Well, as promised here is my little review on my Toshiba Portégé M400. Quite possibly the best purchase i’ve made in a long time. The M400 is known as a Tablet PC, that is, you can rotate the screen and fold it flat so that the screen faces outwards. Combined with the included Pen, you can then write on the screen as if it were a notepad.
This particular model came with a Intel Centrino Duo 1.66Ghz processor, 1Gb RAM and a 60Gb hard drive. The screen is 12.1in with a max resolution of 1400×1050. The laptop shipped with Windows XP Tablet Edition, but states that it is Vista Capable. XP Tablet Edition is much like any other version of XP, but with a few extras. Things like the Onscreen keyboard pops up for logins automatically, there’s a handwriting tab that allows you to handwrite text to go into Text Fields on Webpages and the like. Just silly little extras like that. Nothing amazing.
Vista on the other hand, includes all of these as standard (well, did in the Business edition i have). The M400 is indeed very capable of running vista, complete with the Aero theme which surprised me. Vista makes a number of improvements over XP with the Tablet features. The onscreen keyboard at login, for example, is embedded into the login screen as you can see in this photo. The handwriting tab is also better – it docks to the side of the screen, making it accessible at all times and very fast to
load. It also dynamically adds more space if you writing a long word or sentence, unlike XP. My only gripe with running Vista is the low battery life. Under XP i could get about 3.5hours, with Vista i get around 2.5 hours if i’m lucky.
But anyways, back to the M400 itself. The biggest worry i had when looking for a Tablet PC was how good the touch screen was. After a bit of digging is was decided that the M400 had one of the best touch screens around for handwriting. This tablet was going to be primarily used for handwriting. Specifically, taking notes during lectures. I needed something that would allow me to write quickly and accurately. The M400 does just that. I’ve not used a tablet pc before, but based on some reviews of other devices it seems that the accuracy of the touch screens can vary widely. The handwriting recognition in XP is very good, by the way. It could recognise the majority of what i was writing without being “taught” my handwriting style. Very impressive given how bad my handwriting is. Not that it matters though as none of my lecture notes would be converted to text anyway.
So, as an electronic notepad the M400 performs very well. After 8 weeks of constant use every day i can’t fault it one bit. The pen is a good size, easy to hold and has a number of handy features – an “eraser” on the end, as well as a “right-click” button along the barrel, which sometimes gets in a way depending on how you hold your pen. The M400 also comes with a spare pen, which is more pda-pen sized and slots in a specially designed chamber on the underside of the laptop. The main pen fits into a sprung-loaded slot on the side next to the dvd-rw drive.
A few more useful features include the array for switches on the front panel. Most laptops use the classic fn+up/down/whatever keys to control volume and wifi on/off. The M400 does not. Toshiba have brilliantly decided to include a wheel to control volume, much like the ones on older cd-rom drives and a physical switch for turning the wifi on and off. Both of which are perfect. The volume in particular, as you can tell instantly whether or not you’re going to disturb the lecture when you turn on the laptop. Last but not least on the front panel you get the standard headphones and mic inputs and an array for LEDs to tell you if the laptop is on, the battery condition
etc etc.
Along the side and rear of the laptop you have the usual array of USB ports (3 in this case), PCMCIA slot, network and modem, VGA and power. Additionally the M400 also has a 4-pin firewire port (or i.link as they are now known for some reason) and a 3-in-1 card reader that will read xD, SD and Memory Stick formats. Very handy. Lastly, the M400 includes a fingerprint scanner and the appropriate software allowing you to program in your fingerprints and use it to logon to windows, automatically fill out forms on webpages and other bits of software that require user names and password, WinSCP for example. The reader can be a little tricky to get the hang of to start with, but once you’ve got the knack it’s very good. Useful if you want to look swish in front of people you’ve never met, or if you’re paranoid about security.
So, that’s about it for the M400 ( i think). It’s the best laptop i’ve owned (but given that my last one was an Acer, that’s not saying much), and definitely £800 well spent. To any students out there looking for a better way to take notes and keep yourself organised, a Tablet PC is definitely the way to go, especially if you get Microsoft Office OneNote as well (more on that in another post). Tablet PCs aren’t cheap, but in my opinion definitely worth the money.