Toshiba launches new Satellite netbooks in the US and UK

We know you love nothing more than a Toshiba Satellite laptop announcement, so listen up: the company has just announced two new CULV ultraportables of the UK and stateside market: The Satellite T135 (or the T130 as it’s known overseas) is a 13.3-inch beauty with options including either an Intel Pentium, Celeron single core or Celeron dual-core CPU, up to 3GB of DDR3 RAM, and 250GB harddrive. The Satellite T115 (or T110 in the UK) sports an 11.6-inch display, either an Intel Pentium or Celeron single core CPU, and up to 4GB of RAM and 500GB harddrive. What’s more, the kids over at Laptop Mag have given the T135 the old once-over and found it to be a pretty good deal: “for slightly less than the competition,” they said of the $709 review unit, you’re getting “good performance and a stylish design.” Perhaps the single touchpad button and the quiet speakers will be a turn-off to some, but it takes all kinds, right? Look for the T135 and T115 on October 22nd, for $599 and $449 respectively — their UK counterparts should hit the streets on the same date, priced from £429.
Read – Toshiba Satellite T130/T135 and T110/T115 CULV ultraportables debut
Read – Toshiba Satellite T135 review

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Toshiba launches new Satellite netbooks in the US and UK originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 14:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Iridium to merge with GHL, get back into sat phone game

Aside from pushing out around one phone per year (at best), Iridium Satellite really hasn’t had a major impact on the market over the past ten years. ‘Course, that’s probably because it’s hard to have much impact after seeking bankruptcy protection in 1999, but we digress. Starting tomorrow, new life will be breathed into Iridium thanks to a merger with publicly traded GHL Acquisition. If all goes to plan, the merger will add over $200 million to the company’s bank account, enabling it to pay down debt and develop a next-generation network of satellites to be launched in 2014. Furthermore, $160 million will be raised by issuing another 16 million shares at $10 a pop, and a new label (Iridium Communications) will be thrown on for good measure. Only time will tell if the world really is ready to adopt satellite phones en masse, but if TerraStar’s latest deal is any indication, we’d say chances are good halfway decent.

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Iridium to merge with GHL, get back into sat phone game originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Sep 2009 09:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba lights up the streets with Satellite U500 Ducati

Ducati may have its roots firmly planted on the highway, but the high-end label certainly isn’t scared of stepping out from time to time. After gifting firms like SanDisk and Sony Ericsson with the right to use its name on various gizmos, the motorcycle maker is now linking up with Toshiba on a special edition laptop. The Satellite U500 Ducati is a 13.3-inch ultraportable equipped with an ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 (512MB), an Intel Core 2 Duo P8700 and 4GB of RAM. Naturally, the primarily white device will boast its fair share of Ducati badging, but seemingly lacks the company’s trademark desmodromic valve actuation. Precise pricing information wasn’t made public, but you can bet only those with more money than sense will take interest when it ships later this month in Italy.

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Toshiba lights up the streets with Satellite U500 Ducati originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Sep 2009 10:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba adopts Blu-ray for laptops, completes shame circle

First Toshiba caved on Blu-ray for the home, and now they’re taking the sad show portable. The once-great defender of the HD-DVD crown has begun adopting the format for its laptops, bringing the discs to the P500 (a member of the Satellite family). The system — which was released originally in June sans Blu-ray — sports an 18.4 inch (1920 x 1080) display, HDMI REGZA link, a Core 2 Duo CPU, 4GB of RAM, a 500GB hard drive, and a slew of the standard ports and wireless radios. The laptop will be available in October, irony comes standard on all models. [Warning: read link is a PDF]

[Via Pocket-lint]

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Toshiba adopts Blu-ray for laptops, completes shame circle originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 14:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sirius XM to Introduce iPhone and iPod Satellite Radio Dock

sirius

Sirius XM, the satellite radio service provider, is set to introduce a satellite radio dock called XM SkyDock for the iPhone and iPod Touch, says the XMFan.com website.

The company has scheduled a press event on Wednesday to talk about new products.

The SkyDock will turn the iPhone or the iPod Touch into a satellite Sirius XM radio receiver. And it is expected to come with a wallet-friendly price tag of $100. Customers will still have to pay subscription fees for the service but this product makes satellite radio an exciting possibility for iPhone or iPod Touch users.

In June, Sirius XM released an iPhone app for their service. But the application left out many of the most popular shows on the network such as Howard Stern, MLB games and NFL because of  contract issues over the right to stream to phones.  We hope the SkyDock won’t be crippled with similar problems.

