Thread: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
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17th April 2008, 03:44 PM #1
Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
by Kevin O'Brien
The Toshiba Satellite L350 series notebook is a new addition to the 17" desktop replacement lineup from Toshiba. For a starting price of $749, Toshiba gives customers a TruBrite screen, webcam, integrated ATI Radeon graphics, a dual core AMD processor, and a DVD SuperMulti drive. This notebook is aimed at consumers who want a bit more notebook out of a budget price range, and seems to hit the mark perfectly. Read on to see how well the Toshiba L350 holds up in our testing, and if it is a notebook worth checking out.
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This review will cover the AMD version of this notebook, which is the base configuration at the price of $749.Satellite L355D-S809 specifications:
- Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium (SP1, 32-bit version)
- AMD Turion 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology TL-60 (2.0 GHz, 1MB L2 Cache, HyperTransport Technology @ up to 800MHz)
- 2GB PC5300 DDR2 SDRAM memory (Maximum capacity 4GB)
- 200GB (4200 RPM) Serial ATA hard disk drive
- DVD SuperMulti (+/-R double layer) with Labelflash drive supporting 11 formats
- 17.1" diagonal widescreen TruBrite TFT LCD display with 1440x900 native resolution (WXGA+)
- ATI Radeon X1250 128MB-831MB dynamically allocated shared graphics memory
- Built-in stereo speakers
- Atheros 802.11 b/g wireless-LAN
- 3 USB Sleep-and-Charge ports, 5 in 1 SD-Card Reader, 10/100 LAN, 56k Modem
- Built-in Webcam and microphone
- 4000mAh 10.8v battery and 75w AC Adapter
- Weight: 7lbs 0.6oz
- Dimensions: 15.6 x 11.4 x 1.8"
- One-year standard Limited Warranty

(view large image)Build and Design
The Toshiba L355D has a design that we are very familiar with, that has changed very little from the older P200 series notebook. The notebook body slimmed down across the board, but without comparing pictures between each model it would be hard to tell the difference. The peak height at the feet remained very similar, but the notebook profile is thinner in the front and back. The biggest change is the hinge design, which went from a "hidden" design to a double hinge setup. The rest of the notebook looks fairly untouched, with the same multimedia controls, stepped sloping palmrest, and near identical look when closed. The final visual change that many will notice is the lack of glossy finish on the display cover, which was replaced with a silver metallic matte finish. Users who complained of easy scratching and smudged fingerprints can now rejoice.

(view large image)Build quality has remained the same, with a solid feel and only a slight amount of flex in the palm rest and screen cover. The body as a whole feels quite durable, with few squeaks or rattles when picked up and carried around. The keyboard has very good support, with little flex apparent when you press firmly on the keys. The display cover keeps away most ripples from the LCD, but with a firm jab to the back of the cover some circular distortions do show up. The newer matte paint finish seems to hold up much better, with the biggest difference being no fine scratches after a trip in my backpack.

(view large image)Display
The display on the Toshiba L350 series notebooks is of average quality, with even backlight and minimal light bleed. Colors are vibrant when viewing head on, but wash out or invert at steep angles. Horizontal viewing angles go about 45 degrees before the colors start dim or wash out. Vertical viewing angles are not so lucky, inverting quickly after about 20 degrees of movement.

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(view large image)My comfortable viewing range on this screen was at 60% brightness in a bright room, and a few notches lower in a dark room.
Keyboard and Touchpad
The keyboard is excellent, with tight keys that require little pressure to trigger. Key wobble is minimal, making it easy to type very fast with few errors as you are not hitting the sides of other keys. Key throw is perfect, not too long and not too short.

(view large image)Being a 17" notebook, key spacing and size is not a problem in the slightest. The keyboard found on the L350 is fullsize, including the number pad on the side. A few users will also enjoy the correct placement of the Ctrl key on the far left of the keyboard, instead of the Function key which sometimes gets placed there.
Toshiba was also nice enough to include several dedicated media buttons located just above the keyboard. None of the media buttons have an annoying LED backlight and all of them are easy to use.

