View and Download Toshiba Satellite A105-S4014 specifications online. Toshiba Satellite A105-S4014: Specifications. Satellite A105-S4014 laptop pdf manual download. This is a review of the Toshiba Satellite A105 and A100 notebook offerings. For a few weeks now the Toshiba Satellite A100/A105 has topped the NotebookReview.com most popular notebooks ranking.
The Official Dynabook & Toshiba Support Website provides support for Satellite A105-S1014. View and Download Toshiba Satellite A105-S1014 specifications online. Toshiba Satellite A105-S1014: Specifications. Satellite A105-S1014 laptop pdf manual download. SATELLITE A105-S1014 Software Download drivers, software patches, and other updates for your Dynabook & Toshiba product.
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Pros
- Very fast at all tasks
- Excellent video system
- Good build quality
- Clean Windows install
- Toshiba value added software
- You may be able to get MS Office with this notebook
-
Cons
- Should have a DVI port with VGA adapter
- Bigger battery please
- Squishy keyboard
by Perry Longinotti, Canada
A notebook for all seasons: Toshiba's Satellite A100 / A105
This is a review of the Toshiba Satellite A105 and A100 notebook offerings. For a few weeks now the Toshiba Satellite A100/A105 has topped the NotebookReview.com most popular notebooks ranking. Approximately eight percent of all visitors to this site come here looking for information on this particular A105 laptop. So when Toshiba Canada offered us a review unit we jumped at the chance to have a look!
In Canada, this line of notebooks is strictly called the Satellite A100. In the USA it's called either the Satellite A100 or Satellite A105 (for our review purposes we'll call these notebooks the same). It makes an apples to apples comparison a little trickier, but that should not be a problem with this particular model because it is available in a seemingly endless array of configurations on both sides of the border. US residents get the added advantage of being able to order custom configurations through Toshibadirect.com. In both countries there are a number of skus of this notebook sold in retail stores and online.
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The exact model number we were sent is the Canadian A100-SK900E, the quick specs on that are:
- Intel T2500 2.0GHz Core Duo processor
- Nvidia Go 7600 256MB Graphics card
- 15.4″ widescreen TruBrite glossy display
- 120GB 5400RPM Hard Drive
- DVD Super Multi Burner optical drive
Out of Box Experience — Look and Feel
Toshiba's box is all business. No fancy artwork or decals here, just an understated brown box.
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Inside the box the A100 and accessories are packed in cardboard and there is a minimum of plastics. Some might call this boring, but I respect a company that uses easily biodegradable materials in their packaging.
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Removing the laptop from its cardboard cocoon there is some plastic to protect the unit's cover which is finished in a ‘Mist Grey' color (Peacock Blue and Copper can also be ordered if you use Toshibadirect.com). Overall, it is an understated looking notebook, but it certainly does not look generic.
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The chassis construction bears a family resemblance to Toshiba's other Satellites. In fact, this one looks like a smaller Satellite P100 17″ screen notebook. It feels just as solid in the hands and it resists torsion and flexing.
Open the A100 up and several features jump out immediately. First, the A100's 15.4″ wide screen display with TruBrite coating. Second, the harman/kardon speakers (situated above the keyboard in this case). The other item of note is the Dual Mode touchpad.
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Toshiba has built a nice little chassis here. The Satellite A100 and A105 range from the ultra-low price ($550.00) value end to the mid-stream price points in the $1,300.00 range depending on the specs. It certainly feels like a $1,300.00 model, so value shoppers are getting a really good deal.
Our model retails for $1,599.00 Canadian (about $1,425.00 US) and some retailers are including the Student and Teacher edition of Microsoft Office with this, or any, Toshiba notebook over $999.00. I am not sure if this is a Toshiba promotion but I recall seeing a similar promo in Canada for Toshiba notebooks last year. So the bundle and the price point indicate that this unit is aimed straight at the back to school buyer, how does it measure up?
Specifications: Schoolwork or Games?
This is pretty much the top dog on the A100/A105 chart in terms of specifications and Toshiba has outfitted this with some very nice components.
Processor and Chipset
The A100 gets top marks by using the Intel Core Duo T2500 CPU running at 2.00 Ghz and a 667 Front Side Bus (FSB). This dual core chip excels at everything a student is likely to throw at it. The chip's big advantage over last year's models is the ability to handle multiple workloads more efficiently. There are faster chips in Intel's lineup, but the T2500 hits the price/performance sweet-spot. It completed our SuperPi CPU benchmark (calculating Pi to two million places) in 1 minute 18 seconds. That is very respectable.
What makes Intel's Centrino platform nearly invincible is the integration of Intel's CPU, memory, input/output and networking technologies. The glue that binds all these components together is the chipset — in this case Intel's 945 PM. The ‘Northbridge' component of the chipset is where the memory controller resides and it also governs the video system's PCI-Express interface. This chip allows the CPU, memory and video system to communicate.
