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Toshiba Satellite A355-S6943 Specifications:
- Windows Vista Home Premium (SP1, 64-bit)
- Intel Core 2 Duo Processor P7450 (2.13GHz, 3MB L2, 1066MHz FSB)
- 16.0" diagonal widescreen TruBrite TFT LCD display at 1366x768 (WXGA)
- ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3650 with 512MB video memory
- Intel Wireless WiFi Link 5100AGN (802.11a/g/n)
- 4GB PC2-6400 DDR2 SDRAM (maximum capacity 4GB)
- 500GB 250GB Serial ATA hard disk drive (5400RPM)
- DVD SuperMulti ( /-R double layer) drive with Labelflash
- 1.3 megapixel webcam
- Harmon/Kardon stereo speakers
- Dimensions (WxDxH): 15.1" x 10.5" x 1.6"
- Weight: 6 lbs 11.6oz with six-cell battery
- 90W (19V x 6.3A) 100-240V AC Adapter
- 6-cell 10.8v 44Wh Lithium Ion battery
- 1-Year Standard Limited Warranty
- Price as configured: $1,149.99
Build and Design
The A355 is nearly identical to the older A305 notebook, even sharing the same overall design and paint job. The plastics are glossy or even mirror-like over much of the notebook. The cover has a pinstripe metallic silver and chrome pattern, changing to a chrome and black pattern on the inside. The keyboard shares the same high gloss look with black paint and white lettering. The lower half of the chassis is standard plastic with a matte finish, with removable covers for each user-replaceable part.The Toshiba A355 feels very durable through the use of good plastics and the scratch-resistant Fusion finish. Chassis flex is minimal if you are holding the notebook from a side corner. Screen protection is pretty good with only mild screen distortions when pressing on the back of the display cover. The glossy Fusion finish holds up well against day to day abrasions ... which might include slipping it in and out of your backpack as you take it to class.
Access to system components is easy through three panels on the bottom of the notebook. None of the panels have €ššššš€šššš€ššš€šš€š€œwarranty void if removed€ššššš stickers to inhibit upgrades. Two panels give access to the dual hard drives and the third panel allows you to swap out the RAM and wireless card.
Display
The 16€ššššš TruBrite display features a 16:9 ratio and has good color saturation and contrast thanks in part to the glossy polarizer layer. Compared to other notebooks this panel falls into the middle of the ground with average viewing angles. Vertical viewing angles are limited to a sweet spot that ranges about 15 degrees up or down before colors start to invert or wash out. Horizontal viewing angles are better, staying accurate at steep angles from both sides. Backlight levels are great for viewing in bright conditions, but aren€ššššš€ššššžt bright enough for outdoor viewing.
Keyboard and Touchpad
The glossy keyboard is comfortable to type on, but not the easiest to read in bright rooms. The keyboard surface is firm with minimal flex under hard typing and individual key action is smooth with a mild click when pressed. The glossy surface reflects glare from overhead lights, which depending on the angle completely wash out the white lettering on each key. Smudges are another problem with the glossy surface which needs to be wiped down frequently to keep its clean fingerprint-free look.Toshiba included an ALPS touchpad on the A355, which after some tweaking became very usable. Out of the box the cursor was very twitchy until I ramped up the sensitivity and lowered the speed. The touchpad surface is a matte overlay on the palmrest with the color scheme slightly showing through. The surface was easy to move across under most conditions, but the flush surface made it hard to stay within the boundaries. Scrolling took a while to get used to since I kept moving off of the touchpad surface.
The A355 also supports disabling the lights for the media keys and around the touchpad. This can help reduce all the distracting illumination €ššššš€šššš€ššš€šš€š€œfeatures€ššššš when watching a movie with the lights out.
Ports and Features
Port selection on the A355 is great, with four USB ports, FireWire, eSATA through a USB combo port, S-Video, HDMI, VGA, LAN, and audio jacks. This notebook also features a 5-in-1 multicard reader, ExpressCard/54 slot, and a FM Tuner. In this day and age the S-Video port is somewhat of a mystery, but at least they didn€ššššš€ššššžt take away something else to fit that on the side. The FM Tuner is great if you don€ššššš€ššššžt want to be connected to the internet to listen to streaming music, but it does require a whip antenna attached to the side to function.