Sirius also plans to introduce a new XM radio with color screen for $80, says XMFan.com

Photo: (ckelley/Flickr)

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Walmart’s $348 17-inch Toshiba Satellite L355 reviewed: surprisingly awesome

Looking for an ultra-cheap machine to take to school, are you? If you couldn’t care less about extreme portability, Toshiba’s shockingly inexpensive Satellite L355 (S7915) could be just the thing. $348 at Walmart nets you a 17-inch display (1,440 x 900), a 2.2GHz Celeron 900 CPU, Vista Basic, 3GB of RAM, a 250GB (5400RPM) hard drive, 8x DVD writer and GMA 4500M integrated graphics. The 7-pound machine was recently tested over at Laptop Mag, and critics were noticeably stunned at just how well the machine performed. The display was bright, the keyboard was more than adequate and the six-cell battery managed to hang on for over 2.5 hours in real-world testing. All in all, reviewers felt that the rig was perfectly suitable for handling schoolwork and other basic tasks, and save for the omission of a webcam, they couldn’t find any huge beefs given the uncharacteristically low MSRP. ‘Course, if you already snapped up that $298 Compaq, maybe you should just plug your ears here and pretend this whole thing never happened.

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Walmart’s $348 17-inch Toshiba Satellite L355 reviewed: surprisingly awesome originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 06:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CSR debuts SiRFstarIV location-aware architecture, kisses slow fixes goodbye

Nary half a year after snapping up SiRF, CSR is already tooting its horn about an all new SiRFstar architecture. The predictably titled SiRFstarIV technology takes quite the leap over its three-pronged predecessor, all but promising to nix those annoyingly long location fixes that are all too common on existing PNDs. The new location-aware, self-assisted, micro-power tech enables devices to be continually aware of location without requiring network aide; furthermore, there’s hardly any power drain to speak of, which ought to please smartphone owners who can literally watch their battery meter drop with GPS enabled. CSR’s first SiRFstarIV product is the GSD4t receiver, which is optimized for mobile phones and “other space and power-sensitive consumer devices.” We’re told that samples of the chip are shipping out now, with mass production slated for October and device integration happening shortly thereafter.

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CSR debuts SiRFstarIV location-aware architecture, kisses slow fixes goodbye originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 08:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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“Flying laptop” spacecraft could “transform” in space, sort of

Impressive as they are, satellites and space probes aren’t always the most versatile pieces of equipment once they’re up in orbit. A new satellite developed by researchers from the University of Stuttgart’s Institute of Space Systems looks set to shake things up in a pretty big way when it launches in 2012, however, even if it’s not quite the “transforming” space probe that you might be imagining. Described as a “flying laptop,” the satellite promises to pack a vast array of instruments and sensors, including cameras, multispectral imagers, star trackers, and GPS receivers, to name a few, all of which can apparently be completely reconfigured on the fly in space. That, the researchers say, could let the satellite switch from, say, an atmospheric pollution sensor to a near-Earth asteroid detector, an even open up some new commercial possibilities, with different groups able to rent out the satellite to perform various tasks.

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“Flying laptop” spacecraft could “transform” in space, sort of originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 05:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TerreStar successfully completes first call on new satellite

Remember that giant satellite TerreStar launched a few weeks ago, TerreStar-1? It’s now up and running, which means we’re that much closer to tiny smartphones that blur the boundary between “satellite phone” and “sexy” — something that we can’t really say has ever even come close to happening before. In addition to completing its first call on the all-IP network provided by TerreStar-1, the company has notified the FCC and Industry Canada that it’s now in compliance with the final milestones required for certification, so there’s a fighting chance these guys could meet their goal of launching commercially this year. James Bond, your cellphone awaits.

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TerreStar successfully completes first call on new satellite originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 13:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s new Satellite M500 and U500 mid-tier laptops “shine” in the flesh

You know, at one point chrome accents and glossy plastics were novel additions to previously staid consumer electronics — now they make us want to punch a hole in the nearest smarmy LCD display. While HP has tried its best to be the worst offender in its consumer line, Toshiba is really giving it a shot with the M500 and U500 series laptops — the U500 is pretty outlandish, but at least it offers a ribbed, almost-desirable matte surface of sorts, while the M500 (pictured) makes everything else look tame in comparison, and has the plentiful finger smudges to prove it. Both of the laptops offer chrome trim, overdone speaker grills and light-up accents. The textured trackpads are probably a love it or hate it thing; in fact, most of these “style” choices could be termed as such, but we’re sure you’ve ascertained by now where we stand. Sure, the so-called general consumer apparently eats it up, but the charm is lost on us. On a gentler note, the M505 we looked at was running Windows 7, something we more commonly see being demoed on a touchscreen PC or something otherwise Windows 7 specific. Obviously it’s not shipping with that OS yet, but the pining is palpable.

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Toshiba’s new Satellite M500 and U500 mid-tier laptops “shine” in the flesh originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Jun 2009 21:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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