ie8 fix

Toshiba Satellite R15-S822

Full user review

See all user reviews
  • Rating Breakdown:
  • 5 star:
    23/32
    23
  • 4 star:
    6/32
    6
  • 3 star:
    1/32
    1
  • 2 star:
    0/32
    0
  • 1 star:
    2/32
    2
My rating: 0 stars

you have not rated this yet

Write review
Results 1 of 32
  • 4.0 stars

    "Vastly Underrated by CNET" on by ToshibaR15Owner

    Pros: Size (not too big), Battery Life, Array of Features/Hardware at a solid price

    Cons: Needs More RAM (easy to upgrade), Slow Hard Drive, Lots of Bloatware Pre-installed

    Summary: This notebook is much better than the CNET rating would lead you to believe.

    The whole point of this notebook is to find a happy medium between being small/light and being packed with hardware and features. They punish its rating because it's not as light as the lightest, feature-weak laptops, then punish its rating again because it doesn't perform as well as the top-end non-tablets. Let's go over the main complaints of the reviewer:

    (1) It's too heavy.

    Six pounds is really not all that heavy. Yes, it's heavier than the slate-style tablets that lack keyboards. It's also heavier than other convertible tablets like IBM's X41 and Compaq's tc4200 -- but each of these has a small screens (12.1" as opposed to the 14.1" of the R15) and also lacks an integrated DVD or CD drive. For a tablet with a keyboard, 14.1" screen, and DVD/CR-RW all on-board, 6 pounds is not too heavy at all.

    (2) It underperforms.

    This is probably due to the lack of RAM -- more on that later.

    (3) The screen wobbles.

    So do all laptops. I tested this a bit when I bought it at the retailer, and this screen doesn't seem to wobble any more than the others. There are also some stabilizers under the screen that prevent it from rotating in laptop mode once you've got it locked into place.

    (4) Our test version had a piece of dust under the screen.

    Pffft. Is there any better indicator that the reviewer has an anti-Toshiba vendetta for some reason?

    (5) It lacks: Gigabit ethernet, a multicard reader, DVD burner, fingerprint reader.

    This is not a top-of-the-line tablet PC. If you're looking to spend $3000, you're looking in the wrong price point. For the money, the hardware is plenty adequate.

    (6) Warranty is only one year.

    That's pretty standard guys.

    So what's actually good about this computer?

    Well, lots of things. Handwriting recognition is quite good. I have pretty bad hand writing, and it generally knows what I want to say. Corrections are fairly easy to make as well.

    It doesn't run too hot, which was a concern of mine. It gets warm, but warmth is unavoidable. It's not so hot as to be unusable on my lap in my hotbox of an apartment during the summer.

    It comes loaded with a lot of software. Pre-installation of a fully licensed version of Microsoft OneNote can't be underestimated. This is quite useful software for anyone interested in taking notes on their tablet.

    And what are the real problems with it?

    It does need more RAM. Again, my guess is that this is the reason it "underperformed" on CNET's tests. My desktop is a 1.7 GHz with 512 MB of 266 MHz RAM, and it runs just fine for me, so I expected the R15 to do the same with its slightly faster RAM. But, Windows XP Tablet Edition is a lot more bloated, and Toshiba doesn't help by preloading even more useless software, so at the end of the day, you will need at least another 512 MB of RAM. If you install it yourself (which is quite easy -- the manual even gives you instructions on how to do it) you can buy 512 for about $50 online, or $100 at Best Buy or CompUSA. Without the upgrade, it struggles when trying to run more than one application, and even Microsoft's "Experience Pack" applications have trouble running all by themselves. With the upgrade, it zips along without much slowdown at all, and with several apps running. Bottom line: Order the RAM also, and add that to the price of purchase when making your comparisons.

    The hard drive is also slow, at only 4200 RPM's, compared to most laptops that run at 5400 or even 7200. This makes the lack of RAM an even bigger problem, since the OS has to use the slow hard drive as "extra" RAM if you don't have enough.

    The multitudes of unnecessary apps installed by Toshiba is a pain, but you can disable these if you know what you're doing.

    So, here's the upshot. If you're considering a Tablet PC, first decide if you really want a tablet or not. If so, decide if you want a slate or convertible. Slates are lighter without a keyboard and slower processors (designed to replace clipboards for med students) and convertibles are heavier but have keyboards (designed to replace paper notebooks for students). If you decide on a convertible, figure out what size screen you want. Unlike processor speed or RAM, where more is always better, a bigger screen isn't necessarily better, since bigger means heavier and less portable.

    I decided on a convertible tablet with at least a 14.1" screen, under $2000. This basically led me to either this computer, or the Gateway M275 series. The Gateway is slightly lighter, thinner, and slightly faster. But I read too many horror stories about Gateway customer service, and there were also a lot of complaints that the Gateway runs hot. Between those two factors, I decided on the Toshiba.

    Obviously I'm pretty happy with it.

  • 4 replies to this review
  • reply on May 9, 2006 by HamDzui

    I bought it 2 months ago in Circuitcity at the price 1200$... then upgraded the memory to 2GB. -&gt; Total cost 1400$. Not to much wih this configuration (TabletPC 14", DVD Burner, 2GB DDR Ram)<br><br>I installed tons of heavy software like AutoMap, Photoshop, Corel Draw, 3D StudioMax... and opened it at the same time... Can you guess what happened? It worked faster than I thought before. How about its stable? Running 1 month non stop and it was slightly warm... <br><br>Recommend: Should uprade to 2GB

  • reply on March 1, 2006 by milehighmommy

    Seems the consideration this reviewer gave was more thoughtful than Cnet's own review. I went thru same thought process as this reviewer myself, since I was not considering the $3000 laptop range.

  • reply on July 22, 2005 by jcg3

    All i can say is this guy knows what he is talking about. If you read this review very carefully he basically spells it out for you.<br><br>Best of luck to you on your shopping,<br>JCG3<br><br>ps- do go to best buy and try it out your self

  • reply on July 16, 2005 by jirgis

    If you really like Toshiba then send the extra money to buy the M200 series you will be better off

Back to product review See 32 reviews

Write a Review

Quickly sign in with: or Log in or create an account to post a review.
Submit

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks is prohibited. Click here to review our site terms of use.

Sponsored Premier Brands on CNET

Where to Buy

Pricing not available

Set price alert
ie8 fix
ie8 fix
ie8 fix
  • Recently Viewed Products
  • My Lists
  • My Software Updates
  • Promo
  • Log In | Join CNET