
Typhoon has announced the SU-300  clip-on speaker for  laptops. The Typhoon SU-300 has two 1W drivers, a  frequency range of  200Hz ~ 15 kHz. Size of Typhoon SU-300 is 230 x 60 x  28 mm, has magnetic  shielding. The speakers are powered through a USB  connector. 
A great sounding sound system and a great-looking 16-inch display,  the Toshiba Satellite A665-S6086, available at Amazon, a large  entertainment notebook. It lacks the Blu-ray drive, the same configured  and priced Toshiba Satellite A665-S6085, but it makes up for this loss  with an extended-life battery a much longer life battery and produces a  WiMax radio for high-speed wireless broadband.
The A665-S6086′s design is almost identical to that of the Toshiba  A665-S6085, both use the same plastic lid and keyboard deck, which has a  texture pattern, the only difference is that the A665-S6086 is dark  gray of color, the Toshiba A665-S6085 is black. And like the Toshiba  A665-S6085, A665-S6086 the lid flexes a fair bit if you press down,  making me wonder how easy it would be to damage the screen when the lid  ever gets knocked a little too hard.
Both laptops also share the same footprint (15 by 10 inches), but because the A665-S6086 adds a 12-cell extended-life battery 98WH to the mix (the A665-S6085 comes with a 6-cell 48Wh battery) 2.2-inch thick, the A665-S6086′s rear feet stick up about 0.75 inches higher than the more slender Toshiba A665-S6085. Also because of the extended-life battery, the A665-S6086 (6.12 pounds) is heavier than the Toshiba A665-S6085 (5.55 pounds), respectively.
The “tile”-like keyboard on the two laptops are identical, where the square, isolated key titles like Scrabble. The keys have nice trip, and there is only a little bit of flex to the right of the keyboard and on the dedicated number pad. A strip of touch-sensitive buttons is above the keyboard. The buttons are the Toshiba Power Utility Eco-management application, 802.11b/g/n the radio on and off, adjust volume, play and pause and play media. There is also a button that the backlight of Toshiba logo on the left corner of the palm rest and a thin LED strip above the touchpad turns. The touchpad surface is smooth, responsive, multitouch gestures, and easy-to-press buttons make it a joy to use. It is level with the palm resting A665-S6086.
Like the Toshiba A665-S6085, the A665-S6086′s outstanding feature is  the great audio system. Even without a subwoofer, the fresh-sounding and  very loud Harmon Kardon speakers actually a hint of bass. You can also  use sparkling speaker of the A665-S6086′s, even when the laptop is in  sleep mode or turned off by connecting an MP3 player on the laptop, the  A665-S6086′s “Sleep-and-Music” feature.
The impressive audio quality of the sound system carries over to movie soundtracks as well. Not only movies sound great, they look great on clear and color-rich, the A665-S6086′s 16-inch display. But as with most glossy displays, reflections can be problematic, unless you’re in a dark room. Even with a native resolution of 1366 x 768, you can not watch 1080p videos in their native resolution, but this is less a problem with the A665-S6086 than it is with the Toshiba A665-S6085, a Blu-inclusive ray drive the A665-S6086 comes with a more pedestrian dual-layer DVD +/ RW drive.

Both laptops also share the same footprint (15 by 10 inches), but because the A665-S6086 adds a 12-cell extended-life battery 98WH to the mix (the A665-S6085 comes with a 6-cell 48Wh battery) 2.2-inch thick, the A665-S6086′s rear feet stick up about 0.75 inches higher than the more slender Toshiba A665-S6085. Also because of the extended-life battery, the A665-S6086 (6.12 pounds) is heavier than the Toshiba A665-S6085 (5.55 pounds), respectively.
The “tile”-like keyboard on the two laptops are identical, where the square, isolated key titles like Scrabble. The keys have nice trip, and there is only a little bit of flex to the right of the keyboard and on the dedicated number pad. A strip of touch-sensitive buttons is above the keyboard. The buttons are the Toshiba Power Utility Eco-management application, 802.11b/g/n the radio on and off, adjust volume, play and pause and play media. There is also a button that the backlight of Toshiba logo on the left corner of the palm rest and a thin LED strip above the touchpad turns. The touchpad surface is smooth, responsive, multitouch gestures, and easy-to-press buttons make it a joy to use. It is level with the palm resting A665-S6086.
The impressive audio quality of the sound system carries over to movie soundtracks as well. Not only movies sound great, they look great on clear and color-rich, the A665-S6086′s 16-inch display. But as with most glossy displays, reflections can be problematic, unless you’re in a dark room. Even with a native resolution of 1366 x 768, you can not watch 1080p videos in their native resolution, but this is less a problem with the A665-S6086 than it is with the Toshiba A665-S6085, a Blu-inclusive ray drive the A665-S6086 comes with a more pedestrian dual-layer DVD +/ RW drive.
The RF510 has a good range of interfaces, including a surprise: USB  3.0. On  the left side of the chassis are two USB 2.0 ports, VGA and  HDMI video outputs,  an Ethernet port and two audio jacks. Over on the  right side is a DVD burner and  two USB 3.0 ports. The latter, when used  with compatible devices are capable of  transfer rates of up to 5 G bps.  This corresponds to a theoretical ten-fold  increase over USB 2.0. (The  faster ports are distinguished by blue USB ports,  while the USB 2.0  ports, use black.) A four-format flash card reader located on  the lower  front edge of the notebook is located, and a 1.3-megapixel webcam is   embedded in the – Display of the upper panel. The standard edition  webcam is  good for quick snapshots and utilitarian Skyping, but too  coarse for photos you  want to keep.
An Intel Core i5-460M processor at 2.53 GHz, 4 GB of DDR3 RAM,  supports the  RF510-S01 offers a lot of horsepower. On our PCMark  Vantage test, which is the  general system performance measures, the  head of the RF510 score of 6445 both  the Lenovo ThinkPad Y560D’s 6343  and the outrageously expensive HP EliteBook 8540w 6328 by almost 100  points.
to do our Cine bench 10 test exercises each processor core on a 3D  model and  is a good measure of raw CPU power. On it, scored the  RF510-S01 7177, more than  1,000 points above the average for a  mainstream notebook, but about 2,000 points  lower than the overclocked  MSI GT660R, which was equipped with a Core i7 CPU.  The RF510-S01  completed our iTunes (music) and Windows Media Encoder (Video)  media  encoding tests in 3 minutes and 5 seconds and 4:17, respectively. (For   these tests, we convert 11 storage MP3s into AAC format in iTunes and  Windows  Media Encoder, encode a test-standard 3-minute video clip.)  Both times, more  than a full minute faster than the mainstream laptop  average which means This  laptop will have no trouble importing and  encoding movies convert MP3, AAC and  other music files.
The RF510 is equipped with mid-tier mobile Nvidia GPU, the GeForce GT  330M.  While it is not what you call a killer gaming chip, the 330M GT  led admirably on  our real world gaming benchmarks. Running at its 1,366  x 768 native resolution,  it was the RF510 a respectable 63.2 frames  per second (fps) on our Company of  Heroes DirectX 9 gaming test, which  is a bit slower than the more expensive MSI  GT660R (171fps) and Lenovo  IdeaPad Y560D (77.3fps), but still a very playable  frame rate. It has  23.9fps on the DirectX 10 version of the same test, you want  to call  back on some effects may even enjoy playing the games of this caliber   means. 
No comments:
Post a Comment