Showing posts with label Toshiba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toshiba. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2009

Toshiba Satellite M500/M505 Notebook PC

Toshiba Satellite M500 M505 Notebook PC

Toshiba presents the new Satellite M500/M505 line of notebook PCs that is for work and play for home users, students and mobile enthusiasts. Like the A500 and P500, the M500/505 can be powered by Intel or AMD processor, up to 4GB RAM and either onboard graphics or dedicated ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 512MB graphics card.

The Satellite M500/M505 is equipped with a 14.1-inch 1366×768 LCD screen, up to a 500GB hard drive, a SuperMulti DVD burner, and a multi-in-one card reader. It supports WiFi and optional Bluetooth. You can also find webcam, eSATA/USB combo port, HDMI output and an ExpressCard slot.

Toshiba Satellite M500/M505 is available now with a starting price of $699.99.

Some Pre-configured Models:

Satellite M505D-S4930

  • AMD Turion X2 Dual-Core Mobile Processor RM-74
  • 4GB DDR2 800MHz memory
  • 320GB HDD (5400rpm)
  • ATI Radeon 3100 graphics
  • DVD-SuperMulti (+/-R double layer) with Labelflash drive
  • Realtek WiFi 802.11b/g/n wireless LAN
  • Price: $699.99

Satellite M500-ST5401

  • Intel Core 2 Duo Processor T6500
  • 4GB DDR2 800MHz memory
  • 320GB HDD (5400rpm)
  • Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD
  • DVD-SuperMulti (+/-R double layer) with Labelflash drive
  • Intel Wi-Fi Link 5100AGN (802.11a/g/n)
  • Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
  • Fingerprint reader
  • Built-in webcam & mic
  • Price: $799.00

Satellite M505-S4947

  • Intel Core 2 Duo Processor P7350
  • 4GB DDR2 800MHz memory
  • 400GB HDD (5400rpm)
  • Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD
  • DVD-SuperMulti (+/-R double layer) with Labelflash drive
  • Intel Wi-Fi Link 5100AGN (802.11a/g/n)
  • Built-in webcam
  • HDMI port
  • Price: $899.99

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Toshiba shows off 5.6-inch minibook prototype

Toshiba may soon launch a small portable computer that would straddle the line between UMPCs such as Nokia's N810 and netbooks from the likes of the Eee PC and MSI Wind, according to a recent PC Authority report. The size and lack of a keyboard scream UMPC, but hardware and specs are very netbook-like. Preliminary specs for the 5.6-inch UMPC-like device include an Intel Atom processor sitting on a motherboard that's half the size of the one used in the company's Portege R500 notebook. The report says a 64GB solid-state drive is fitted into the unnamed prototype, which runs on Microsoft's Windows Vista. GPS functionality is also integrated, thanks to a built-in antenna that curves around the perimeter of the small device. The virtual keyboard takes up two-thirds of the touch-screen's surface, in a similar vein to Apple's iPhone.

However, Toshiba staff is downplaying the chances of the prototype ever seeing production, at least in its current form. "We don't think this [prototype] is commercially viable, it's too small," said Toshiba's General Manager, Mark Whittard. "Having said that, we will have a ULPC (Ultra Low-Cost PC) soon."

Toshiba representatives went on to suggest they are looking into six or seven market segments, with a 9-inch netbook among the possibilities. Toshiba is not keen on taking on the Eee PC directly, stressing its product may not be a direct rival to the popular netbook.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Toshiba Portege R500-S5003

OVR

Product Summary

The good: Extremely thin and light laptop; includes solid-state hard drive.

The bad: Fixed configuration; no mobile broadband; expensive external optical drive option; ULV CPU limits performance without seeming to do all that much to extend battery life.

The bottom line: Toshiba's SSD version of the Portege R500 may be the best ultraportable laptop available right now, and it packs in much of what the MacBook Air lacks while weighing nearly half as much.

When we first saw the Toshiba Portege R500 back in the summer of 2007, it quickly became one of our favorite ultraportable laptops--and one of our favorite laptops overall. Thanks to its small size, light weight, and plentiful extras, the R500 was very close to the final word in ultraportable systems. In the months since, very little has come our way to challenge the R500's lofty perch atop the ultraportable heap, though Apple's new MacBook Air comes close, offering a bigger screen, thinner chassis, and more powerful CPU, as well as an optional solid state hard drive.

Toshiba's SSD version of the R500 has been widely available only recently, and going toe-to-toe with the solid-state drive (SSD) version of the MacBook Air, it's a close matchup. Both systems offer expensive 64GB modules and omit the optical drive. (While both companies offer slim external drives, it should be noted that Toshiba also sells a version of the R500 with an internal optical drive). The Air is thinner and features a larger display, but the R500 keeps most of the ports and connections that go missing on the Air, and, more amazingly, manages to cut more than a pound off of the Air's weight, coming in at an astounding 1.7 pounds.

