August 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
Look out memory nerds, as Toshiba has just announced a more capacious embedded NAND flash memory device than you ever thought possible. The new 32GB chip boasts full compliance with eMMC and eSD standards, is fabricated with Tosh’s 43-nanometer process technology, includes a dedicated controller and should slip right into your favorite handset / PMP of tomorrow. Samples are slated to hit couriers in September for an undisclosed price, while mass production will get going in Q4. So, how long ’til you guys and gals repeat this news with “64″ or “128″ in place of that lowly “32?”
[Via Electronista]
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Posted in toshiba, flash memory, FlashMemory, NAND, slc, 32gb nand, 32gbNand, eMMC, eSD, flash storage, FlashStorage, TAEC | No Comments »
July 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras

It looks like those wanting to get some HD recoding done on the cheap but not willing to venture into some less familiar territory now have a new option to consider from Toshiba, which is set to release its new Camileo H10 camcorder. It’ll give you the usual 720p recording, along with a 5x optical zoom, a 10-megapixel sensor, 64MB of memory, an SDHC card slot for expansion, image stabilization, motion detection and, of course, an HDMI output to let you view your low-budget masterpieces. No word on a release ’round these parts, unfortunately, but those in the UK can apparently get their hands on one at the end of the month for £180 ($360, or less once the VAT and whatnot are taken out of the equation).
[Via Tech Digest]
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Posted in toshiba, camcorder, hd camcorder, HdCamcorder, camileo, camileo h10, CamileoH10 | No Comments »
July 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Handhelds, Laptops
We’re almost totally over the whole netbook craze, but Toshiba’s latest prototype shows there’s still interesting things possible, even if it isn’t a traditional laptop. The 5.6-inch touchscreen handheld runs Vista on Intel’s Atom processor with a 64GB SSD and a GPS chip — which like an awfully expensive setup, but Toshiba says they’re aiming for netbook pricing. Of course, that means almost nothing, since netbooks are all over the map — and that probably explains why Tosh says it’s identified “six or seven” segments of the netbook / UMPC market, and that it might not compete directly with Eee-class machines. Sure — but isn’t an expensive handheld touchscreen netbook just a straight UMPC? Nice try, guys.
[Thanks, Pete]
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Posted in toshiba, umpc, concept, minibook, netbook | No Comments »
July 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
The world already knew of Toshiba and Matsushita’s separate plans to barrel into the OLED realm, but Toshiba Matsushita Display Technology is all set to become the first in Japan to “mass produce organic electroluminescent, or OEL, display panels.” Reportedly, the two outfits will establish manufacturing lines in the Ishikawa Prefecture in fall of 2009, with plans to churn out one million 2.5-inch EL displays. Granted, the products will be rather minuscule in nature, with the idea being to fit them into cellphones, PMPs and other handheld gadgetry. Better hurry — Samsung’s pulling away over in South Korea.
[Via CNET]
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Posted in toshiba, oled, panasonic, joint venture, JointVenture, Matsushita, display, manufacture, display technology, DisplayTechnology, OEL, organic electroluminescent, OrganicElectroluminescent, Toshiba Matsushita Display Technology, ToshibaMatsushitaDisplayTechnology | No Comments »
July 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
Toshiba just bested its own 320GB hard drive with a 400GB offering in the same 9.5-mm height form factor favored by most thin laptops. That’s as good as it gets unless you can track down Sammy’s elusive 500GB Spinpoint M6. The MK4058GSX spins just 2 platters which means the disk sports an impressive 477Mbit/mm2 (308Gbpsi) areal density while consuming 20% less power (0.0015W/GB energy consumption efficiency) and 2dB less noise than its own 320GB predecessor. Rounding out the specs are a 12-ms average seek and 8MB cache. Toshiba also boosted the rest of its 9.5-mm, 2.5-inch, 3.0Gbps SATA disk lineup to 7,200rpm including the 320GB MK3254GSY. Mass production of the 400GB slab is expected to begin in September while the 7,200 HDDs will hit the market in August. No prices announced.