Performance
System performance is excellent with the 2.16GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor and ATI Radeon 3650 dedicated graphics. The system can handle most modern games, Crysis not-included, at detail high settings. Standard day-to-day performance is very good with minimal lag when opening programs and having quick boot or shutdown times. The dual hard drives allow you to separate file storage from installed software, even speeding up certain applications that are disk intensive by not causing the other drive to lag out when you are multitasking. We did not see any significant gains between the two systems in our benchmarking and any gains we did see could be explained by newer drivers or the 64-bit operating system.
WPrime is a benchmark similar to Super Pi in that it forces the processor to do intense mathematical calculations, but the difference is this application is multi-threaded and represents dual core processors better. Lower numbers indicate better performance.
Notebook / CPU wPrime 32M time Toshiba Satellite A355 (Core 2 Duo P7450 @ 2.16GHz) 35.848s Lenovo IdeaPad Y650 (Core 2 Duo P8700 @ 2.53GHz) 30.126s Dell Studio XPS 16 (Core 2 Duo P8600 @ 2.4GHz) 31.827s Lenovo IdeaPad Y530 (Core 2 Duo P7350 @ 2.0GHz) 38.455s Dell Studio 15 (Core 2 Duo T5750 @ 2.0GHz) 41.246s HP Pavilion dv5z (Turion X2 Ultra ZM-80 @ 2.1GHz) 39.745s Dell Vostro 1510 (Core 2 Duo T5670 @ 1.8GHz) 51.875s Dell Inspiron 1525 (Core 2 Duo T7250 @ 2.0GHz) 43.569s Dell XPS M1530 (Core 2 Duo T7500 @ 2.2GHz) 37.485s PCMark05 measures overall notebook performance based on processor, hard drive, operating system, RAM, and graphics (higher scores are better):
Notebook PCMark05 Score Toshiba Satellite A355 (2.16GHz Intel P7450, ATI Radeon HD 3650 512MB) 5,842 PCMarks Lenovo IdeaPad Y650 (2.53GHz Intel P8700, NVIDIA GeForce G 105M 256MB) 5,575 PCMarks Dell Studio XPS 16 (2.4GHz Intel P8600, ATI Mobility RADEON HD 3670 512MB) 6,303 PCMarks Lenovo IdeaPad Y530 (2.0GHz Intel P7350, Nvidia 9300M 256MB) 4,844 PCMarks Dell Studio 15 (2.0GHz Intel T5750, Intel X3100) 3,998 PCMarks HP Pavilion dv5z (2.1GHz Turion X2 Ultra ZM-80, ATI Radeon HD 3200) 3,994 PCMarks Dell Vostro 1510 (1.8GHz Intel T5670, Intel X3100) 3,568 PCMarks Dell Inspiron 1525 (2.0GHz Intel T7250, Intel X3100) 4,149 PCMarks Dell XPS M1530 (2.20GHz Intel T7500, Nvidia 8600M GT 256MB) 5,412 PCMarks
3DMark06 comparison results for graphics performance (higher scores are better):
Notebook 3DMark06 Score Toshiba Satellite A355 (2.16GHz Intel P7450, ATI Radeon HD 3650 512MB) 4,084 3DMarks Lenovo IdeaPad Y650 (2.53GHz Intel P8700, NVIDIA GeForce G 105M 256MB) 2,472 3DMarks Dell Studio XPS 16 (2.4GHz Intel P8600, ATI Mobility RADEON HD 3670 512MB) 4,855 3DMarks Lenovo IdeaPad Y530 (2.0GHz Intel P7350, Nvidia 9300M 256MB) 1,833 3DMarks Dell Studio 15 (2.0GHz Intel T5750, Intel X3100) 493 3DMarks HP Pavilion dv5z (2.1GHz Turion X2 Ultra ZM-80, ATI Radeon HD 3200) 1,599 3DMarks Dell Vostro 1510 (1.8GHz Intel T5670, Intel X3100) 519 3DMarks Dell Inspiron 1525 (2.0GHz Intel T7250, Intel X3100) 545 3DMarks Dell XPS M1530 (2.20GHz Intel T7500, Nvidia 8600M GT 256MB) 4,332 3DMarks All of the 3DMark06 scores for all of the systems listed above were run at 1280 x 800 or 1280x768 based on the available screen resolutions for use with the built-in screen.