The ‘Southbridge' component of the chipset governs general input/output capabilities. In this case the part used is Intel's 82801 (also known as ICH7). This chip gives the A100 its SATA connection for its Hard Drive, USB 2.0 support, High Definition audio, and links the networking components.
Memory
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1 GB of DDR2 667 MHz in dual-channel mode matches the CPU's front side bus speed and avoids bottlenecks. It also insures that the A100 will be able to keep up with the T2500's multitasking ability. The quality of the A100's RAM gives it 4GB per second memory bandwidth according to SiSoft Sandra's memory benchmark.
Hard Drive
With a 120 GB Hard Drive there is a lot of storage in the A100 (likely to be filled with MP3s, video files and games in no time). The Drive is a Toshiba MK1234GSX and features an SATA interface and Native Command Queuing (NCQ). This later feature allows the drive to accept more than one read/write command at once, it then uses knowledge of its own access time and spin rate to decide which command to complete first. The drive's 5400 RPM rotational speed and NCQ provide solid input/output performance.
HDTune hard drive performance measurement (view large image)
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Optical Drive
Optical storage comes in the form of a Super Multi DVD Burner. This is a dual layer DVD burner that accepts both -/+ media. It burns regular DVD-/+R discs at 8x, re-writable discs at 4x, dual layer at 2.4x and DVD-RAM at 5x. This should cover most needs.
Graphics
As unlikely as it is for a student to play games on a computer, Toshiba has generously included one of the better mobile video chips in the A100. The GeForce Go 7600 is based on Nvidia's latest generation technology and it comes with 256 MB of dedicated video RAM. In addition to handling most current generation games at the A100's native resolution, the Go 7600 features some solid media accelerating technologies that should allow you to fully enjoy the screen. These include hardware accelerated decode of WMV, MPEG-2 and H.264, LCD sharpening and spatial-temporal de-interlacing. I am not sure to what degree the Go 7600's Pure Video feature helped, but I was very pleased with the quality of the DVD playback.
In raw performance terms, the Go 7600 managed a score of 3370 in 3DMark05. That puts it just below an ATI X1600 in synthetic benchmarks, but in real game play there will likely be little choosing between the two parts. There is a faster clocked version of this same chip called the Go 7600 GT — other than clock speeds the two parts appear to be identical.
Screen
As I mentioned in the first impression part of this review, the A100's LCD panel features TruBrite. This type screen coating is becoming a universal feature on consumer notebooks because it accentuates contrast. You really notice this when watching video or playing games. This screen is quite bright and seems to have a fast enough response rate for playing games. There is a bit of light bleeding along the bottom of the screen when viewed in the dark — so if viewing movies in pitch dark conditions is your cup of tea, keep this fact in mind. I tried to capture this with my digital camera, but its sensitivity to light exaggerated the effect so much that I did not use the photos.
Wireless
Wireless networking is handled by the Intel PRO/wireless 3945ABG chip. Other than lacking some of the interesting bandwidth doubling technologies of other vendors, this chip is as good as it gets. I should point out that often those 2x network technologies require matching wireless routers. Personally I prefer to stick to standards. With the proliferation of 802.11b and g networks, it is nice that the A100 offers users the option to go with the less cluttered 802.11a standard. Antenna performance was not quite up to the level of my current WiFi champ, but the A100 was certainly able to hold a signal in my house with no problems at all.
Audio
Top right hand side harman/kardon audio speaker on the A105 (view large image)
High Definition audio is present on the A100. What is this you ask? The vast majority of notebooks use the ‘host audio' capabilities of their chipsets. This is then output via a codec chip. What this means is that rather than having a dedicated hardware based mixer and signal processor (like an Audigy for example), the work is handled by the ‘host' (read CPU). There is nothing wrong with this approach and the powerful CPUs of the last few years have allayed any concerns people might have had about the CPU being tied up with audio tasks. In the A100, this ‘soft audio' is output through a Realtek ALC861 codec chip. This is a pretty good chip that supports 24bit resolution at 96 kHz. It is certainly a step-up from the AC'97 codecs standard on a lot of notebooks. It is important to have a good codec because the most crystal clear and perfect audio could be ruined by a codec chip that only supports low resolution and sampling rates.
Toshiba outfits the A100 with harman/kardon speakers so it is a good thing that they did not skimp on the codec. These are pretty good for laptop speakers — suitable for filling a small room with sound. Bass is on the weak side, but this is true of almost every notebook that I have tested.
Ports
Front side view of Satellite A105 (view large image)
A 5-in-1 media card reader is included that supports the smaller card formats. A four pin firewire port is included for connecting that DV cam you have kicking about.
Toshiba has outfitted the A100 with both a Cardbus/PCMCIA and Express Card slot. This is a smart move that offers users the best of both worlds: compatibility with current and past cards and the ability to use the interesting cards that are on the horizon. HDTV tuner cards come to mind as examples of Express Card technology that would appeal to the A100's target market.
