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Remove and replace Toshiba laptop keyboard tips
April 24 2009, 4:02 AM
Today, I'll give you some instructions on how to remove and replace Toshiba laptop keyboard, if you are meeting this kind of problem, read this article carefully.
First, insert a small flathead screwdriver under the Toshiba laptop keyboard bezel and carefully lift it up. Continue releasing plastic latches and removing the Toshiba laptop keyboard bezel with your fingers. Be careful, on some models the bezel might be connected to the motherboard as it shown on the picture above. Lift it up with a small screwdriver and remove using fingers. On most Toshiba laptops the keyboard bezel doesn’t have any circuit board underneath, it’s just a piece of plastic and you don’t have to worry about cables.
After the bezel is removed you get an access to the Toshiba laptop screws. Remove two (or more) screws. Release the plastic latch pointed with the red arrow and lift up the keyboard. Carefully put the keyboard aside so you can access the connector underneath the Toshiba laptop keyboard. Do not forget that the keyboard is still connected to the motherboard.
Then, Remove three (or more) screws from the top of the Toshiba laptop keyboard. Carefully lift up the keyboard from the laptop case. The keyboard connects to the motherboard via a flat ribbon cable. Before you pull the cable from the connector, you’ll have to unlock the connector. The image above illustrates how to unlock the keyboard connector. Carefully move the connector lock 2-3 millimeters up and after that pull the keyboard cable. To install the Toshiba laptop keyboard, follow the above mentioned steps in the reverse order.
Warning!
- if your laptop is still covered by the manufacturer’s warranty, do not open the case or you can loose the warranty
- always remove the battery and unplug the AC adapter before you open the laptop case
- if you damage the Toshiba laptop keyboard connector on the motherboard you’ll have to replace the whole motherboard
- proceed on your own risk
Toshiba A45-S1202 keyboard(Status: Genuine and new! )
Toshiba m205-S810 keyboard(Ribbon cable included)
Toshiba Satellite A10 keyboard(Ribbon cable included)
Toshiba S3 keyboard(Ribbon cable included)
Toshiba m200-S838 keyboard(Colour:Black )
HP NC6320 keyboard(Genuine and new!)
Gateway MX6000 Keyboard(Status: Genuine and new! Remark: Ribbon cable included )
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How to choose a perfect notebook
April 21 2009, 3:09 AM
If you were thinking about a netbook, but considered them too small and limited, if you wanted a very portable Blu-Ray player, or if you’d always wanted something small but were turned off by the higher price, you’d drift toward the DV2. If what you wanted was something you were going to live off of as your primary computer, or needed something with longer battery life and didn’t care about Blu-ray, the DV3 would be the better choice. In reality, if you thought about your priorities first, you would never have to decide between these two products any more than you’d ever need to choose between a Miata sports car and an SUV.
Once you know what you want, you can reduce the choices you have to make, and simply chose the product out of a class of machines, rather than the entire population of them.
The smallest size screen you can actually live on is 12 inches. A 14-inch widescreen is the largest size that will fit comfortably on the tray in most coach airline seats, but 13.3 inches feels more ideal in this use, and it is also one of the most popular sizes. Also, 13.3-inch screens typically give you a full-sized keyboard, which can be important for those of us that have big hands. Anything larger than a 14-inch widescreen is very difficult to comfortably use in a coach airline seat. If you do a lot of productivity work, then you will want more than one processor core, and if you do any graphics work or want to watch HD movies, you’ll need discrete graphics (though it will cost you battery life). On the road, you’ll want something that will take a nine-cell or better battery, to get the required battery life. I’m personally not a fan of large hard drives on laptops, because they encourage people to put a large amount of company information on them, which can be problematic if the thing gets stolen. However, if given a choice, I’d pick speed over capacity in almost all cases, when it comes to hard drives.
Before buying your next laptop, think about what is important to you. Cool does count, which is why products like the MacBook Air sell well. Don’t forget to set a budget, and realize that you can actually get, as these offerings demonstrate, some impressive technology for under $900. Also remember to check the return policy, and make sure that if you take a notebook home and realize it isn’t right for you, that you can return it. When you fire up a new notebook, both the antivirus and the search programs will need to index your files.
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The Full Informaiton of Acer's Two Upcoming Notebo
April 16 2009, 12:00 AM
It seems that this is the summer to Acer, with its recently announcemant of a pair of new notebooks, one of which it plans to release in June. Sitting at opposite ends of the spectrum, the thin and light Aspire 3935 will ship as a 13.3-inch notebook, with the 8935G checking in at a much larger 18.4 inches.
Packed into the smaller 3935 will be Intel's Core 2 Duo T7350 processor on the chip maker's GM45 chipset, 3GB of DDR2-1066 RAM, integrated 4500MHD graphics, a 250GB SATA hard drive, 8X DVD burner, Wi-Fi, touch sensitive hotkeys, and various other goodies adding up to a 4.18-pound laptop.