[Via I4U]
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Posted in toshiba, sata, 320gb, 7200rpm, 5400rpm, 400gb, MK3254GSY, MK4058GSX | No Comments »
July 14th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Get ready for a flood of Centrino 2 laptops, kids — hot on the heels of Intel’s big announcement and Sony and Lenovo’s updated lineups comes Toshiba with the new Satellite Pro S300, Tecra M10 and A10, and Qosmio X305, F55 and Cell-based G55. The Qosmios actually aren’t that new — all three of them were initially announced back in June, but they’re actually available now, with the gaming-oriented X305 exclusive to Best Buy. The $1,299 Satellite Pro S300 (pictured) is a little more interesting, with a 2.4GHz P8600 Core 2 Duo on Centrino 2’s 1066MHz bus and Intel 4500MD integrated graphics powering a 15.4-inch display, as well as sleep-and-charge USB ports and a docking port. The more business-oriented Tecra lappies also get a similar Centrino 2 treatment, sharing a motherboard design to reduce repair costs. The $1,399 M10 sports a 14.1-inch screen, while the 15.4-inch A10’s pricing hasn’t been announced. Pictures of the new Tecras after the break.
Read - Satellite Pro S300
Read - Tecra A10 and M10
Read - Qosmio X305
Read - Qosmio G55
Read - Qosmio F55
Continue reading Toshiba announces Centrino 2-based Satellite Pro S300, Tecra M10 and Tecra A10
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Posted in toshiba, Satellite, breaking news, BreakingNews, Qosmio, satellite pro, SatellitePro, centrino 2, Centrino2, g55, qosmio x305, QosmioX305, x305, f55, Qosmio F55, Qosmio G55, QosmioF55, QosmioG55, s300, satellite pro s300, satellite s300, SatelliteProS300, SatelliteS300, tecra, tecra a10, tecra m10, TecraA10, TecraM10 | 1 Comment »
July 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
Several Japanese tech giants are teaming together today in a quest to make 40-inch and larger OLED panels for televisions. Sony, Toshiba, Panasonic, Sharp and others will participate under a joint development project initiated by the Japanese government. All of this is of course meant to help the Japanese companies compete with South Korea’s chaebols, particularly Samsung and LG, as the industry giants maneuver for an advantage over the next, next-generation flat panel technology to dominate the living room.
[Via OLED-info]
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Posted in lg, sony, toshiba, japan, samsung, sharp, oled, panasonic, north korea, NorthKorea, korea, chaebol | No Comments »
June 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video
Hey, if Bill can give away tens of billions of dollars, the least we can do to celebrate his last day is to give away some Microsoft-powered gear, right? First up: the 4GB Toshiba Gigabeat T400, one of the very last Portable Media Center-based devices ever made. Damn, we kind of miss PMC, and the rad stuff it could do that Zune couldn’t (like sync recorded TV shows from your Media Center PC). Take it away!
- Leave a comment below. Tell us about your favorite Microsoft-powered product. Or your favorite Apple product, too, since Bill totally bailed those guys out back in ‘97.
- You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.)
- If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
- Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers and contest laws if you have to be mad.
- Winner will be chosen randomly. That winner will get a brand new orange Toshiba Gigabeat T400. Approximate value is $150.
- Entries can be submitted until Sunday, June 29th, 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
- Full rules can be found here.
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Posted in toshiba, gigabeat t400, GigabeatT400, contest, bill gates day, BillGatesDay | No Comments »
June 23rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We first heard of Typhoon Touch Technologies back in December when the company sued Dell and Motion Computing for infringing two of its patents on touchscreen computers, and armed with favorable settlements from Motion Computing and Electrovaya, Typhoon’s gone ahead and joined a host of other companies to the Dell suit. Roll call: would Apple, Fujitsu, Toshiba, Lenovo, Panasonic, HTC, Palm, Samsung, Nokia, and LG all report to Eastern District of Texas, please? Lunch will not be provided.
[Via iTWire]
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Posted in Apple, Palm, htc, lg, patent, toshiba, samsung, dell, nokia, lawsuit, legal, fujitsu, panasonic, lenovo, Nova Mobility Systems, NovaMobilitySystems, Typhoon Touch Technologies, TyphoonTouchTechnologies | No Comments »
June 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones

We caught a brief glimpse of Toshiba’s Sportio W62T when KDDi announced its vast summer 2008 lineup of phones, but the Japanese carrier is just now giving the handset its proper due with an official launch. As the rather unfortunate name suggests, this one’s intended to help you out in your various athletic endeavors, with it packing an accelerometer and built-in GPS to keep track of how many steps you take and how far you’ve gone, as well as how many calories you’ve burned. As if that wasn’t enough, you’ll also apparently be able to “compose music” by jogging along to special tracks. Otherwise, you can expect a 2.2-inch 240 x 320 display, a built-in 1seg TV tuner, a 2-megapixel camera, and built-in Bluetooth — no word on a price just yet though.
