the R200. Recent advances enabled the company to go all out in miniaturization. The R500’s motherboard is unusually small and thin, and its DVD burner is only 7mm thick. The laptop’s 12.1-inch display avails itself of LED backlighting, which lets PC makers build ultra thin screens (about half the thickness of LCD screens).

The trade-off for the R500’s sleek and sexy profile lies in its so-so performance. It loads an ultra-low-voltage 1.2-GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U7600 CPU, and it does manage to fit a 120GB, 2.5-inch, 5.400rpm hard drive. But with its integrated graphics and sparse 1GB of RAM. The R500 took a long time to boot into Windows Vista Business. Also, the DVD drive is noisy to the point that Toshiba bundles an acoustic silencer in its software package. Battery life is above average for a machine with low-power components. That it took just 2 hours 37 minutes to run down while playing a DVD movie doesn’t sound that impressive, but you can certainly get up to around 4 hours when doing less intensive tasks.

Though you won’t be encoding video or playing 3D games with it, the R500 is fine for office tasks. For a machine built to be used on the road, an integrated EV-DO or other WWAN modem would have been a nice addition. Still, the R500 is a joy to carry, a wonder to look at, and fun to use. Do yourself a favor, though, and boost the RAM to 2GB to give the system a little more oomph.

May 13th, 2008Review of Toshiba A305D

The Toshiba A305D is the now and then overlooked AMD younger brother to the Intel A305 notebook. This model shares practically the same design, just fewer features that help to bring the cost down. At first glance it would be impossible to tell these two notebooks apart, but if you take a close enough look you can probably spot the difference. understand writing on to see if this lower cost AMD-equipped Toshiba A305D deserve a spot on your desk.

sharp-eyed readers will notice that much of this review is alike to our review of the Intel-based A305, and with good cause. The A305D is essentially the same notebook with a few dissimilar parts inside. Keep reading and we’ll center on whether those difference make the A305D better or not as good as.

Our review unit of the A305D features the following stipulation

* Windows Vista Home Premium (SP1, 32-bit)

* AMD Turion X2 Dual-Core TL-64 (2.2GHz)

* 15.4″ diagonal widescreen TruBrite TFT LCD display at 1280×800 (WXGA)

* ATI Radeon X1250 Integrated Graphics

* Atheros Wireless 802.11a/g/n

* 3GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM (maximum capacity 4GB)

* 320GB 5400rpm Toshiba Hard Drive

* DVD SuperMulti (+/-R double layer) drive with Labelflash

* 1.3 megapixel webcam

* Harmon/Kardon stereo speakers

* Fingerprint reader

* Dimensions (WxDxH Front/H Rear): 14.25″ x 10.5″ x 1.4″ /2.25″

* Weight: 6 lbs 2.5oz with six-cell battery

* 75W (19V x 3.95A) 100-240V AC Adapter

* 6-cell (4000mAh) Lithium Ion battery

* 1-Year Standard Limited Warranty

* Price as configured: $999.99

Build and Design

First thing you will notice is every part of this notebook is glossy, from the screen cover, to the palm rest, and even the keyboard keys. Toshiba is really showing off their new durable Fusion finish on every part of the note pad that they can, and in some ways it is a very good thing. Durability is a big thing with note pad finish, as many glossy finishes will dull and scratch over time. The novel Toshiba Fusion finish on this is incredibly tough, and has yet to actually scratch throughout my testing. With multiple trips in my backpack, I can’t find any able to be seen scuffs on the cover, where other notebook would show fine scratches almost out of the wrapper.

So what does this Fusion finish mean to you? Your keys will not go from matte to glossy over time as they wear down (they are already glossy). Every part of the notebook will get full of smudges and fingerprints, but you can always wipe it down in a couple of minutes to make it look brand new. On other notebooks you get all the smudges, but it would take some hard work with some plastic polish before you ever got it looking new again.

Build quality is excellent in most areas, giving the notebook a very solid feel. squeak and creaks are not present, and panel flex is at a minimum. The only areas that stand out as needing some improvement are the wobbly battery, and rough edges around the monitor frame where the two plastic pieces meet.

