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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Toshiba Satellite M200 (Core 2 Duo 1.5GHz, 1GB RAM) By Alex Kidman, CNET.com.au February 26, 2008 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/hardware/laptops/soa/Toshiba-Satellite-M200-Core-2-Duo-1-5GHz-1GB-RAM-/0,2000065761,339286324,00.htm
Design The suffix is actually one of the few really unattractive things about the M200, which is an otherwise shiny and attractive 14-inch semi-portable laptop. We say semi-portable because it weighs in at 2.26kg, which will tug upon your shoulder reasonably fast. As with most 14-inch laptops, the keyboard is naturally a touch compressed, with no number pad and the home and page keys compressed against the right hand side of the keyboard. The exterior casing is in glossy black, which brings with it the ever present risk of fingerprint smudges when carried around. Features Performance Toshiba's asking price for the M200 PSMC3A-04P008 is AU$1,399 (at the time of writing Toshiba was offering a AU$100 cashback on M200 purchases), which in the current notebook market doesn't automatically make this a budget machine; the advent of ASUS' highly popular Eee has seen a slew of new sub $1000 notebooks flood the market. As such, it needed to draw every last erg of power out of its architecture to truly impress us. Its PC Mark score, sadly enough, wasn't that impressive, coming in at 3341. We're never going to expect much out of Intel's inbuilt graphics solutions, and indeed the X3100 managed a score of 388; not bad if you're looking for a basic productivity machine, but pretty much dead in the water for gamers. The M200 PSMC3A-04P008 managed a healthy enough one hour and thirty six minutes in our DVD playback test, with screen brightness at full and all other power saving measures switched off. For basic productivity work you could certainly expect more battery life than that, as the DVD test really does work the entire machine rather harder than most people in fact will on a regular basis. A time of 1:36 is essentially neither spectacular nor terrible, but this certainly isn't anywhere near being an all day portable machine.
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