[Via Pocket-lint]
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Posted in toshiba, kddi, sportio, w62tsportio w62t, W62tsportioW62t | No Comments »
June 18th, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
We first heard about Toshiba’s plan to increase NAND flash capacities by building “3D” memory chips with “pillars” of stacked cells in January of 2007, but it looks like the effort is getting revived — Tosh and SanDisk have entered into an agreement to jointly develop and cross-license 3D memory tech. SanDisk was once rumored to be developing write-once 3D flash chips, so both companies have experience building the stuff, but it sounds like it’ll take another three or four years for the partnership to produce actual products, as high-yield production is still difficult.
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Posted in toshiba, flash memory, FlashMemory, NAND, memory, Flash, sandisk, 3d memory, 3dMemory | No Comments »
June 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment

For the attentive in attendance, you likely noticed that none of Toshiba’s newly announced laptops (yes, even the absurdly powerful Qosmio rigs) have built-in Blu-ray drives. Like, there’s not even an option. When questioned about the obvious oversight (ahem), Tosh’s Europe CEO Alan Thompson noted that “Blu-ray was just one of the many ways that you can get HD content and is not required for accessing HD content.” Furthermore, it seems as if the outfit is continuing on in its pursuit to develop the best DVD upconverting technology in the whole wide world, as it explained to the press in London that its forthcoming technology would “fill in the gaps” and “add resolution.” Company representatives even remarked that “Blu-ray was only a storage medium,” and reiterated that BD “wasn’t the only way to view high-def content.” It’s one thing to bow out gracefully, pick up the pieces and get on with life. It’s another thing to douse yourself in ignorance and pretend that Blu-ray (let alone HD DVD) never happened.
Read - Toshiba’s London press event
Read - Toshiba Europe CEO comments
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Posted in europe, toshiba, Blu-ray, DVD, Qosmio, upconvert, upconverting, london, super-resolution, alan thompson, AlanThompson, upcsaling | No Comments »
June 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Not like it’s any surprise, but Toshiba has just certified that the potent Qosmio G55 we peeked earlier this week is indeed more than a figment of someone’s imagination. The 18.4-inch (that’s the screen size) laptop is the world’s first to pack the Cell-based SpursEngine, which Tosh is re-christening the Quad Core HD processor. Moving on, we’ve got the 17.1-inch X305, which includes a GeForce 9800 GTX, DDR3 memory, up to 400GB of HDD space and a red-flamed Rouge design. Lastly, the F55 comes in with a more common 15.4-inch display, GeForce 9700 GTS card and integrated GPS receiver / Garmin mapping software. The whole lot packs HDMI ports with REGZA LINK technology, Feathertouch multimedia buttons, an eSATA port and Harman Kardon speakers with a built-in “subwoofer.” Check ‘em out later this summer for a pretty penny.
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Posted in toshiba, gaming laptop, GamingLaptop, Qosmio, SpursEngine, g55, quad core hd, QuadCoreHd, qosmio x305, x305, f55, Qosmio F55, Qosmio G55, QosmioF55, QosmioG55, REGZA LINK, RegzaLink | No Comments »
June 14th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Looks like Toshiba’s not too far out from a new Qosmio called the G55, which LAPTOP says is on sale next month for $1,550. Listed among the specs are an 18.4-inch (1680 x 945) display, Centrino 2 CPU, GeForce 9600M GT, 4GB of RAM, dual drives, and the “Quad Core HD processor” (probably the commercial name for the Cell-based SpursEngine), which powers many of the media functions, including its camera-based visual gesture control system. LAPTOP calls the gesture system groundbreaking, but we’re clearly two sides to the same coin: the demo they gave looks cumbersome, inaccurate, and incredibly frustrating. And besides the fact that it requires “steady hands” and “can’t be used by people with wrist problems,” even if the gesture controls were well done, holding your arm in the air for minutes at a time is nowhere near a practical for regular use. Is it sad that we still kind of want it, though?
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Posted in cell, toshiba, Qosmio, SpursEngine, gesture control, GestureControl, g55, quad core hd, QuadCoreHd | No Comments »
June 13th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Laptops
For those of you dreaming of a super-fast gaming laptop that’s also adorned with a chic red and pink “flame” pattern, your days of searching are over. Enter the Qosmio X305, Toshiba’s entry into the lap-cooking gamer notebook market. The X305 features a 3GHz dual-core Intel CPU, a 1GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX graphics chipset, dual 7200RPM 200GB hard drives, up to 4GB of RAM, and sports a 17-inch 1680 x 1050 LCD display. Of course it’s also kitted out with a whopping four-speaker Harmon Kardon sound system as well as S/PDIF and HDMI ports. The pink powerhouse is set to launch July 14th, so word on price just yet.
