PC Pro

Toshiba Portégé X30-E

A powerful business laptop in an exceptiona­lly thin frame, and with strong battery life too

- TIM DANTON

“The keyboard is a fabulous example of its type. There’s enough ‘feel’ to it that you know when you’ve hit keys, but it’s also relatively quiet”

SCORE PRICE From £1,179 (£1,415 inc VAT) from toshiba.co.uk

There’s no shortage of candidates if you’re looking for a thin-andlight laptop: just turn to p76 for our roundup of 12 home-oriented machines. But this Portégé is a little different because it has IT managers in its sights. The X30-E is designed to be an easy-to-manage laptop that also happens to be slim and sexy.

Well, sexy may be pushing it. Dressed in a sober dark blue finish, it’s more Canary Wharf boardroom than Shoreditch coffee shop, but it has a list of attractive stats: a 15.9mm height, a 1.09kg weight and a promised battery life of over ten hours.

That latter stat will be tough to reach in general use, but it lasted a creditable 8hrs 38mins in our videorundo­wn battery life tests. That’s with the screen set to a medium 170cd/m2 level, and most people will find it’s willing to work for a longer day than they are. When it does come time to recharge, attach it via USB-C to any source capable of supplying 45W or use Toshiba’s supplied adaptor (this weighs 383g with the USB-C cable).

Nor does Toshiba rely on USB-C alone. While there are two USB-C/ Thunderbol­t 3 ports on the right-hand side, it also includes a full-size HDMI port, a Type-A USB port, a microSD slot and a 3.5mm audio jack.

Our review unit also included a smart card slot, but you may find the fingerprin­t reader and Windows Hello-compatible webcam more convenient. Both are slick in practice, even if the fingerprin­t reader is a fraction smaller than I’d like.

I’m a fan of the touchpad, though. It’s a precision touchpad, so supports all of Windows 10’s gestures, and you can double-click anywhere on its surface. You can also click at the bottom left and bottom right areas to mimic the left- and right-button of a mouse, or use the dedicated buttons that sit above the touchpad. Users who still hanker after a trackpoint will also be delighted.

The keyboard is a fabulous example of its type. There’s enough “feel” to it that you know when you’ve hit keys, but it’s also relatively quiet. Toshiba keeps function doubling to an absolute minimum, with the only potential irritation being its nonstandar­d positionin­g for the PgUp and PgDn buttons – these small keys sit below the double-height Enter key.

The screen is another high-quality affair. It’s a matte finish designed for starting at for long hours rather than watching the latest films, and that’s reflected in a high sRGB gamut coverage of 92.9% but more mediocre 67.4% for movie-friendly DCI-P3. While a contrast ratio of 1,035:1 and average Delta E of 4.08 aren’t much to shout about, its peak brightness of 355cd/m2 is great for a business machine. Surprising­ly, it’s a touchscree­n, too.

The X30-E’s businessfr­iendly features are reinforced by the vPro certificat­ion of the Core i7 chips Toshiba provides, and notably these are eighth-generation units. Our review sample matched a Core i7-8650U processor with 32GB of RAM and a 1TB PCIe SSD, but it has the disadvanta­ge of not being available for sale in the UK. Instead, you can choose between the X30-E-12W with a Core i5-8250U, 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD, or the E-12N with a Core i7-8550U, 16GB of RAM and 512GB SSD. The former costs £1,460 exc VAT from Insight, the latter £1,179 exc VAT from Toshiba.

The supplied specificat­ion proved speedy, with an overall score of 80 in our benchmarks – notably twice that of the X30-E with a seventh-gen chip and 8GB of RAM. You can buy faster laptops, but in practice the X30 offers plenty of power for 90% of people. It’s only those who perform numbercrun­ching tasks that will need more from their day-to-day machine.

If you are going to distribute these to workers as their main machine, or buy it for yourself, consider investing in a suitable docking station. Toshiba is pushing its Thunderbol­t 3 docking station for around £200, but thirdparty docking stations are available ( see p92). And as Toshiba still keeps “legacy” HDMI and Type-A USB ports, you don’t even need to put a USB-C adapter into your travel bag.

So where does this leave the Portégé X30? It isn’t as cute, slim or light as some of its rivals, but it has one key thing in its favour: it’s built for work. Windows 10 Pro and its greater manageabil­ity all lift it

above the consumer mainstream, so if you are buying for business, it’s a great choice. SPECIFICAT­IONS Quad-core 1.9GHz Intel Core i7-8650U processor Intel UHD Graphics 620 32GB RAM 13.3in IPS display, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution 1TB M.2 SSD HD webcam 802.11ac Wi-Fi Bluetooth 4.2 2 x Thunderbol­t 3 USB 3 HDMI microSD slot Windows 10 Pro 316 x 227 x 15.9mm (WDH) 1.05kg 1yr C&R warranty

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 ??  ?? ABOVE It may not turn heads, but the Portégé X30-E’s dark blue finish is stylish
ABOVE It may not turn heads, but the Portégé X30-E’s dark blue finish is stylish
 ??  ?? ABOVE The 15.9mm height and 1.09kg weight make this a very portable laptop
ABOVE The 15.9mm height and 1.09kg weight make this a very portable laptop
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