Back side view of Toshiba Satellite A100 (view large image)
Left side view of Toshiba Satellite A105 (view large image)
Right side view of Toshiba Satellite A105 (view large image)
This was the third notebook in a row that I have tested that lacked a DVI out port. The A100 only comes with VGA and S-Video out.
Battery and Power
Included battery (view large image)
Battery Eater Pro gobbled up every last trace of power in the A100's battery in just over 67 minutes. With a 4000mAh 6-cell battery, I was not too surprised by the A100's result. A 9-cell 5600mAh unit would be a better fit in my opinion.
Under side view of A105 notebook with battery removed (view large image)
Battery Eater Pro is a good tool for getting absolute quantifiable results, but I still like to get a sense for how long you can use a laptop on battery power in real world conditions. Once again I turned to my trusty Lord of the Rings battery torture routine. How far into the Fellowship of the Ring (extended edition) could the A100 get before failing?
The A100's default DVD watching power profile set the LCD panel to a perfect brightness. With volume on full blast, I managed to get 1:37:55 into the first disk before WinDVD stopped playback (there was 5% battery left).
I then tried wireless surfing until the A100's battery ran out of juice and got a respectable 2:20 from it. I noticed the display was pretty bright on the ‘word processing' power profile and I could have turned it down a bit for a minute or two of extra time.
AC power supplies can add some serious bulk to many of today's notebooks. The A100 power adapter is reasonably sized. It could be smaller but that would likely add expense and raise the price.
Included Software and Disks
Restore disks for the Operating System and Utilities are included. Toshiba provides a relatively clean install of Windows XP Home Edition. Their own utilities for power management and networking are included. I have said this before, but I really like Toshiba's application suite and other makers are following suit with good applications of their own. LG in particular has raised the ante a bit by providing their own update service along the lines of Windows Update. This is great for insuring that you always have the latest utilities and drivers.
Bundled software includes the usual assortment of DVD burning and playback utilities. Among these, Intervideo's WinDVD is included. This is a shame because it looks as though it has not been updated in years and lags behind PowerDVD in terms of user interface and usability.
Toshiba also bundles Microsoft Office One Note, something that students might find useful. As I mentioned before, certain Canadian retailers are offering a free Student and Teacher Edition of Office with this notebook — that is going to be much more useful in the long run. If you are in Canada and shopping for a notebook I would strongly encourage you to look into this offer.
Performance
Once again, Intel's Core Duo impresses. Only the most demanding games will cause problems for the A100 and the bottleneck with the video system (as good as it is). For other computational tasks the T2500 won't disappoint. Frankly, Intel's platform will crush anything that AMD can offer this back to school season so I would avoid Turion X2 unless the price is very low.
Another synthetic benchmark we use is PCMark 05. In this test the A100 delivered a score of 4,092. In detail, the PCMark 05 score looked like this:
PCMark05 | |
HDD — XP Startup | 5.65 MB/s |
Physics and 3D | 156.79 FPS |
Transparent Windows | 623.45 Windows/s |
3D — Pixel Shader | 89.76 FPS |
Web Page Rendering | 3.11 Pages/s |
File Decryption | 49.74 MB/s |
Graphics Memory — 64 Lines | 981.98.93 FPS |
HDD — General Usage | 3.77 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 1 / Audio Compression | 2028.42 KB/s |
Multithreaded Test 1 / Video Encoding | 308.74 KB/s |
Multithreaded Test 2 / Text Edit | 106.23 Pages/s |
Multithreaded Test 2 / Image Decompression | 23.51 MPixels/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / File Compression | 7.86 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / File Encryption | 17.59 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / HDD — Virus Scan | 11.66 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / Memory Latency — Random 16 MB | 8.01 MAccesses/s |
Super Pi Comparison Results
Notebook | Time |
Toshiba Satellite A100 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Asus W3H760DD (2.0 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 33s |
Dell Inspiron e1505 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 16s |
Lenovo ThinkPad T60 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Toshiba Satellite M100 (2.00GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Samsung X60 (1.66GHz Core Duo) | 1m 29s |
Dell XPS M140 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 41s |
Sony VAIO FS680 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 53s |
IBM ThinkPad T43 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 45s |
PCMark05 Comparison Results
Notebook | PCMark05 Score |
Toshiba Satellite A100 (2.0GHz Core Duo | 4,092 PCMarks |
Fujitsu N6410 (1.66GHz Core Duo) | 3,487 PCMarks |
Alienware M7700 (AMD Athlon FX-60) | 5,597 PCMarks |
Sony Vaio SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400) | 3,637 PCMarks |
Dell Inspiron e1405 (1.66 GHz Intel T2300) | 2,879 PCMarks |
Asus V6J (1.86GHz Core Duo T2400) | 3,646 PCMarks |
Toshiba Satellite M70 (Pentium M 1.86GHz) | 1,877 PCMarks |
Ergonomics
Keyboard and Touchpad
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The A100's keyboard is a bit spongy and the keys offer long travel. I personally prefer a stiff keyboard that does not flex when I hammer on it. I did not find that it slowed me down at all, but if you are picky about keyboards you might like to try the A100 out in a store beforehand. Most students are probably not too picky about their keyboards so this keyboard is probably not an issue for the target audience of the A100.