At $2,699, the SSD version of the Portege R500 is no bargain, especially considering its wimpy Intel ultra-low-voltage processor (the Air has a new, shrunk-down version of Intel's standard Core 2 Duo, which won't be available to other PC makers for months, at least). But, considering the SSD version of the MacBook Air comes in at $3,100, the R500 suddenly looks a lot more reasonable.

Price as reviewed $2,699
Processor 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U7600
Memory 1GB, 667MHz DDR2
Hard drive 64GB solid-state drive
Chipset Intel 945
Graphics Mobile Intel Express 950GM (integrated)
Operating System Windows XP Pro
Dimensions (WDH) 11.0x8.5x1.0 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 12.1 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 1.7 / 2.4 pounds
Category Ultraportable

Cast in a matte silver, with an ultrathin LED backlit display, the R500 is still impressively tiny, even though the footprint is no smaller than the versions of the R500 that feature an optical drive. Both the screen and keyboard flex a bit under the slightest pressure, even though we know from experience that the magnesium-alloy chassis is sturdy enough for regular use and travel. At only 1.7 pounds, the R500 feels incredibly light--so much so that one colleague who picked it up asked if it was a dummy mockup for photos, rather than a fully functional computer.

The Toshiba Portege R500 manages to fit in a decent-size keyboard, which made for comfortable typing, and avoids the annoying ultraportable trap of eliminating important keys, squeezing in separate page-up and page-down keys (always important for laptop Web surfing). The 12.1-inch display has a native resolution of 1,280x800, the same as that of the MacBook Air and most other 15-inch or smaller laptops. The R500 had a matte screen, which we generally prefer, but the antiglare coating made for terrible off-angle viewing.


Toshiba Portege R500 Average for category [ultraportable]
Video VGA-out VGA-out
Audio Headphone/microphone jacks Headphone/microphone jacks
Data Three USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, SD card reader Two USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, SD or multiformat memory card reader
Expansion PC Card slot Type I/II PC Card or ExpressCard
Networking Modem, Ethernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g Wi-Fi, optional Bluetooth, optional WWAN
Optical drive None None, or DVD burner

With a laptop this small, there are inevitably concessions to be made in terms of ports and connectivity. The older PC card slot is becoming increasingly irrelevant, and we would rather have seen an ExpressCard slot instead. The lack of mobile broadband was one of our key complaints about the original Portege R500. This feature is coming soon to Europe, via a 3G connection, but it's not available in the U.S. yet. Toshiba sells an external DVD burner for $269 (which seems a bit pricey), or the R500 is available with both the SSD drive and a built-in DVD burner for $2,999 (which would add to its weight).

Intel's line of ultra-low-voltage Core 2 Duo CPUs are designed to work in small laptops where heat and battery life are key concerns. Therefore, they're not the speediest processors available, and laptop users can experience slowdown and stuttering even under the best of circumstances. The Core 2 Duo U7600 is a step above the U7500 in the Sony VAIO TZ 150, and it soundly bested the VAIO in each of our benchmarks. But these chips can't compete with the custom version of the standard Core 2 Duo Intel designed specifically for the MacBook Air, which offered an all-around better, faster, and smoother computing experience. While not officially announced, we expect that MacBook Air's CPU to make its way into other brands later in 2008.

A tiny ultraportable laptop lives or dies based on battery life. After all, there's no point to carrying one of these systems around all day if you have to bring an A/C adapter with you everywhere. The Portege R500's battery was reasonably impressive, lasting 2 hours and 49 minutes on our video playback battery drain test. We didn't see much benefit in the battery department from either the ULV processor or the supposedly power-saving SSD hard drive.

Toshiba includes a three-year standard warranty with the R500, as we would expect for a premium-priced system like this, but it's only mail-in service. On-site will cost an extra $152 for the three-year term. The tech support toll-free phone line is open 24-7, and the Web site offers all the standard driver downloads and manuals.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Toshiba's 815T PB on Softbank threatens humanity


We kind of wish this was fake -- and we're tentatively overjoyed that it's not -- but we can't help but feeling a little freaked at the Toshiba 815T PB on Softbank, developed to coincide with a new show featuring (you guessed it) robo-phones called Ketai Sousakan 7. Yeah yeah, QVGA, 3G, 3.2 megapixel camera, that's all well and good, but our latent fear of cellphone brain cancer kind of just went out the window.