Friday, April 1, 2016

Toshiba Portege A30t Review

Toshiba Portege A30t Review
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Designed for productivity workers on the go, the Toshiba Portege A30t-C1340 offers a vibrant 13-inch touch screen in a lightweight, 3.1-pound package. The $950 business-focused laptop provides solid performance and some useful preloaded apps, but it lacks the battery life, keyboard comfort and durability of many direct competitors in its price and size range.
Clothed in button-down black business attire, Toshiba Portege's A30t has a sophisticated all-black look that will fit right in, whether you're in the boardroom or at the airport departure lounge. Its lid and keyboard area are made of superstrong magnesium, and I prefer the A30t'with battery like dell 8012P battery, Dell Latitude CS Battery, Dell 8N884 Battery, Dell Latitude E4310 Battery, Dell Studio 14Z Battery, Dell Studio 1440 Battery, Dell 0K899K Battery, Dell M916K Battery, Dell PU556 Battery, Dell Inspiron 1318 Battery, Dell XPS M1330 Battery, Dell JN149 Batterytextured surface to the more traditional ThinkPad matte finish. However, unlike competitors from Lenovo and Dell, the Toshiba laptop has not been designed to pass any MIL-STD-810G durability tests.
At 3.1 pounds and 12.4 x 9 x 1 inches, the A30t is fairly light, but far from the thinnest system on the market: It sometimes felt chunky in my hands. Several 14-inch competitors, including the Lenovo ThinkPad T460s (3 pounds, 13.03 x 8.93 x 0.74 inches), HP EliteBook 745 G3 (3.4 pounds, 13.3 x 9.3 x 0.74 inches) are a bit thinner. Dell's XPS 13, which is targeted more at prosumers than businesses, is both lighter at 2.7 pounds and thinner at 11.98 x 7.88 x 0.6 inches.
While using the A30t's keyboard, I found the system's flat keys tolerable, but they have a shallow 1.39 mm of travel (1.5 to 2 mm is typical), and offer less feedback than we like. Fast and accurate typing is not one of my strengths, but the A30t's keyboard allowed me to put 43 words per minute onto the screen using the 10fastfingers.com typing test. That roughly matches my average of 45 words per minute.
The 3.8 x 1.8-inch touchpad is smooth, responsive and -- thanks to its discrete buttons -- lacks the annoying jitteriness that plagues some of its buttonless competitors. In my tests, I was able to not only navigate around the desktop with ease but also perform gestures such as pinch-to-zoom.

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