In an effort to keep weight and thickness down, Toshiba has trimmed design to the bone, giving the R705 a largely plastic chassis (with modest bits of magnesium alloy) that flexes liberally under strain — not good for a laptop designed for travel. Considerably worse, though, is the keyboard. The island-style chiclet keys are too small and have too much distance between them, and their rubbery action is more reminiscent of dialing a telephone than pleasantly touch-typing on a real keyboard.
Performance on the machine, while acceptable, is uninspired. Its benchmark scores are fine for a latest-generation Core i3-based computer, but naturally graphics (integrated here) are a no-show. Battery life of 3.5 hours is also about average for a 13-inch machine, and far from the promised 8.5 hours.
The net results of Toshiba's efforts are a computer designed for busy travelers but which neither looks particularly good nor works particularly well in day-to-day use because of its keyboard issues. Repackage it as a $500 executive netbook, and maybe we have a deal.
WIRED Slim and extremely lightweight. USB-eSATA combo port is handy. Touchpad responds well.
TIRED Keyboard is tragically designed. Chassis feels cheap and looks unappealing. Overpriced for its feature set, despite slim profile.
- Manufacturer: Toshiba
- Price: $890 (as tested)
Authors: Christopher Null