Posts Tagged ‘Toshiba’s’

Toshiba’s 2012 Q3 makes $322 million net profit, sees a future in nuclear

Toshibas 2012 Q3 makes $  322 million net profit, thinks its future is nuclear

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Toshiba’s most recent numbers may not reach the dizzying heights of last quarter, however at least it’s not back to completing its spreadsheets in red pen. The business is announcing revenues of $ 322 million from net sales of $ 14.9 billion. A big portion of that change originated from Tosh’s “social infrastructure” division, which produces power plants, medical systems and radiation detectors– while its house entertainment and computing departments sat and enjoyed profits continue to decline. Toshiba has actually preserved the cut-back projection it made in October, expecting annual net profits to be around $ 1.2 billion, ample for it to send you a charming bug-eyed robot for your next birthday.Com mentsSource: Toshiba (

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Toshiba’s Satellite U845t brings touch to a low-end Windows 8 laptop

Toshiba U845t

Take your existing products, and add touch. It’s a formula we’re seeing over and over here at CES, but primarily only with higher-end machines. Toshiba’s brought the same formula to its low-end products, with the new Satellite U845t — it’s basically the old U845, with a touchscreen added. The 14-inch laptop still comes with a Core i3 or i5 processor, up to 6GB of RAM, USB 2.0 and 3.0 ports, and of course Windows 8. The touch-enabled model weighs four pounds, and is 0.8 inches thick — adding touch capabilities tends to increase both the size and weight of a Windows PC. Touch also tends to raise the price, but Toshiba’s introducing the touch-capable U845t for the same price — $ 799.99 — as the non-touch model cost last year. If…

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Toshiba’s Excite Honeycomb tablet confirmed for Canadian launch in January

We’ve already heard a fair bit about Toshiba’s forthcoming 10.1-inch Honeycomb tablet, but the company has only now finally confirmed a name — Excite, previously seen in a trademark filing — and a launch date (or month, anyway) for the tablet outside of Europe. You can look for it to roll out for an as yet unspecified price sometime in January — in Canada, at least (though we’d presume a US launch will be around the same time). It will come in both 16GB and 32GB versions, each of which pack a 1.2GHz dual-core OMAP 4430 processor, a 2 megapixel front-facing camera, a 5 megapixel cam ’round back, and a microSD card slot and a micro HDMI port. Toshiba also boasts that it’s the “world’s thinnest, lightest tablet,” with it measuring just 7.7 mm thick and weighing in at 558 grams (or 1.23 pounds).

Toshiba’s Excite Honeycomb tablet confirmed for Canadian launch in January originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Dec 2011 17:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s 7-inch Thrive goes on sale a little early, insists it is very much alive

Just because haven’t heard a peep from Toshiba about its smaller 7-inch slate since September, doesn’t mean you can’t find it on sale out there in the vast ether we like to call the internet. Discovered by a tipster shrewd enough to Google its model number — “pda03u-005007″ for those of you that don’t speak Toshiba — a bunch of oh-so-eager retailers are ready to trade you around $ 450 in exchange for the rubberized slate. Jiving with previous plans to go on sale in “early December,” the 7-inch redux is thinner and lighter than its 10-inch brother, as it eschews the former’s penchant for full-size USB and HDMI ports. Adventurous types seeking to meet the tablet can take the plunge at the links below, but be forewarned our tipster had to provide a business license just to complete the sale. Your mileage may vary, though there’s always the option to await the Thrive’s arrival through more official channels.

[Thanks, Kenneth]

Toshiba’s 7-inch Thrive goes on sale a little early, insists it is very much alive originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Dec 2011 05:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Only in Japan: Toshiba’s Regza DBR-M190 serves 5TB of home media

Sometimes gigabytes aren’t enough. You have to start talking terabytes. That’s the case with Toshiba‘s new Regza Server, more numerically known as the DBR-M190. The just-announced home media server boasts 5TB of storage, enough for 15 days of MPEG4AVC-compressed digital TV — from six different channels. Of course, that “server” in the name means you’ll be able to stream captured content as well. The sad news? “You” means only Japanese consumers. But if you’re one of the chosen many, this media-slinging behemoth will cost you 200,000 yen, or around $ 2,600.