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Toshiba's unique Dual Mode Touchpad is featured on the A100. This offers a simple toggle between normal mousing and programmable quick launch buttons. I found that it worked well and did not interfere with basic use, and that can not be said of all touchpad solutions. I also liked the way it worked perfectly out of the box without any tweaking of sensitivity settings.
Build and Durability
Toshiba Satellite A105-s1014
With a weight of about 6.1 lbs the A100 is about average in terms of portability and heft, but good when you consider its solid-feeling construction. Most of the A100's dimensions are typical of 15 inch notebooks, but the thickness (over and inch at its widest) could be improved.
Overall, the A100's feel suggests that it will easily survive the average three year notebook lifespan. Even though I cannot imagine living with a single notebook that long — friendships and marriages are meant to last, gadgets should be changed as often as possible! Seriously though, Toshiba's Satellite line has a long history of being dependable notebooks and I don't see the A100 being any different.
Heat and Fans
Heat was not an issue under normal use. Intel has devised a platform with such excellent thermal properties that notebook makers can quite easily create chassis with adequate cooling.
What often throws a spanner into a maker's thermal plan is the heat generated by the video system. Both Nvidia and ATI offer power saving solutions and I have tested both, but the combination of the Go 7600 and this chassis really impressed me. The A100 palm rests, keyboard and touch pad are all cool to the touch even when the notebook has been on for hours. Watching a DVD when on AC power did not generate heat or fan noise. The only hint of heat comes from the gentle flow of exhaust on the left hand side of the A100 — very nice!
Toshiba Satellite A105-s1014 Drivers
When powered by battery the A100 was silent and cool.
Conclusion, is it worth the money?
The A100 is a great value in the configuration that I tested. It offers performance that will be significantly faster than units in this price range with either shared memory video systems or lower-end dedicated video systems such as the GeForce Go 7300 and 7400 or ATI X1400. With the A100's excellent hardware specifications and the current promotion in Canada offering free Student/Teacher Microsoft Office with this notebook the only other thing a student will need is a carrying bag. Props to Toshiba for making this so easy.
Nothing is perfect, and the A100 does have a couple of areas that could be improved. I think the battery should be a 9-cell unit. Not being able to complete an average length DVD on a single battery charge is a bummer. I also think the keyboard could be stiffer, but that is coming from a confessed keyboard snob.
This is a competitive price range but the A100 is pretty tough to beat. I was not able to configure a comparable Dell Inspiron (slower RAM and less powerful video system). It might seem like I am picking on Apple lately, but the MacBook stands out as a machine designed for students:
Toshiba A100 | Apple MacBook | |
CPU | 2.00 GHz Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix is a English album released on Oct 2005. Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix Album has 8 songs sung by Jimi Hendrix Experience, Jimi Hendrix. Listen to all songs in high quality & download Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix. Experience hendrix download full. John Scofield - That's What I Say - John Scofield Plays the Music of Ray Charles (2005) (FLAC).zip. © 1996-2020 Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. All Rights Reserved. 'JIMI HENDRIX' and related logos are trademarks of Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. | 2.00 GHz |
RAM | 1 GB DDR2 667 | 1 GB DDR2 667 |
HDD | 120 GB 5400 RPM | 120 GB 5400 RPM |
Video | 256 MB GeForce Go 7600 | Intel GMA 950 |
Networking | Intel 3945ABG | Airport BG Bluetooth 2.0 EDR |
Display | 15.4″ WXGA+ (1280*800), VGA, S-Video | 13.3″ WXGA+ (1280*800), DVI |
Optical | DVDR 8x Dual Layer | DVDR 4x |
Slot | Cardbus, Expresscard/54 | Expresscard/34 |
Wired Networking | 10/100, 56k Modem | Gigabit Ethernet |
Portability | 6.1 lbs, 11.8″ * 10.5″ * 1.4″ | 5.2 lbs, 12.8″ * 8.9″ * 1.1″ |
Extras | Microsft Office Student and Teacher Ed. | OSX, iLife, Front Row, iSight Cam, Mag Safe PSU |
Price (CDN) | $1599 | $1869 (less with student discount) |
I think this is a pretty interesting comparison in which the A100 looks really good. You can opt out of the dedicated video system in the A100 we tested and that drops the price considerably.
Personally I wish this notebook was out last fall when I bought my Acer Ferrari.
Pros
- Very fast at all tasks
- Excellent video system
- Good build quality
- Clean Windows install
- Toshiba value added software
- You may be able to get MS Office with this notebook
Cons
- Should have a DVI port with VGA adapter
- Bigger battery please
- Squishy keyboard
Note to Readers
Remember, the Satellite A105 / A100 notebook can be configured in vastly different ways, so performance specificataions will be suited to the processor and video solution you choose. They will not match exactly to those numbers presented in this review. Lower price and lower spec components will mean lower performance numbers. However, the build quality, screen and audio carries across the entire line Satellite A100 line no matter what internal components you configure.
