[Home]
[Full version]
Toshiba Announces a Budget-Lover's Laptop
Apr 17 ,Electronic Devices
Toshiba has launched new Satellite P-Series and A-Series laptop models, including one 17-inch laptop for under $1,000.
The Satellite P-Series might be known for its gaming prowess, but now there are low-end versions that can serve as affordable media solutions as well. This past weekend, Toshiba launched its Satellite P205-S6237, delivering 17 inches of screen real estate to those with a modest budget.
This $999 laptop is not the first 17-inch model to hit the three-digit mark. The Acer Aspire 9300-5005 has already done it with its 17-inch screen behemoth, but it loads a low-end 1.6GHz AMD Turion X2 TL-50 processor. The P205-S6237's 1.73GHz Intel Core Duo T2080 is not that much better in the performance department, using last year's Intel technology, but it gives you enough to run Microsoft Windows Vista . At least the Acer laptop has discrete graphics (the nVidia GeForce Go 7300).
Surprisingly, Toshiba is already starting to integrate Intel's Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN with 802.11n support. The wireless chipset will be part of Intel's forthcoming Santa Rosa platform. Other features include a built-in webcam and 1440-by-900 native resolution on the 17-inch screen.
For those looking for a little bit more, the $1,199 Satellite P205-S6267 model will bump last year's Intel processor up to a 1.83GHz, while including 2GB of RAM instead of the 1GB last year's model offered. Both the P205-S6237 and P205-S6267 will feature a DVD drive with LabelFlash technology built-in. LabelFlash is an etching technology that burns images onto specialized media without the use of ink cartridges. It's practically identical to HP's LightScribe technology, which came out first with its monochromatic lasers. You can use an application like Nero to create an image that fits on a DVD, and the image is then burned on by flipping the DVD to the side where the specialized coating resides.
In addition to the two Satellite P205 laptops, Toshiba is also launching new models for the A series. The Satellite A205-S4577 may not have as big of a screen as a P205, but the 15.4-inch screen might do a better job with portability. It weighs 6.29 pounds and features Toshiba's Onyx Blue metallic lid (think shiny). It also comes with a 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5300 processor and 1GB of RAM. Graphics are still integrated, but you do get the same cool features as the P-Series, including 802.11n support, an integrated webcam, and a DVD burner with LabelFlash technology. And all this comes for about $999.
The P-series and A-series laptops are available directly from Toshiba at toshibadirect.com , as well as major computer retailers.
Copyright 2007 by Ziff Davis Media, Distributed by United Press International
Related stories:
Toshiba Announces Gallium Nitride Power FET with World's Highest Output Power in Ku-band
Toshiba Corporation today announced that it has developed a gallium nitride (GaN) power field effect transistor (FET) for the Ku-band (12GHz to 18GHz) frequency range that achieves an output power of 65.4W at 14.5GHz, the highest level of performance yet reported at this frequency band.
Top 10 things seen at CES
I realize that in the grand scheme of things readers don't care whether the job of a reporter is made easier or not. But I must admit that one of the cooler things at the show was that Sony, Phillips, Delphi and a few other companies made their press kits available on really small, easy-to-carry USB-based flash drives. Maybe someday companies will abandon those annoying, big, thick paper press packets.
Consumer Electronic Show: Day 1
Day 1 of the sprawling Consumer Electronic Show proved how important convergence and high-definition technology will be in 2006. From the HD-DVD promotion group's launch party to Sony's exhibit of its new HD camcorder, HD is promising to become the buzzword this year.
Las Vegas glitters with next-generation gadgets
The world's biggest electronics fair opened Thursday with high-definition televisions, next-generation DVD players and all-in-one communication tools blazing a trail for the digital future.
Toshiba Announces Gallium Nitride Power FET With World's Highest Power Output
Toshiba Corporation today announced development of a gallium nitride (GaN) power field effect transistor (FET) that far surpasses the operating performance of the gallium arsenide (GaAs) FET widely used in base stations for terrestrial and satellite microwave communications. The new transistor achieves output power of 174W at 6GHz, the highest level of performance yet reported at this frequency.
Scientists integrate data in three dimensions to study climate effects on young fish
From the surface, the two areas of ocean off the coasts of northern New Jersey and Long Island, New York look the same. But to NOAA scientists, the four-square-mile patches could not be more different as they view real-time underwater images and environmental data to try to figure out what lives there and how climate change is affecting marine life, especially very young fish.
GLAST mission operations at NASA Goddard powered up
Several bases of operations for NASA's Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) are gearing up for data from the recently launched satellite.
NASA to Attempt Historic Solar Sail Deployment
"Hold your hands out to the sun. What do you feel? Heat, of course. But there's pressure as well – though you've never noticed it, because it's so tiny. Over the area of your hands, it only comes to about a millionth of an ounce. But out in space, even a pressure as small as that can be important – for it's acting all the time, hour after hour, day after day. Unlike rocket fuel, it's free and unlimited. If we want to, we can use it; we can build sails to catch the radiation blowing from the sun."
[Home]
[Full version]