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Toshiba Satellite M50 review: Toshiba Satellite M50

Under its colored exterior lies an affordable, well-rounded thin-and-light.

Stephanie Bruzzese
5 min read
Toshiba Satellite M55

Don't judge the Toshiba Satellite M55 by its cover (its choice of ostentatiously colored lids may turn you off). Beyond its hue (bright blue, copper, or silver), there's a lot to like about this thin-and-light laptop, including an exceptional design, handy multimedia controls, solid speed and battery life, and a palatable price. Though we were not keen on our test unit's almost-teal lid, the Satellite M55 is a good thin-and-light for the home or small-office user.

6.0

Toshiba Satellite M50

The Good

Reasonable price; double-layer DVD burner; multimedia controls; can play music and videos without booting up the operating system; exceptionally quiet, comfortable keyboard.

The Bad

Colored lids are a bit garish; small mouse buttons.

The Bottom Line

The colorful Satellite M55 will satisfy your craving for a well-rounded, affordable thin-and-light.

The Satellite M55's case measures 13.5 inches wide, 9.5 inches deep, and 1.2 inches thick. It weighs 5.2 pounds, and the heavy AC adapter tacks on nearly a pound to the system's total weight. These measurements make the case slightly larger and heavier than those of competing thin-and-lights such as the Sony VAIO VGN-S470P and the Averatec 4200. However, the Toshiba has a 14-inch screen, while the Sony and the Averatec have slightly smaller 13.3-inch displays.

Aside from its gauche colored lid and some small mouse buttons, the Satellite M55's design is impressive. Its broad keyboard features quiet keys that don't clack when you type, which will please your neighbors on long flights. A standard-size touch pad and small mouse buttons sit below the keyboard. To the right of the keyboard lie six buttons in a ladderlike formation. You can program the first two buttons to launch the applications of your choice. The remaining four buttons control the laptop's multimedia player; you can even watch DVDs or listen to CDs without booting up the operating system. While not huge, the 14-inch display has a 1,280x768 native resolution and a wide-aspect configuration that works well for watching movies and comparing documents side by side. (If you're looking for an even larger screen, the less expensive HP Compaq nx6125 includes a 15-inch display, and the similarly priced Toshiba Tecra A4 has a 15.4-inch display.) A volume wheel on the front edge allows you to turn sound up or down, and the Harman Kardon speakers located below deliver above-average sound. Finally, a wireless on/off switch helps you preserve battery life by disabling the integrated Wi-Fi when you're not online.

The Satellite M55 strikes a good balance between moderate case size and useful connectors. The thin-and-light leaves out bulky legacy connectors, such as parallel and serial ports, and instead provides more contemporary connectors. These include FireWire, S-Video-out, VGA, and four USB 2.0 ports; 56K modem, Ethernet, headphone, and microphone jacks; one Type II PC Card slot; and one 5-in-1 flash media slot that supports five types of flash memory cards: Secure Digital, Memory Stick/Memory Stick Pro, MultiMediaCard, and xD-Picture.

The Satellite M55 comes standard with Microsoft Windows XP Home and the scaled-back Microsoft Works 8.0 mini office suite. The company also offers a few applications to help with video viewing (InterVideo WinDVD 5.0) and disc burning (Sonic RecordNow Basic and DLA). The last program of note is Toshiba's ConfigFree utility for altering wireless settings, programmable-button applications, and more.

You can nab a Satellite M55 at retail stores such as Best Buy and CompUSA, as well as through several online resellers. Our test model, the Satellite M55-S325, goes for $1,399 (as of August 2005)--a fair price, considering its overall solid configuration. The system features a 1.73GHz Pentium M processor; a giant 100GB, 5,400rpm drive; a killer double-layer DVD burner; and an Intel 802.11b/g wireless card. It also ships with a couple of ho-hum parts: 512MB of somewhat slow 333MHz memory and an economical Intel 915PM chipset that borrows up to 128MB of video RAM from main memory. The rival Sony VAIO VGN-S470P costs $500 more for a smaller screen and hard drive, though it provides a more powerful Nvidia GeForce Go 6200 graphics chip. In contrast, the Averatec 4200 is priced $200 less than the Satellite M55 but includes a slower 1.6GHz Pentium M processor, a smaller hard drive and display, and a single-layer DVD burner. Check out our Satellite M50 series review for more details on this series' alternate configuration. (Note: The Toshiba Satellite M50 and M55 are basically the same system; you can customize the M50, while M55 models come preconfigured.)

In CNET Labs' mobile benchmarks, the Satellite M55 proved itself a solid contender. It performed 43 percent faster than the abhorrently slow Averatec 4200 and trailed the top-scoring VAIO VGN-S470P by just 7 percent. In our Labs' battery-drain trials, the Satellite M55 emerged the winner over the VAIO VGN-S470P, holding out for 3 hours, 22 minutes, compared with the Sony's 3 hours, 1 minute. The Averatec 4200 somewhat redeemed itself by beating both the Toshiba and the Sony with its 3 hours, 33 minutes of battery life.

Toshiba provides an industry-standard one-year warranty with the Satellite M55. During that time, you must mail or carry in the laptop to an authorized service center for repairs. You can buy an extended warranty with up to three years ($229) of coverage; you can also buy enhanced coverage, such as accidental damage protection and onsite service. Toll-free tech support is available around the clock for the length of your warranty. The Toshiba support Web site lacks one of our favorite features--real-time chat with a tech-support rep--but it does link out to the helpful Windows Users Group Network laptop forum.

Mobile application performance
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark 2002 performance rating  

Battery life
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark 2002 battery-life minutes  

Find out more about how we test Windows notebooks.

System configurations:
Averatec 4200
Windows XP Home; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M 730; 512MB PC3200 DDR2 SDRAM 400MHz; Intel 915GM/GMS, 910GML Express 64MB; WD Scorpio WD800UE 75GB 5,400rpm
Toshiba Satellite M55
Windows XP Home; 1.73GHz Intel Pentium M 740; 512MB PC2700 DDR2 SDRAM 333MHz; Intel 915GM/GMS, 910GML Express 128MB; Toshiba MK1032GAX 100GB 5,400rpm
Sony VAIO VGN-S470P
Windows XP Pro; 1.73GHz Intel Pentium M 740; 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM 400MHz; Nvidia GeForce Go 6200 128MB; Fujitsu MHT2080BH 80GB 4,200rpm

6.0

Toshiba Satellite M50

Score Breakdown

Design 7Features 6Performance 6Battery 5Support 5