People have a general notion that using varied kinds of devices require diverse knowledge on how to use it. However this is not the case and many times no matter the device brand you are using, going through certain instructional steps will all be the same. Kart racing pro download free. For instance, if you forgot the password of your Toshiba laptop, you need not devise separate ways to recover it.
What makes Intel's Centrino platform nearly invincible is the integration of Intel's CPU, memory, input/output and networking technologies. The glue that binds all these components together is the chipset — in this case Intel's 945 PM. The ‘Northbridge' component of the chipset is where the memory controller resides and it also governs the video system's PCI-Express interface. This chip allows the CPU, memory and video system to communicate.
The ‘Southbridge' component of the chipset governs general input/output capabilities. In this case the part used is Intel's 82801 (also known as ICH7). This chip gives the A100 its SATA connection for its Hard Drive, USB 2.0 support, High Definition audio, and links the networking components.
Memory
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1 GB of DDR2 667 MHz in dual-channel mode matches the CPU's front side bus speed and avoids bottlenecks. It also insures that the A100 will be able to keep up with the T2500's multitasking ability. The quality of the A100's RAM gives it 4GB per second memory bandwidth according to SiSoft Sandra's memory benchmark.
Hard Drive
With a 120 GB Hard Drive there is a lot of storage in the A100 (likely to be filled with MP3s, video files and games in no time). The Drive is a Toshiba MK1234GSX and features an SATA interface and Native Command Queuing (NCQ). This later feature allows the drive to accept more than one read/write command at once, it then uses knowledge of its own access time and spin rate to decide which command to complete first. The drive's 5400 RPM rotational speed and NCQ provide solid input/output performance.
HDTune hard drive performance measurement (view large image)
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Optical Drive
Optical storage comes in the form of a Super Multi DVD Burner. This is a dual layer DVD burner that accepts both -/+ media. It burns regular DVD-/+R discs at 8x, re-writable discs at 4x, dual layer at 2.4x and DVD-RAM at 5x. This should cover most needs.
Graphics
As unlikely as it is for a student to play games on a computer, Toshiba has generously included one of the better mobile video chips in the A100. The GeForce Go 7600 is based on Nvidia's latest generation technology and it comes with 256 MB of dedicated video RAM. In addition to handling most current generation games at the A100's native resolution, the Go 7600 features some solid media accelerating technologies that should allow you to fully enjoy the screen. These include hardware accelerated decode of WMV, MPEG-2 and H.264, LCD sharpening and spatial-temporal de-interlacing. I am not sure to what degree the Go 7600's Pure Video feature helped, but I was very pleased with the quality of the DVD playback.
In raw performance terms, the Go 7600 managed a score of 3370 in 3DMark05. That puts it just below an ATI X1600 in synthetic benchmarks, but in real game play there will likely be little choosing between the two parts. There is a faster clocked version of this same chip called the Go 7600 GT — other than clock speeds the two parts appear to be identical.
Screen
As I mentioned in the first impression part of this review, the A100's LCD panel features TruBrite. This type screen coating is becoming a universal feature on consumer notebooks because it accentuates contrast. You really notice this when watching video or playing games. This screen is quite bright and seems to have a fast enough response rate for playing games. There is a bit of light bleeding along the bottom of the screen when viewed in the dark — so if viewing movies in pitch dark conditions is your cup of tea, keep this fact in mind. I tried to capture this with my digital camera, but its sensitivity to light exaggerated the effect so much that I did not use the photos.
Wireless
Wireless networking is handled by the Intel PRO/wireless 3945ABG chip. Other than lacking some of the interesting bandwidth doubling technologies of other vendors, this chip is as good as it gets. I should point out that often those 2x network technologies require matching wireless routers. Personally I prefer to stick to standards. With the proliferation of 802.11b and g networks, it is nice that the A100 offers users the option to go with the less cluttered 802.11a standard. Antenna performance was not quite up to the level of my current WiFi champ, but the A100 was certainly able to hold a signal in my house with no problems at all.
Audio
Top right hand side harman/kardon audio speaker on the A105 (view large image)
High Definition audio is present on the A100. What is this you ask? The vast majority of notebooks use the ‘host audio' capabilities of their chipsets. This is then output via a codec chip. What this means is that rather than having a dedicated hardware based mixer and signal processor (like an Audigy for example), the work is handled by the ‘host' (read CPU). There is nothing wrong with this approach and the powerful CPUs of the last few years have allayed any concerns people might have had about the CPU being tied up with audio tasks. In the A100, this ‘soft audio' is output through a Realtek ALC861 codec chip. This is a pretty good chip that supports 24bit resolution at 96 kHz. It is certainly a step-up from the AC'97 codecs standard on a lot of notebooks. It is important to have a good codec because the most crystal clear and perfect audio could be ruined by a codec chip that only supports low resolution and sampling rates.
