The Toshiba Portege z20t ($1,399, £1,289, AU$1,815) is a
business-grade hybrid laptop that is compact, lightweight and moderately
stylish.
Competing in the same class as the business-focused Dell Venue 11 Pro 7000 and the HP Elite x2 1011,
the Portege is capable as both a laptop and as a tablet, with enough
power and battery life to get you through the average work day.
However,
like most business hybrids, especially those of the thin and light
variety, the Portege doesn't feature the high-end performance of a
mobile workstation, nor is it as sexy as a consumer 2-in-1. What you're
getting here is a compromise that delivers on its hybrid-for-work
promise, but not much else.
Design
Built
with a neat-looking graphite black metallic shell that won't
fingerprint or smudge, the Portege is middle-of-the-pack in terms of
heft and thickness. The Portege weighs 3.3 pounds (1.5kg) when attached
to its power keyboard, and 1.6 pounds (0.73 kg) as a tablet.
For
reference, the HP Elite x2 weighs 3.63 pounds (1.65kg) when attached to
its power keyboard, and 1.71 pounds (0.71kg) without a keyboard, while
the Venue 11 Pro weighs 1.76 pounds (0.72kg) with its keyboard and 1.6
pounds (0.68kg) without it. To be fair, neither of those keyboards will
add 7 hours of battery life like the Portege's power keyboard will, so
the keyboard more than makes up for its heft. It's also slightly slimmer
than the Elite x2, by a measly 0.02 inches, so there's one more minor,
minor victory.
The Z20t features a 12.5-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 IPS
touchscreen that compares nicely to the full HD-resolution display (FHD)
1,920 x 1080 on the 11.6 inch Elite x2, and the Dell Venue 11 Pro
7000's FHD screen. However, the Z20t's screen does feature a bit more
pizazz than the Elite x2, which was one of the weaker FHD screens I've
ever tested.
The tablet is built with a flat base that is
comfortable to handle when not attached to the keyboard dock. However,
the seven latches that hold the tablet to the dock are a bit much.
Popping the tablet off of the dock is as simple as flipping a button and
pulling, but putting the tablet back on requires careful alignment. You
won't be able to mindlessly slap the tablet back onto the dock,
especially considering how flimsy the plastic latches and receivers are
on both ends of the device; if you do, you might very well end up with a
little piece of plastic shrapnel flying off onto your desk.
Unlike
the Elite x2, you can connect the tablet to the keyboard in the reverse
display mode seen on Lenovo Yoga devices, and you can flip and bend the
tablet all the way back into tablet mode while it's still attached to
the power keyboard. So, if you're in desperate need of this device in
tablet mode, but you're short on juice, you can pop it onto the keyboard
and get to work without an issue.
Unfortunately, when the device
sits on the dock in display mode, you won't be able to press too hard
on the screen, as the tablet doesn't lock into place while sitting on
the dock. This is a bit of a hindrance, especially for anyone who is
giving a presentation and needs to use the touchscreen to flip from
slide to slide.
In laptop mode, the mounting is perfect; it's
sturdy enough to handle hard presses, and loose enough to adjust without
having to yank and shove.
One
thing you'll likely hate about the Portege is the key layout on the
power keyboard. I'm not sure if a group of middle-schoolers is the
target demographic for this device, but the keys are so small you're
going to wind up spending more time searching for the right button than
you should, especially for a device that's designed for productivity.
Ditto for the trackpad, which is only about and inch and a half tall.
Like the Dell Venue 11 Pro and the Elite x2, the Portege runs on an
Intel Core M chip, which is designed for mobile computing. Core M
processors lack the speed and power of the Intel Core i series, which
can be found on hybrids like the Microsoft Surface Pro series.
As I mentioned in my Elite x2 review, Core i processors are especially suited for Windows 10,
which is designed to enable enhanced productivity, such as multitasking
between spreadsheets and video editing. With a Core M processor, you
can still get through a typical work day without noticing any issues,
but if your job requires heavy spreadsheet use, or video editing, or if
you want to sneak in a PC game, you're going to want something that
comes with a Core i processor.
Specifications
Here is the Toshiba Portege z20t configuration sent to techradar for review:
CPU: 1.2 GHz Intel Core M 5Y71 (dual-core, 4MB cache, up to 2.9GHz with Turbo Boost)
Graphics: Intel HD Graphics 5300
RAM: 8 GB
Screen: 12.5-inch 1,920x1,080 HD resolution
Storage: 128 GB
Ports:
2 x USB 3.0 (power keyboard), 1 x Ethernet (power keyboard), 1 x HDMI
(power keyboard), 1 x RGB video (power keyboard), 1 x HDMI, 1 x microSD,
1 x micro USB
Weight: 1.71 pounds
Size: 12.2 x 8.5 x 0.8 inches (W x D x H) (tablet with keyboard)
What
you'll immediately love about this device is the abundance of ports and
connections available. Even on the tablet alone, you're able to connect
via HDMI, micro USB and microSD. That's pretty rad for a tablet. Most
manufacturers leave the ports and connections off of the tablet, in
order to minimize thickness. Toshiba was able to do both simultaneously.
Kudos.
Benchmarks
Here's how the Toshiba Portege x20t performed in our suite of benchmark tests:
3DMark: Cloud Gate: 2,976; SkyDiver: 1,435; Fire Strike: 400
Cinebench CPU: 113 points; Graphics: 14 fps
PCMark 8 (Home Test): 2,187
PCMark 8 Battery Life: 7 hours and 54 minutes
In
the Cinebench graphics test, the Portege and the Elite x2 1011 managed a
frame rate of 14 frames per second (fps), which is about 7 frames
slower than the Venue, and 11 frames worse than Core i-powered Microsoft
Surface Pro 3. For the CineBench CPU test, which measures a processor's
multi-core performance via a 3D image rendering task, the Portege got
whooped by everyone, even the Elite x2, which scored 152 points, a score
that is about 30 points lower than the Dell, and 50 points lower than
the Surface.
The
Portege and the Elite scored 400 points in 3DMark's Fire Strike test,
which measures graphics rendering. The Dell scored 512 points. The
Surface scored only 347 points.
The Portege lost to all of its
competition on the 3DMark Sky Diver test by a wide margin (1,435 to the
Elite's 1,491 to the Dell's 1,862 and the Surface's 2,242).
So,
even compared to devices in its own class, the Portege runs slightly
slower. But where the Portege absolutely wallops the competition is in
battery life.
Battery
Only the Elite x2, which ran for 7
hours and 41 minutes (about 14 minutes less than the Portege) during the
PCMark 8 battery test, is able to compare to the Portege in this
competition. The Surface only ran for 2 hours and 38 minutes during this
test, while the Venue ran for 4 hours and 1 minute.
When playing
looped video on the Elite x2, I was able to run the battery for 7 hours
and 15 minutes as a tablet and 11 hours and 20 minutes when connected to
the power keyboard. With the Portege I was able to run the same test
for 7 hours and 45 minutes as a tablet, and 14 hours and 25 minutes with
the attached keyboard.
Toshiba Portege Z20t review
Reviewed by Unknown
on
19:27
Rating: 5
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