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Posted in toshiba, gaming laptop, GamingLaptop, Qosmio, qosmio x305, QosmioX305, x305 | No Comments »
June 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
Who makes a 160GB, 1.8-inch SATA disk spinning at 5400RPM? Nobody, until today. Toshiba just announced the industry’s largest-capacity / fastest 160GB MK1617GSG disk for ultra-portables and netbook-class machines. While others have hit the magical 160GB mark in an 8-mm thick form factor, this is the first 1.8-inch SATA to hit the 5400RPM mark. Oh, and because you’re about to ask: no, it’s too chubby for an iPod Classic (where that speed wouldn’t likely be noticed) or ultra-thin laptop like the MacBook Air or Envy 133. Thanks for asking though.
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Posted in toshiba, hdd, hard disk, HardDisk, 1.8-inch, 160gb, netbook, 5400rpm | No Comments »
June 4th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Well, would you look at this? Toshiba’s Puma-equipped Satellite A305 hasn’t even left the floor of Computex and it has already been benchmarked. Kudos to NotebookReview for snagging some quality hands-on / testing time with the 15.4-incher, which came stocked with a 2.1GHz CPU, 2GB of DDR2 RAM, a 320GB hard drive, dual-layer DVD writer, 1.3-megapixel camera and Windows Vista Home Premium. You know you can’t wait for all the dirty details and pics to boot, so head on down to the read link and save yourself a trip to Taipei.
[Thanks, Kevin]
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Posted in toshiba, hands-on, amd, 780, a300, puma, computex, computex 2008, Computex2008, turion x2, TurionX2, a305, Mobility Radeon HD 3000, MobilityRadeonHd3000 | No Comments »
June 2nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
It wasn’t long ago that IBM promised to unleash its racetrack MRAM (magnetoresistive RAM) on a power and speed-hungry computing public, but now Toshiba says its 1GB MRAM chips are “almost ready”. The chips use Spin-RAM (STT-RAM) and Toshiba fully expects them to take over where DRAM left off by 2015. They say their new chips use about 10 percent the energy used by DRAM and, like MRAM is supposed to do, retain memory even after the power supply has been cut off. So what does this mean? Instant boot-up, fast access times, and super-low power consumption. While MRAM has been announced by others, capacities and speeds promised by this 1GB jobby from Toshiba will certainly make things worthwhile.
[Via MRAM-info]
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Posted in ibm, toshiba, flash memory, FlashMemory, DRAM, mram, racetrack, stt-ram | No Comments »
May 30th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Nothing too notable here — just that Toshiba is apparently fixing to unveil a brand new DVD player in the age of Blu-ray that will be “capable of producing high-resolution images from regular DVDs.” As you’re laughing heartily, ponder this: are we looking at a simple upconverting DVD player? Or will that Cell-based SpursEngine chip bring “super-resolution” to a standalone deck? According to unnamed sources cited by Daily Yomiuri Online, the planned release “signifies an effort to recover from a humiliating setback suffered in March after announcing its decision to withdraw from its HD DVD business.” We really cannot fathom why Tosh would even dream of fighting BD with souped-up DVD, but reportedly, it plans on marketing the unit “as a device with which consumers can enjoy a broader array of content than is available in the Blu-ray format.” Congratulations Toshiba — we thought it couldn’t get any lamer than HD VMD, and you handily proved us wrong.
[Via VNU Net / Yahoo, image courtesy of DangerousIntersection]
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Posted in toshiba, breaking news, BreakingNews, Blu-ray, DVD, hd dvd, HdDvd | No Comments »
May 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops, Peripherals
It took Toshiba long enough to get its socket-infused Dynadock onto store shelves, and considering the rough reputation held by the vast majority of USB video docking stations out there, you’ve probably been holding back on this well-spec’d unit due to fear alone. If we just rang your bell, you’ll be glad to know the critics over at Trusted Reviews were able to spend some quality time with the device and test out all those features that may or may not work as advertised. Overall, reviewers felt that the Dynadock performed adequately in everything save for “entertainment,” so be sure and give the article a bit of your time to determine whether or not it’ll handle the tasks you have in mind for it.
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Posted in toshiba, shipping, docking station, DockingStation, available, ship, dynadock, video dock, VideoDock | No Comments »
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