HDTune storage drive performance results:
Speakers and Audio
Toshiba uses Harmon/Kardon speakers on the A300 and A350 series notebooks, which sound very good at lower volume levels. As you start to crank the volume up there is noticeable distortion. Bass and midrange are much better than average, with clear high notes. The speakers are located above the keyboard instead of the crotch-firing speakers we have seen on some recent models. This location prevents clothing from muffling the speakers with it on your lap. The A355 with HDMI out supports digital audio out through the HDMI port for watching a on a bigger screen with only using a single cable.Battery
Power consumption improved over the previous A305, but since Toshiba decreased the capacity of the battery it is hard to notice any gains. The old model with the 9-cell battery managed 2 hours and 50 minutes of runtime. The A355 with its 6-cell battery, brightness set to 70%, Vista set to the Balanced profile, and wireless active managed 2 hours and 14 minutes.Heat and Noise
Toshiba designed the A355 to handle heavy GPU and CPU loads without drastically increasing the temperature of the chassis. Fan noise is just above a whisper with the fans chugging along at full speed with the system under load and inaudible under normal circumstances. As the temperatures drop the fan either stops entirely or barely spins to draw air through the notebook.
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dietcokefiend DietGreenTeaFiend
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A Toshiba review, 414 reads and NO comment?? What's going on??/
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This variation of the same notebook on Newegg is faster and costs less: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834114639
Overall, I'm loving the 4k+ 3dmark06 but still wish Toshiba would adopt the ATI 4xxx Mobility series.
Perkam -
Charles P. Jefferies Lead Moderator Super Moderator
Nice review. The notebook seems to be quite pricey given its specs, namely the lackluster screen res. Dual hard drive bays are a nice feature, as are the better-than-average speakers. Toshiba always does a good job in that department.
The HP dv6t is a direct competitor to this and is now available with the ATI HD 4530 and 4650. The latter is definitely better than the HD 3650, not sure about the 4530 though. dv6t product page:
http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/s...nce+and+entertainment&series_name=dv6t_series
It gets pricey fast when options are added. -
Perkam -
Good review, Kevin.
Don't like the look of the current generation of Toshiba laptops though. -
Excellent review! Too much money for what you get.
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For a bit more you can get a Dell Studio 16 with much better specs: 4gb DDR3, P8700, 3670, LED 720p, displayport, eSATA, etc.
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only thing that stands out is the dual-hard drives
the specs-for-price seem to be about a year behind -
Thanks for the review, Kevin.
Just curious, is there a RAID option for the A355? -
dietcokefiend DietGreenTeaFiend
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Ah, yet another victim of the 16:9 craze. Seriously, will people ever learn?! I guess they've forgotten that a 768px vertical resolution is very 1998ish (my c. 1999 Dell 1500FP LCD is 1024x768!). I really would be fine with 16:9 if it were 1920x1080 or whatever the resolution is between 1920x1080 and the horribly low 1366x768, but 1366x768 is much too low.
Just because it's 16:9 doesn't mean it's HD. I say keep the 16:10 ratio for lower resolutions, and restrict 16:9 for high-end "HD" notebooks where such a ratio is desired.
Otherwise, this is a good notebook. Does this notebook outright replace the A305, or will these two notebooks be produced side-by-side? -
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Toshiba's laptops are mostly on the expensive side but you get a solid machine. My sister's 2005 toshiba had a price tag of £1000 but she's still using it and it still cuts the cloth and does not appear used up. It's still rock solid!!
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Would love to see a poll - how many people actually want 16x9.
Put me down for "hell no".
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Discussion in 'Notebook News and Reviews' started by dietcokefiend, Mar 16, 2009.