Toshiba outfits the A100 with harman/kardon speakers so it is a good thing that they did not skimp on the codec. These are pretty good for laptop speakers — suitable for filling a small room with sound. Bass is on the weak side, but this is true of almost every notebook that I have tested.
Ports
Front side view of Satellite A105 (view large image)
A 5-in-1 media card reader is included that supports the smaller card formats. A four pin firewire port is included for connecting that DV cam you have kicking about.
Toshiba has outfitted the A100 with both a Cardbus/PCMCIA and Express Card slot. This is a smart move that offers users the best of both worlds: compatibility with current and past cards and the ability to use the interesting cards that are on the horizon. HDTV tuner cards come to mind as examples of Express Card technology that would appeal to the A100's target market.
Back side view of Toshiba Satellite A100 (view large image)
Left side view of Toshiba Satellite A105 (view large image)
Right side view of Toshiba Satellite A105 (view large image)
This was the third notebook in a row that I have tested that lacked a DVI out port. The A100 only comes with VGA and S-Video out.
Battery and Power
Included battery (view large image)
Battery Eater Pro gobbled up every last trace of power in the A100's battery in just over 67 minutes. With a 4000mAh 6-cell battery, I was not too surprised by the A100's result. A 9-cell 5600mAh unit would be a better fit in my opinion.
Under side view of A105 notebook with battery removed (view large image)
Battery Eater Pro is a good tool for getting absolute quantifiable results, but I still like to get a sense for how long you can use a laptop on battery power in real world conditions. Once again I turned to my trusty Lord of the Rings battery torture routine. How far into the Fellowship of the Ring (extended edition) could the A100 get before failing?
The A100's default DVD watching power profile set the LCD panel to a perfect brightness. With volume on full blast, I managed to get 1:37:55 into the first disk before WinDVD stopped playback (there was 5% battery left).
I then tried wireless surfing until the A100's battery ran out of juice and got a respectable 2:20 from it. I noticed the display was pretty bright on the ‘word processing' power profile and I could have turned it down a bit for a minute or two of extra time.
AC power supplies can add some serious bulk to many of today's notebooks. The A100 power adapter is reasonably sized. It could be smaller but that would likely add expense and raise the price.
Included Software and Disks
Restore disks for the Operating System and Utilities are included. Toshiba provides a relatively clean install of Windows XP Home Edition. Their own utilities for power management and networking are included. I have said this before, but I really like Toshiba's application suite and other makers are following suit with good applications of their own. LG in particular has raised the ante a bit by providing their own update service along the lines of Windows Update. This is great for insuring that you always have the latest utilities and drivers.
Bundled software includes the usual assortment of DVD burning and playback utilities. Among these, Intervideo's WinDVD is included. This is a shame because it looks as though it has not been updated in years and lags behind PowerDVD in terms of user interface and usability.
Toshiba also bundles Microsoft Office One Note, something that students might find useful. As I mentioned before, certain Canadian retailers are offering a free Student and Teacher Edition of Office with this notebook — that is going to be much more useful in the long run. If you are in Canada and shopping for a notebook I would strongly encourage you to look into this offer.
Performance
Once again, Intel's Core Duo impresses. Only the most demanding games will cause problems for the A100 and the bottleneck with the video system (as good as it is). For other computational tasks the T2500 won't disappoint. Frankly, Intel's platform will crush anything that AMD can offer this back to school season so I would avoid Turion X2 unless the price is very low.
Another synthetic benchmark we use is PCMark 05. In this test the A100 delivered a score of 4,092. In detail, the PCMark 05 score looked like this:
PCMark05 | |
HDD — XP Startup | 5.65 MB/s |
Physics and 3D | 156.79 FPS |
Transparent Windows | 623.45 Windows/s |
3D — Pixel Shader | 89.76 FPS |
Web Page Rendering | 3.11 Pages/s |
File Decryption | 49.74 MB/s |
Graphics Memory — 64 Lines | 981.98.93 FPS |
HDD — General Usage | 3.77 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 1 / Audio Compression | 2028.42 KB/s |
Multithreaded Test 1 / Video Encoding | 308.74 KB/s |
Multithreaded Test 2 / Text Edit | 106.23 Pages/s |
Multithreaded Test 2 / Image Decompression | 23.51 MPixels/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / File Compression | 7.86 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / File Encryption | 17.59 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / HDD — Virus Scan | 11.66 MB/s |
Multithreaded Test 3 / Memory Latency — Random 16 MB | 8.01 MAccesses/s |
Super Pi Comparison Results
Notebook | Time |
Toshiba Satellite A100 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Asus W3H760DD (2.0 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 33s |
Dell Inspiron e1505 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 16s |
Lenovo ThinkPad T60 (2.0GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Toshiba Satellite M100 (2.00GHz Core Duo) | 1m 18s |
Samsung X60 (1.66GHz Core Duo) | 1m 29s |
Dell XPS M140 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 41s |
Sony VAIO FS680 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 53s |
IBM ThinkPad T43 (1.86 GHz Pentium M) | 1m 45s |
PCMark05 Comparison Results
Notebook | PCMark05 Score |
Toshiba Satellite A100 (2.0GHz Core Duo | 4,092 PCMarks |
Fujitsu N6410 (1.66GHz Core Duo) | 3,487 PCMarks |
Alienware M7700 (AMD Athlon FX-60) | 5,597 PCMarks |
Sony Vaio SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400) | 3,637 PCMarks |
Dell Inspiron e1405 (1.66 GHz Intel T2300) | 2,879 PCMarks |
Asus V6J (1.86GHz Core Duo T2400) | 3,646 PCMarks |
Toshiba Satellite M70 (Pentium M 1.86GHz) | 1,877 PCMarks |
Ergonomics
Keyboard and Touchpad
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The A100's keyboard is a bit spongy and the keys offer long travel. I personally prefer a stiff keyboard that does not flex when I hammer on it. I did not find that it slowed me down at all, but if you are picky about keyboards you might like to try the A100 out in a store beforehand. Most students are probably not too picky about their keyboards so this keyboard is probably not an issue for the target audience of the A100.