Body Changes

The new Satellite A305D change quite a bit of its design, while still retaining some similarity of its older A205 brother. The biggest change is the use of the new durable Fusion finish, which can be found on practically every surface of the notebook, from the top cover to the individual keyboard keys. Unlike the older glossy surface that would scuff with minimal effort, the Fusion come to an end holds up very well, and I have yet to find a fine scratches or other wear on it.

The keyboard and surrounding area has changed quite a bit form the older A205, including touch sensitive multimedia keys, which are all the rage these days on most notebooks. Another change is the flush touchpad area, which is surprisingly slick with its textured surface. It is almost too easy to slide your finger around on it, and slip off onto the palm rest. The touchpad buttons have also changed quite a bit, going from rectangular slabs to chromed ovals which are easier to trigger, as well as being more at ease to use.

Display

The screen excellence is above average for sleek screens, with an evenly bright backlight and vibrant colors. Backlight bleed is minimal, meaning better game play in dark scenes without areas getting washed out. Viewing angles are adequate, with a wide horizontal range, but shallow vertical range. When tilting the monitor back, you will have to find a sugary spot, and going out of that means washed out or inverted colors.

Keyboard and Touchpad

The keyboard on the Satellite A305D is made up of high gloss painted keys, which is fairly unique as far as mainstream notebooks go. The look is excellent, and goes very well with the silver striped glossy notebook, and the feel is even better. There is just something about typing on a soft glossy surface that makes long typing very comfortable. Even things like gaming seem to work better, letting you easily slide from one key to the next with negligible drag.

One disappointing aspect of the keyboard is that it is not backlit, as that could be the only possible way to make it even more awesome. Hopefully this keyboard stays the same in the Qosmio, and gets some special backlit treatment.

The touchpad is mounted flush with the palm rest, with the only indication of it being a touchpad at all is a semi-smooth textured overlay. I don’t know what the surface is made out of, but it is oddly slippery. No matter if your fingertip is mildly sweaty or perfectly dry, it doesn’t stick to the surface. For anyone who has used a notebook for hours on end, you know that eventually your fingers start to stick on some touchpad surfaces, this surface somehow prevents that. In use the sensitivity is excellent, with a wide range of change offered through the Synaptics driver control panel.

The touchpad buttons are very nice, reminding me of the chrome bumper on older cars. They feel soft to the touch without any hard defined edges, and even though they have very shallow feedback, they are probably some of the best touchpad buttons I have used.

Performance

The Toshiba A305D comes loaded with the AMD Turion TL-64 2.2GHz processor, and the ATI 1250 integrated graphics. For most activities this combination handles itself quite well, including office productivity applications or watching movies. betting is one area that this close brother to the Intel A305 can’t follow, bring in 3D benchmarking scores almost 93% lower.

The Intel-based A305 delivered an impressive benchmark score in terms of overall presentation thanks to a second hard drive and dedicated graphics. unluckily, our pattern of the AMD-based A305D produced “average” benchmark numbers from a single hard drive and integrated graphics.

wPrime is a program that forces the processor to do recursive mathematical calculation, the advantage of this program is that it is multi-threaded and can use both processor cores at once, thereby giving more precise benchmarking measurements than Super Pi. (Lower numbers mean improved presentation.)

Two new laptops from Toshiba will be launched in Japan under the names Qosmio G40 and Qosmio F40. Qosmio G40 is priced at around $3,600 and will feature a powerful 2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500 processor, 2GB of DDR II memory, 2 S-ATA hard disks of 200GB each and a good-looking GeForce 8600M GT graphics card with its own 256MB memory. The laptop integrates a High Definition DVD-RW optical drive which makes it one of the high-end models on the market.

Its display is 17 inches large, with the Clear View technology and 1920×1200 pixels resolution, unlike the other model, Qosmio F40 that is smaller, with a screen measuring just 15.4 inches. Qosmio F40 has a smaller price of $2,700 and it doesn’t run with the same processor as the other model, but with a 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7250, and integrates 250GB of HDD storage.

Both laptops, G40 and F40 have support for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity technologies, and are ready with card readers and HDMI ports.


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