As we all know that Toshiba Satellite offers an affordable mobile
multimedia laptop with wireless communication built-in, a good processor
and good battery life so that the maximum mobility is guaranteed
through all the day.
For a machine that is going to sit on the shelf
at the Best Buy, the Toshiba series look like they would be more at
home under the arm of some suited, late '80s merchants.
The Satellite
series ships with either a 14-inch or 15.6-inch diagonal display.
Powered by your choice between Intel and AMD processors, both options
include TruBrite HD widescreen displays with 250GB/320GB hard drives,
720p resolution, DVD SuperMulti drives, Wi-Fi and multi-touch touch
pads.
The design and look is good, it comes in a wonderful silver
colour and has a very beautiful black keyboard. The screen is also
painted black around the edges. The Multimedia keys on the top of the
keyboard look nice, they are small round buttons. The power button is
smart and easy to push; the blue light gives it a nice touch too.
While
it's not as artfully rendered as the MacBook Air, the Toshiba is
incredibly light, and offers extras, such as HDMI and USB 3.0, missing
from Apple's laptop. Even Toshiba's battery life was excellent, beating
Lenovo's U300s for the best Windows-based notebook battery score to
date.
Toshiba also threw in its Resolution plus technology, which
promises to increase video to as high as 720p.
While it doesn't hurt to
have this feature, it's more of a marketer's bullet point than anything
else.
Talking about software, Toshiba has their Media Controller
application which enables users to share files, video, music and
pictures over Wi-Fi to the Xbox 360 via a drag-and-drop interface or to
other PCs running Windows. Real-time is a tool for finding documents
based on when they were last accessed. It also offers previews of files
and filters them by date.
1. You can use the operating system's
power-management features to set aggressive targets for when the display
will go dark and when the machine will slip into sleep mode.
2. Don't wrap the mains cable from around the body of the Toshiba Satellite power supply, as this can also damage the Toshiba Portege Z835 AC adapter mains cable.
3.
The lithium-ion battery should be stored at about 40% state-of-charge,
because laptop battery's self discharge can break the battery in the
storage.
4. Avoid dropping, hitting or otherwise abusing Toshiba Satellite C600 charger as this may result in the exposure.
5. Don't use with regularity one-recharging and over-discharging and high temperature.
Article source : http://goarticles.com/article/Toshiba-Satellite-Laptop-Review/7068464/
Monday, October 22, 2012
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