(view large image)The touchpad is surface is excellent, with just the right amount of space for easy movement, as well as near perfect finger sensitivity. The texture is a soft matte finish, that is very easy to glide your finger across. The touchpad buttons are of decent size, but I would have preferred better feedback when clicking the buttons. As it is, the buttons have a shallow click when pressed.

(view large image)Performance and Benchmarks
For day to day use, the notebook performs quite well with great startup and shutdown speed. Opening software such as Internet Explorer, Adobe Reader, or iTunes loads in no time. Much of this can be attributed to the Dual Core AMD Turion X2 TL-60 processor and 2GB of RAM, which this notebook offers as standard equipment. Compared to older generations where you might have been stuck with 512MB or even 1GB of RAM, this gives you a pretty substantial bump in performance. If you're willing to spend an extra $50 you can also configure a version of this notebook with an entry-level Intel Core 2 Duo processor.
Notebook performance is great for a budget machine, but don't expect to play any modern games on this machine. Games that are two-three generations old should still be playable, as long as you tone down the eye-candy settings. Since most users looking at this notebook arent expecting gaming performance from this notebook, this should not be a problem.
WPrime 32M comparison results
WPrime is a benchmark similar to Super Pi in that it forces the processor to do intense mathematical calculations, but the difference is this application is multi-threaded and represents dual core processors better. Lower numbers indicate better performance.
Notebook Time Toshiba Satellite L355D (2.0GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60, Windows Vista) 39.732s Gateway P-171XL FX (2.8GHz Intel Core 2 Duo X7900, Windows Vista) 30.359s Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.50GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T9300, Windows Vista) 31.108s Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Windows Vista) 42.085s Lenovo ThinkPad T60 (Intel Core 2 Duo CPU T7400@ 2.16GHz, Windows XP) 41.40s HP dv6000z (AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60 @ 2.00GHz, Windows Vista) 38.913s Sager 9260 (Intel Core 2 Duo CPU E6700@ 2.66GHz, Windows XP ) 33.718s Dell Precision M70 (Intel Pentium-M 780 @ 2.26GHz, Windows XP) 78.992s
PCMark05 comparison results:PCMark05 represents the overall system performance of a notebook. Higher numbers indicate better performance.
Notebook PCMark05 Score Toshiba Satellite L355D (2.0GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60, ATI Radeon X1250) 3,305 PCMarks Gateway P-171XL FX (2.8GHz Intel Core 2 Duo X7900, NVIDIA Go 8800M GTS) 7,749 PCMarks Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.50GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T9300, NVIDIA Go 8600M GT) 5,865 PCMarks Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA Go 8600M GT) 5,261 PCMarks Dell Inspiron 1720 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8600M GT) 5,377 PCMarks Dell Inspiron 1420 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 4,925 PCMarks Sony VAIO FZ (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 3,377 PCMarks Dell XPS M1330 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 4,591 PCMarks Lenovo ThinkPad X61 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 4,153 PCMarks Lenovo 3000 V200 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 3,987 PCMarks Lenovo T60 Widescreen (2.0GHz Intel T7200, ATI X1400 128MB) 4,189 PCMarks Fujitsu N6410 (1.66GHz Core Duo, ATI X1400) 3,487 PCMarks Alienware M7700 (AMD Athlon FX-60, Nvidia Go 7800GTX) 5,597 PCMarks
3DMark06 comparison results:3DMark06 represents the overall graphics performance of a notebook. Higher numbers indicate better performance.
Notebook 3DMark06 Score Toshiba Satellite L355D (2.0GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60, ATI Radeon X1250) 301 3DMarks Gateway P-171XL FX (2.8GHz Intel Core 2 Duo X7900, NVIDIA Go 8800M GTS) 8,801 3DMarks Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.50GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T9300, NVIDIA Go 8600M GT) 3,775 3DMarks Toshiba Qosmio G45 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA Go 8600M GT) 2,934 3DMarks Dell Inspiron 1720 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8600M GT) 2,930 3DMarks Dell Inspiron 1420 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS 128MB) 1,329 3DMarks Sony VAIO FZ (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 532 3DMarks Dell XPS M1330 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS 128MB) 1,408 3DMarks Asus F3sv-A1 (Core 2 Duo T7300 2.0GHz, Nvidia 8600M GS 256MB) 2,344 3DMarks Alienware Area 51 m5550 (2.33GHz Core 2 Duo, nVidia GeForce Go 7600 256MB 2,183 3DMarks Fujitsu Siemens Amilo Xi 1526 (1.66 Core Duo, nVidia 7600Go 256 MB) 2,144 3DMarks Asus A6J (1.83GHz Core Duo, ATI X1600 128MB) 1,819 3DMarks HP dv6000t (2.16 GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400) 827 3DMarks Sony VAIO SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400) 794 3DMarks Hard drive performance was more than adequate, even though it was a 4200rpm drive. The access times and transfer speeds were more in line with a higher performance 5400rpm drive.
HDTune results:

(view large image)I am also really disappointed that this 17" notebook did not offer an additional drive bay, to further expand on storage space or increase performance with a RAID setup.
Ports and Features
Port selection on the L350 felt lacking, with fewer options compared to the older P200. It now has half the USB ports, no S-video out, no Firewire, and lots of blank open plastic that could have been used for additional ports. As previously mentioned, another missing feature of this notebook is the 2nd HD bay, which is fairly uncommon for a 17" notebook.
With some 13.3" notebooks having a much more expansive port selection than this 17" notebook, it makes you think what items might have been cut in order to lower the overall cost of the computer. Three USB ports on a 17" notebook is my biggest complaint though, when many similarly sized notebooks have four or six.
Front: Wireless On/Off switch, SD-Card Reader, Headphone/Mic, Volume switch

(view large image)Rear: Modem

(view large image)Left: VGA, LAN, two USB, Expresscard/54

(view large image)Right: One USB, Optical bay, AC plug, Kensington lock slot

(view large image)Speakers
The speakers on the L350 are average, able to reach high volume levels without much distortion, but you have no bass content. High and midrange audio was good, and users will have no worries about using the internal speakers to listen to music or watch a movie. As always, I still prefer using headphones in most situations for privacy and not to annoy others in crowded areas. The headphone jack was great, giving clear audio without any hissing background noise.

(view large image)Heat and Noise
Noise performance on the L350 is great, with the fan barely noticeable at low speed, and still whisper quiet under load. Temperature levels are also low overall, but it did have a few odd hot spots. After the notebook has been on for a couple of hours, the touchpad managed to reach 98F, with the rest of the top surface being much cooler.

