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Toshiba Satellite Pro L830

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It’s the cutting-edge business laptops that take the plaudits and seize the attention, but there’s much to be said for corporate machines that aren’t saddled with four-figure prices. Toshiba’s latest, the Satellite Pro L830-10G, is an affordable 13.3in laptop with its sights set on more modest IT budgets.

At just £413 inc VAT, the Toshiba is as cheap as business laptops get. That’s a tempting headline figure, but it doesn’t take long to see where Toshiba has taken swipes at its budget. Little inspires about the design, which is all grey and glossy black plastic, and the patchy build quality bespeaks the Satellite Pro’s budget beginnings.

The keyboard is the first giveaway. The plastic surround bounces with every keypress with battery like IBM 01H6136 Ac Adapter , IBM 02K6658 Ac Adapter , IBM 02K6669 Ac Adapter , IBM 02K6699 Ac Adapter , IBM 08K8206 Ac Adapter , IBM 08K8210 Ac Adapter , IBM 10N0951 Ac Adapter , IBM 11J8956 Ac Adapter , IBM ThinkPad R40 Ac Adapter , IBM ThinkPad R32 Ac Adapter , IBM ThinkPad S30 Ac Adapter , IBM ThinkPad i1300 Ac Adapter , and the right-hand side proved even more flexible than the left, making for an indistinct, woolly feel while typing. The trackpad suffers from similar afflictions: the touchpad itself is responsive, but the hinged buttons feel stiff and awkward.

The base is flexible, too, with even light twisting causing the chassis to distort noticeably, and stronger heaves elicit the odd creak here and there. The lid, thankfully, is a little better: you have to press quite firmly on the lid before any distortion is visible on the display.

At this price, it’s no surprise to find that it’s a 13.3in, 1,366 x 768 resolution panel. Image quality is pretty average, but it’s perfectly usable for everyday applications. The contrast ratio of 227:1 is a little better than the 196:1 we recorded from the £440 inc VAT Acer Aspire 5750G, our current budget favourite, but there’s some ugly backlight leakage along the bottom of the screen. Colour accuracy isn’t good, either, with colours in our test images lacking their usual vibrancy – with an average Delta E of 11, the Toshiba’s display is typical budget laptop fare.

There’s little to shout about on the inside. Intel’s Core i3-2367M is one of the firm’s ultra-low-power Sandy Bridge chips, and has two Hyper-Threaded cores running at 1.4GHz. The Toshiba’s 17W TDP testifies as to its efficiency, but it’s no powerhouse – it limped to a score of 0.34 in our benchmarks. The 2GB of memory takes its toll, but the sheer volume of pre-installed applications is partly to blame here. Trimming the Toshiba’s long list of start-up applications buoyed its benchmark results by 10%, the Satellite Pro reaching 0.38 in our benchmarks.