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Toshiba's unique Dual Mode Touchpad is featured on the A100. This offers a simple toggle between normal mousing and programmable quick launch buttons. I found that it worked well and did not interfere with basic use, and that can not be said of all touchpad solutions. I also liked the way it worked perfectly out of the box without any tweaking of sensitivity settings.
Build and Durability
Toshiba Satellite A105-s1014
With a weight of about 6.1 lbs the A100 is about average in terms of portability and heft, but good when you consider its solid-feeling construction. Most of the A100's dimensions are typical of 15 inch notebooks, but the thickness (over and inch at its widest) could be improved.
Overall, the A100's feel suggests that it will easily survive the average three year notebook lifespan. Even though I cannot imagine living with a single notebook that long — friendships and marriages are meant to last, gadgets should be changed as often as possible! Seriously though, Toshiba's Satellite line has a long history of being dependable notebooks and I don't see the A100 being any different.
Heat and Fans
Heat was not an issue under normal use. Intel has devised a platform with such excellent thermal properties that notebook makers can quite easily create chassis with adequate cooling.
What often throws a spanner into a maker's thermal plan is the heat generated by the video system. Both Nvidia and ATI offer power saving solutions and I have tested both, but the combination of the Go 7600 and this chassis really impressed me. The A100 palm rests, keyboard and touch pad are all cool to the touch even when the notebook has been on for hours. Watching a DVD when on AC power did not generate heat or fan noise. The only hint of heat comes from the gentle flow of exhaust on the left hand side of the A100 — very nice!
Toshiba Satellite A105-s1014 Drivers
When powered by battery the A100 was silent and cool.
Conclusion, is it worth the money?
The A100 is a great value in the configuration that I tested. It offers performance that will be significantly faster than units in this price range with either shared memory video systems or lower-end dedicated video systems such as the GeForce Go 7300 and 7400 or ATI X1400. With the A100's excellent hardware specifications and the current promotion in Canada offering free Student/Teacher Microsoft Office with this notebook the only other thing a student will need is a carrying bag. Props to Toshiba for making this so easy.
Nothing is perfect, and the A100 does have a couple of areas that could be improved. I think the battery should be a 9-cell unit. Not being able to complete an average length DVD on a single battery charge is a bummer. I also think the keyboard could be stiffer, but that is coming from a confessed keyboard snob.
This is a competitive price range but the A100 is pretty tough to beat. I was not able to configure a comparable Dell Inspiron (slower RAM and less powerful video system). It might seem like I am picking on Apple lately, but the MacBook stands out as a machine designed for students:
Toshiba A100 | Apple MacBook | |
CPU | 2.00 GHz Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix is a English album released on Oct 2005. Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix Album has 8 songs sung by Jimi Hendrix Experience, Jimi Hendrix. Listen to all songs in high quality & download Experience Hendrix The Best Of Jimi Hendrix. Experience hendrix download full. John Scofield - That's What I Say - John Scofield Plays the Music of Ray Charles (2005) (FLAC).zip. © 1996-2020 Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. All Rights Reserved. 'JIMI HENDRIX' and related logos are trademarks of Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. | 2.00 GHz |
RAM | 1 GB DDR2 667 | 1 GB DDR2 667 |
HDD | 120 GB 5400 RPM | 120 GB 5400 RPM |
Video | 256 MB GeForce Go 7600 | Intel GMA 950 |
Networking | Intel 3945ABG | Airport BG Bluetooth 2.0 EDR |
Display | 15.4″ WXGA+ (1280*800), VGA, S-Video | 13.3″ WXGA+ (1280*800), DVI |
Optical | DVDR 8x Dual Layer | DVDR 4x |
Slot | Cardbus, Expresscard/54 | Expresscard/34 |
Wired Networking | 10/100, 56k Modem | Gigabit Ethernet |
Portability | 6.1 lbs, 11.8″ * 10.5″ * 1.4″ | 5.2 lbs, 12.8″ * 8.9″ * 1.1″ |
Extras | Microsft Office Student and Teacher Ed. | OSX, iLife, Front Row, iSight Cam, Mag Safe PSU |
Price (CDN) | $1599 | $1869 (less with student discount) |
I think this is a pretty interesting comparison in which the A100 looks really good. You can opt out of the dedicated video system in the A100 we tested and that drops the price considerably.