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(view large image)Battery
Battery performance was very good for a 17" notebook with only a 4000mAh battery. With wireless enabled, screen at 70% backlight, and notebook set to the "Balanced" power profile, it managed 2 hours and 47 minutes before it shut off. Here's hoping that an extended battery option comes out for the mobile warriors.
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ConclusionThe Toshiba L350 series notebook offers consumers an excellent budget desktop replacement notebook with a great deal of features for a low starting price of $749. As a mild refresh from the previous P200 series notebook the L350 gives you a slimmer and lighter body, as well as a smudge and scuff resistant matte paint finish.
Pros
- Very quiet with great thermal management
- Nice keyboard with excellent support
- New matte paint finish doesn't scratch as easily as older gloss finish
- No fingerprints visible anywhere on the finish when my review was completed
Cons
- Only three USB ports and no firewire
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17th April 2008, 07:11 PM #2
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
Good review!
This notebook is rather interesting, in that Toshiba decided to break away from the trend towards dark, glossy notebooks. Good for them. I can't stand having fingerprints all over my electronics.
The battery life really shocked me, considering it's only a 4000mAh battery. Then again, the horribly underpowered graphics card is probably the main reason why this is the case. It would be interesting to see how good the battery life is with a more powerful graphics card.
HP Compaq nw8440 | Core Duo T2600 2.16GHz | 4GB 667MHz DDR2 RAM | 500GB 7200rpm HD
| DVD±RW DL drive w/ LightScribe | ATi FireGL V5200 256MB GFX | 15.4" 1920x1200 LCD
| Broadcom a/b/g + Bluetooth
Sony VAIO VGN-TX770P | Pentium M ULV 1.3GHz | 1.5GB RAM | 80GB 4200RPM HD
| DVD±RW DL drive | Intel Integrated GFX | 11.1" 1366x768 LCD | Intel b/g + Bluetooth
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17th April 2008, 11:52 PM #3-
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Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
Well, the price is good but the design is rather blah imho. I'm more interested in seeing a review of the A300/A305. Which we should have next week I do believe.
Thanks for the review Kevin.
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18th April 2008, 12:11 AM #4
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
Nice to see a white, rather than black Toshiba. This laptop fits the bill for my parents perfectly, I will check it out! The battery life seems almost to good to be true, I'm hoping this reflects into the A300! (Looking forward to the review Kevin!)
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18th April 2008, 01:17 AM #5
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
Yeah it looks ok, but how can it be in the desktop replacement lineup?? A 3DMark06 score in the 300s??? Wow... I mean I would expect a desktop replacement to be somewhere between 6000 and 8000 some if you want a desktop replacement.
I mean sure, it's still in the budget line but seriously. The Sony with a Nvidia 7400 beat this thing!! So ridiculous...
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18th April 2008, 01:23 AM #6
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
for some reason... toshiba notebooks really... just do absolutely nothing for me.
Nice review though.PortableDigest.com
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18th April 2008, 04:31 AM #7Notebook Deity
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Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
Can we perhaps see the temperatures in celcius aswell , I have no idea what fahrenheit is vs celcius. But id be intrested to know.
Somone will probably post a way to convert but i dont want to have to convert it every review.
anyway , good review, ThanksMB PKQ Deluxe CPU 3.85GHZ Q6700 GPU's CrossfireX 2x 3870x2 (910mhz) (GDDR4 Versions) HDD RAID 0 (4x500gb)2TB + RAID 1 (2x500GB) RAM 8GB DDR2 1066mhz CASE Antec 900 PSU 1300w Modualar
"3DMark06 is just a synthetic benchmark."
I havent lost my mind... I have it backed up somewhere.
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18th April 2008, 05:14 AM #8
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
I have to wonder whether that HDD is 5400rpm.
Here's an HD Tune plot for a 200GB 4200rpm. There's no trace of the MK2046GSX on the Toshiba storage websites. The nearest is the MK2546GSX which is 5400rpm and I suspect that the MK2046GSX is of the same family. This wouldn't be the first time that manufacturers are shipping products faster than they can update their websites.
John
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18th April 2008, 05:19 AM #9
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
C = 5/9 * (F-32)
0C = 32F
10C = 50F
20C = 68F
30C = 86F
40C = 104F
50C = 122F
etc
Personally, it's the weights I would like to have in kg. I have to use this Convert program each time I read a review (except one of my own).
John
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18th April 2008, 06:03 AM #10
Re: Toshiba Satellite L355D Review
What? There are people who use measurements other than Fahrenheit and pounds? No way! I blame the American educational system for never telling me about this.

Seriously, the editorial team debated the use of measurement standards last year and went with Fahrenheit only because the overwhelming majority of our site traffic is from the US (where Fahrenheit is still king ... for some pointless reason).
That said, we haven't written this rule in stone and we may decide to change this going forward.



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