Only in Japan: Toshiba’s Regza DBR-M190 serves 5TB of home media originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 19:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s new Regza WL800A HDTV hooks up with your smartphone via MHL

The MHL Consortium wants to banish HDMI ports from our phones in favor of its Mobile High-Definition Link connection, and the tech has found its way into handsets like the GSII and the EVO 3D. But until now, there were no TVs to connect to. Toshiba’s latest in the Regza line, the WL800A, is the lone set in its 2011 lineup to pack the 5-pin port that pulls 1080p from your mobile device and puts it up on a 46-inch or 55-inch edge-lit LED panel. Best part is, the MHL connection pushes power back into your phone at the same time video is streaming — so you don’t have to worry about your phone dying on you in the middle of your mobile movie marathon. Currently for sale in the land of Oz for $ 2,329 (46-inch) and $ 3,179 (55-inch) AUD, the WL800 won’t be coming to America. However, now that the GSII has landed stateside let’s hope some MHL-equipped TVs follow suit.

Toshiba’s new Regza WL800A HDTV hooks up with your smartphone via MHL originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Aug 2011 05:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Will Toshiba’s next tablet be named the Excite? Trademark filings suggest so

Yesterday, we caught wind of a rumor that Toshiba would be unveiling a new, ultra-thin tablet at this year’s IFA. Today, word on the street is that the company’s forthcoming slate may be called the “Excite.” According to US Trademark filings obtained by Android Police, Toshiba has apparently registered the purported product name under the category “Tablet Computers.” The manufacturer has also snatched up a whole host of domain names, including “excitetablet.com,” “toshibaexcite.com,” and “thetoshibaexcite.com” — all of which currently redirect to a Toshiba site. As you may recall, remarkably similar evidence surfaced right before the Thrive launched, so recent history certainly lends a bit of credence to today’s report. As always, we’ll be sure to keep you abreast of the latest developments.

Will Toshiba’s next tablet be named the Excite? Trademark filings suggest so originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Aug 2011 07:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Product portal, tweets suggest ‘Thrive’ moniker for Toshiba’s Honeycomb tablet

“What’s in a name?” We’d ask Toshiba, but the company hasn’t been able to give its upcoming 10.1-inch Honeycomb tablet one in five months — or has it? If you’ll recall, Toshiba registered the name Thrive for trademark and related domain names last month, and now evidence is mounting that all of that work wasn’t in vain. TabletCommunity learned days ago that a commercial for the device was in production via some chatty actors on Twitter; soon after, the site also uncovered a parking page for the slate on Toshiba’s website, albeit with little more than the aforesaid name categorized under “Tablets.” It’s a welcome update in light of the vapid titles “Antares” and “ANT300″ that had also seemed possible, and once word spills of US pricing and availability, perhaps we can focus on more pressing matters… you know, like benchmarks.

[Thanks, Jakob]

Product portal, tweets suggest ‘Thrive’ moniker for Toshiba’s Honeycomb tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 May 2011 04:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TabletCommunity  |  sourceToshiba, @DavidLyddon, @actorlulumiller , @bigashb (Twitter)  | Email this | Comments

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Toshiba’s in-cell integrated 7-inch capacitive LCD ditches touch layer, extra girth (video)

Samsung’s Super AMOLED may have beat Toshiba to the in-cell capacitive touch punch, but we’re still happy to see other LCD panels dropping unnecessary layers. Featured in a GPS mock-up, Toshiba’s 7-inch 1024 x 600 R&D display touts 10-point multi-touch over 38,400 sensors — that’s one touch sensor for every four pixels. It may not be the first LCD to abandon the standard touch layer for integrated capacitive support, but we wouldn’t shy away from a tablet or embedded screen featuring this 1mm wonder. We’ll have to wait though; Toshiba’s in-cell tech is still in R&D, with no word when or if we might see it in commercial devices. Check out the video after the break for a quick hands-on.

Gallery: Toshiba’s 7-inch integrated capacitive touchscreen concept at SID 2011

Continue reading Toshiba’s in-cell integrated 7-inch capacitive LCD ditches touch layer, extra girth (video)

Toshiba’s in-cell integrated 7-inch capacitive LCD ditches touch layer, extra girth (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 May 2011 18:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s ET100/WT100 Honeycomb tablet clears the FCC

Toshiba’s forthcoming Honeycomb tablet is already headed to Japanese stores as the Regza AT300, but it’s been a bit slower in arriving stateside. Now it seems the company could be close to shipping a real, working product here in the US. The still unnamed slate — dubbed the ET100/WT100 for now — has won FCC approval for its 802.11n and Bluetooth radios. To recap, the slate will have a 10.1-inch (1280 x 800) display, run on NVIDIA’s Tegra 2 platform, and sport dual cameras, HDMI and USB ports, an SD card reader, and, possibly, a removable battery. We say, bring it on.

Toshiba’s ET100/WT100 Honeycomb tablet clears the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 Apr 2011 03:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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