Personally I wish this notebook was out last fall when I bought my Acer Ferrari.
Pros
- Very fast at all tasks
- Excellent video system
- Good build quality
- Clean Windows install
- Toshiba value added software
- You may be able to get MS Office with this notebook
Cons
- Should have a DVI port with VGA adapter
- Bigger battery please
- Squishy keyboard
Note to Readers
Remember, the Satellite A105 / A100 notebook can be configured in vastly different ways, so performance specificataions will be suited to the processor and video solution you choose. They will not match exactly to those numbers presented in this review. Lower price and lower spec components will mean lower performance numbers. However, the build quality, screen and audio carries across the entire line Satellite A100 line no matter what internal components you configure.
People have a general notion that using varied kinds of devices require diverse knowledge on how to use it. However this is not the case and many times no matter the device brand you are using, going through certain instructional steps will all be the same. Kart racing pro download free. For instance, if you forgot the password of your Toshiba laptop, you need not devise separate ways to recover it.
Single password recovery software will do the trick. All you need is to get hold of the genuine software program and follow the simple guidelines. In case you have lost the password, there is no need to worry because with the iSeePassword Windows Password Recovery software you can reset your password once again. It is a simple process, and you need not get into any complicated details to reset Toshiba laptop password. Neither do you have to go to factory settings or reinstall the system altogether. There are several series of laptops that Toshiba has. Whether it is the Portege, Tecra or Qosmio, the instructional steps will all be the same.Since it is very simple, you need not get into too many details and can successfully gain back your password and most importantly can reset it without losing out on any vital information.
Tutorial: How to Reset Password on Toshiba Laptop
If you have a pre-created password reset disk before you forgot the password, the you can easily reset your Toshiba password with it. But if you didn't have one, you'll never be able to access to your Toshiba laptop unless you re-install and reformat your system, an alternative to recover your forgotten Toshiba admin password is iSeePassword Windows recovery application. The safety and effectiveness of the method is guaranteed, follow step by step guide below.
Supported Toshiba Laptop Mode: Portege, Tecram, Satellite, Qosmio, Tecra, KIRA.
Support Windows OS : Windows 10/10.1/10.2, Windows 8/8.1 and Windows 7/Vista/XP
What You Need:
1) A USB driver with no less then 1G capacity or blank DVD or CD.
2) An accessible Windows or Mac computer or borrow one from your friend.
3) Reliable password recovery program (Standard version), directly download it below.
1Find An Accessible Computer and Download, Install Windows Password Recovery
Since you are unable to access your laptop, get in touch with a Windows or Mac computer that can be operated and download the software program. Launch it after installation. The man screen is like this:
2Insert Your USB Drive to PC and Create a Bootable Password Reset Disk (Take USB for Example)
When you run the program, you will see there are two options for your choice to create a bootable reset disk, one is USB drive, the other is DVD/CD. Because U disk is the most commonly used in our life and easy to use. So we take USB drive as an example to explain how this program works.
Now we're starting to make a USB reset disk, just insert your USB drive to your normal computer (Windows only), then you should target to your USB drive name in the dropdown list. Then click 'Burn USB ' button, it will take some times to write the Image to your USB drive.
3Then Insert This Created USB Reset Disk to Your Locked Computer and Restart Your PC
Now, after you crated a reset disk with your USB, you should plug your USB reset disk to your locked computer, restart to your computer and make the computer boot from USB device.
Change Boot Order on Your Locked Computer:
To make your computer boot from USB drive, you need to change the boot order on your Toshiba laptop.
First you have to restart your laptop and press F1 or F2 key repeatedly and navigate to the BIOS, then select USB drive as first boot order, and press F10 to save the changes you just made.Restart your computer, it will boot from USB drive this time.
4Select Admin Account and Reset Toshiba Password
This step, when you restart your Toshiba laptop, the system won't access to a lock screen, instead, the Windows password recovery program will be loaded. In the program, you're allowed to directly remove or reset the admin password of your Toshiba laptop, just select the target account and click 'Reset password' button, the program will remove your password protection.
Then reboot your Toshiba computer and change the boot order back to hard drive in the BISO, then access to your Toshiab computer without password.
You need not be a master at all these technicalities to reset your Toshiba computer password. The interface will be user-friendly, providing you the chance to get through the steps easily and without having to take any third party help. You can now guarantee access to your Toshiba. Since forgetting passwords have now become a common phenomenon, taking help from such advanced password recovery software is the ultimate security you have. Hence, there is no need to be apprehensive if you have lost track of your password and need to reset it again.