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    Toshiba Tecra A11 review

Toshiba Tecra A11

By Benny Har-Even, 2 Mar 2010

Rating: $rating

Price as reviewed:£649 ex. VAT
Best price: £487.66

After our first look at the Tecra A11 at Toshiba’s 2010 press day, in this review we take an in-depth look at this new business notebook.

There’s also a utility called ‘Reeltime’ that displays all the applications and documents you’ve had open in chronological order for the past three months. This could prove useful if you lose track of a file. Additionally there’s a Bulletin board on which you can pin shortcuts to applications and add gadgets such as post-it notes – it looks cute but it feels more like a consumer application rather than one a business user would want and need.

A key feature of this machine is its large 15.6in screen and Toshiba has quite deliberately given it a non-reflective display that doesn’t distract with glare after prolonged use. While the screen is natively 16:9 widescreen the 1,366 x 768 resolution is as low as it could be, and this will hamper the laptops use for more creative tasks, unless you output to an external display. At least the screen is bright and the lighting even.

The keyboard itself is good in terms of feel and while there’s a perceptible movement of the keys underneath the fingers, the action is solid and we were quickly typing at speed. Toshiba has made good use of space with the Page up and Down keys down the side but the Enter key is slightly smaller than we would have liked. When you press the Function key, an overlay of each icon appears at the top of the screen and icons with labels appear as you select the option, which does make it easy to see what you’re doing.

In addition to the regular track pad, Toshiba has provided a TrackPoint controller - Lenovo ThinkPad style - along with mini mouse buttons beneath the space bar. While some may not care for this, having both this and a track pad as an option is a definite boon. However, the TrackPoint cover felt rough and it also lacked the central Thinkpad scroll button. This means you have to take your fingers off the keyboard and move down to the track pad to scroll, which negates much of the advantage of the TrackPoint.

The track pad does its job at least and though it’s not indicated it supports horizontal and vertical scrolling. The mouse buttons are silver, which adds some contrast to the all black look and feel.

Nestling between them is a finger print reader, which is part of Toshiba’s ‘Easyguard’ platform. This provides a choice between fingerprint registration, facial recognition via the webcam in the display bezel, or your regular text password. We set all of these up and all worked well. While the facial recognition tool is not really a timesaver, there’s something satisfyingly futuristic about logging in without having to touch the keyboard. Additionally on the right there’s a smartcard slot, enabling this to fit into corporate environments. That said the lack of vPro for remote management is a disappointment.

A pleasing touch is that of the four USB ports (two on either side) one doubles up as an eSATA port. Also on the left is an ExpressCard/54 slot and a mini Displayport connector, but this means you’ll need an adaptor to connect to any screen in DisplayPort, DVI or HDMI. However, analogue VGA is provided at the rear, along with a not quite extinct serial connection.

On the right, along with headphone and microphone ports you’ll find an integrated DVD Re-Writer. Moving to the front you’ll find an SD/Memory Stick reader and an on/off switch for wireless connectivity. You’ll also find five lights for disk activity and power.

It’s all pretty comprehensive, giving an overall impression of a solid, effective notebook. It won’t turn heads, it’s not the thinnest or lightest, the resolution is limited and the battery life is decent if unspectacular, but with plenty of raw horsepower it will let you get your job done with the minimum of fuss.

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2 comments

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RE:

Features seems impressive!But its cost is too much that i can't afford to have this one and also i want to know if its compatible with Mac OS or not ?

By annejaa on Friday Mar 12

0 people out of 2 found this comment useful.

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We use them,,,

We used the A10 before them and have started rolling out the A11s to users, when their machines come up for renewal.

Using the same docking station as the previous model helps keep the costs down as well.

They are a very good and cheap workhorse, given how expensive the Tecras used to be!

We are very happy with them. We could save a bit and get cheaper laptops, but having experienced the HP ProBook 17", which costs about the same, I'd go for the A11 every time. It is sturdier and has a much better build quality.

It offer excellent value for money, being the right trade off on build quality to price.

By big_D on Monday Jun 7

2 people out of 2 found this comment useful.

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