Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Toshiba announces 4K Ultra HD notebooks, 13.3″ Chromebook

Add as a preferred source on Google

Toshiba was one of the first PC makers to enter the resolution war with its Kirabook and now, at CES 2014, the company has re-affirmed its commitment to high-resolution notebooks with three new products.

Two of them, the Tecra W50 and Satellite P50t, are new systems, and both have a 15.6″ display with a resolution of 3840×2160, which works out to 282 pixels per inch. The Satellite’s screen accepts touch; the Tecra does not. 

Recommended Videos

The Tecra, being a workstation, can be equipped with an Nvidia K1200M GPU with two gigabytes of GDDR memory alongside an Intel 4th-gen Core i7 quad processor. That should make for a powerful combo, but the system manages to keep its weight below six pounds, which is respectable given the hardware. 

Storage comes in various sizes, from a 256GB solid state drive to a one terabyte mechanical drive, and the mechanical drives are protected  by a sensor that stops drive movement after major jolts. RAM ranges from 8GB in the base model up to a max of 32GB. An optical drive is included, and it can either be a standard DVD-drive or a Blu-Ray. Connectivity is rounded out by four USB ports, HDMI, Bluetooth 4.0 and Gigabit LAN, but 802.11ac WiFi is missing.

toshibasat
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Satellite, on the other hand, is built for the average consumer, which means it comes with an Intel 4th-gen dual-core rather than a quad, and integrated graphics is the only choice. 8GB of RAM is standard, and maxes out at 16GB, while the hard drive is a 750GB mechanical model. All of this is packed in a package that weighs over five pounds and measures a tad more than an inch thick, so the P50t is no featherweight. The connectivity options for the Satellite are similar to the Tecra, but a Blu-Ray drive isn’t offered. 

Pricing for the Tecra and Satellite remains unknown, and availability is not expected until mid-year.

Besides this pair of new 4k notebook, Toshiba is  offering an updated Kirabook, which will now offer a 4th-gen Intel dual-core alongside a 2560×1440 display. This ultra book is otherwise the same as the original, however, which is probably why it will be available in February for $1,499. Important extras include a two-year warranty, 25GB of free cloud storage and complimentary installation of Adobe Photoshop Elements 11 and Premiere Elements 11. 

toshibachromebook
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Also new from Toshiba is a 13.3″ Chrome OS system simply called the Toshiba Chromebook. Slated for release on February 16th at an MSRP of $279, the laptop offers a 1366×768 display, an Intel Celeron processor and two gigabytes of RAM. Storage comes from a 16GB solid state drive but, as with other Chromebooks, is backed up by 100GB of cloud storage from Google Drive.

These announcements prove that Toshiba is committed to upping display resolution, but will that translate to better laptops? We’ll have to wait and see when the Tecra and Satellite hit store shelves this summer. 

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
Topics
MacBook Air M5 review: Boring has never been this good
MacBook Air M5

Quick Take

The MacBook Air M5 is what happens when Apple keeps refining an already excellent laptop instead of reinventing it. On paper, the upgrades feel modest. The design is unchanged, the display is still 60Hz, and the M5 chip isn't delivering the dramatic leap that makes last year's model instantly obsolete. Yet after spending two weeks with it, none of that really matters.

Read more
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus review: I tested this giant in an AI startup lab and it refused to sweat
A massive laptop that wants to sit on your desk, churn data, and make your desktop feel bad.
Dell Pro Max 18 Plus laptop.

View at Dell

I test laptops for a living, and have grown a bad habit out of it. The moment a top-tier machine lands on my desk, I immediately try to push it until I find the cracks. The render that stalls, the fan curve that gives up, or the throttling wall that turns a specs sheet into mere marketing fiction. I went into the Dell Pro Max 18 Plus fully expecting to find that hurdle. Instead, I spent two weeks watching an 18-inch slab absorb everything I threw at it and keep asking for more. It even surprised the engineers at an AI lab who pitted it against their trusty training desktop.

Read more
Chrome is testing an Ask Gemini button that follows your text highlights around the web
Highlight text, get Gemini. Google is making sure you never have to look for AI in Chrome again.
Google Chrome with Gemini

Google is quietly testing something in Chrome Canary that I think will either become one of the browser's most useful or its most irritating additions ever. 

It depends on how often you highlight text to copy it without wanting an AI to jump in.

Read more