Moving up to the 8935G adds a larger display, one of several Intel Core 2 Duo processors, discrete ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4670 graphics, a combo 4X Blu-ray drive and DVD burner, four USB 2.0 ports, up to 4GB of DDR3 memory, and up to 1TB of hard drive space. The added horsepower and screen real estate means the 8935 will weight more than twice as much as the 3935, checking in at 10.1 pounds. Interestingly, neither laptop comes with an SSD option.
Acer says the Aspire 3935 is available now at major retailers nationwide starting at $900. The Aspire 8935G will be available stateside in June with pricing and further specifications still to be determined.
Both of the two notebooks look special, no matter from the appearance or the laptop accessories, hope it will sale well.
Dell Inspiron E1705 keyboard(Status: Genuine and new! Remark: Ribbon cable included )
Dell 1702FP LCD AC Adapter(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC14V 3A )
Dell Inspiron 6000 keyboard(Status: Genuine and new! Remark: Ribbon cable included )
Delta SADP-65KB (REV.B) AC Adapter 19V 3.42A(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC19V 3.42A )
Dell AD-4214N LCD AC Adapter(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC14V 3A )
Delta PA-1650-02 AC Adapter 19V 3.42A(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC19V 3.42A )
Toshiba PA-1650-01 AC Adapter(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC19V 3.42A )
Toshiba PA3467U-1ACA AC Adapter 65W(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC19V 3.42A )
Toshiba PA3469U-1ACA AC Adapter(DC15V 5A Power: 75W )
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Acer PC joins Nvidia's 'Ion'
April 8 2009, 3:53 AM
The Acer AspireRevo is the first Atom-based PC from a major PC supplier to use Nvidia's Ion chipset that packs GeForce 9400M graphics, the same graphics used in the Apple 13-inch MacBook and MacBook Air. Acer launched a PC Tuesday that attempts to bring PC-class performance to Atom-processor-based PCs.
The AspireRevo's marquee external feature is the diminutive size: the desktop is comparable in size to a laptop (though slightly thicker, about the size of a typical hardcover book). Internally, the device will test Nvidia's thesis that devices, such as Netbooks, that pair the Atom processor with Nvidia graphics offer much better performance than Intel-only (i.e., Atom-with-Intel-chipset) platforms.
Nvidia listed the following capabilities for the Ion-based AspireRevo:
1.Ability to run Windows Vista Home Premium
2. 1080p HD video with true-fidelity 7.1 audio
3.Popular games including Spore, Call of Duty 4, and Sim City 5
4. DirectX 10 graphics with advanced digital display connectivity
5. Accelerated video enhancement and transcoding using Nvidia CUDA technology
If Nvidia continue to do things like rebadging old chips, claiming 1080p on a 600 line netbook without any optical storage device and saying "Popular games including Spore, Call of Duty 4, and Sim City 5", nothing will force Intel to improve.
See those failed Mac, HP and Dell with a NVidia chip? What NVidia need to do is to get itself right first before attacking others mindlessly.
Gateway CX200S AC Adapter(DC19V 3.42A Power: 65W )
Gateway K020303D4 Keyboard Original(Genuine and new! )
HP NC6400 battery(11.1V Capacity: 4400mAh )
LCD Adapter 12V 5A(DC12V 5A Power: 60W )
Dell XG900 keyboard(Genuine and new! )
Dell NADP-90KB AC Adapter(DC19.5V 4.62A Power: 90W )
Compaq K022546A1 keyboard(Compaq K022546A1 keyboard )
HP 384020-001 AC adapter(DC18.5V 3.5A Power: 65W )
PA3469U-1ACA(6.3mm/3.0mm Tip)
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Will Laptops Outdate in the Near Future?
April 6 2009, 2:54 AM
Laptops have become commonplace in todays society, with sales outstripping desktop computers and trends towards people becoming more mobile. This pattern remained largely unaffected, with laptop sales growing every year.
The original Asus Eee PC, the 7 inch Eee PC 701, is still on sale but the netbook has evolved. Asus went on to expand it's Eee PC Series to include 9 and 10 inch models, the 'top-of-the-range' Eee PC S101 and used the technology from it to produce the 'Eee Top', a computer bereft of screen, mouse and keyboard which is designed to be portable. Other companies entered the fray such as Acer with it's Aspire One netbook (itself going on to match Asus's sales) and MSI - who introduced the first 10 inch netbook, the Wind, now pretty much the industry standard. Gradually the bigger players began to take notice with HP, Samsung, LG, Toshiba, Dell and most recently Sony having entered the field with miniature laptops more or less mimicking the efforts of pioneering Asus.
So the mini laptop market has already captured the hearts and minds of the manufacturers, after all the cheaper and simpler models are easier to market and sell. But what about the consumers? What do they think? Do they finally satified with it?
The answer is, No! common complaint about a mini laptop is the interface is simply too small. The keyboard is cramped with a poor layout, the touchpad is too tiny and the buttons are peculiarly positioned. Indeed, the earlier netbooks were a bit of a mess - but their more recent cousins are a far cry from the earlier attempts at producing a mini laptop. Now, the bigger players are entering the market, they're capitalizing on their rivals earlier trial and error runs, incorporating their own lines unique selling points and using their name to market their products. Today, the bigger brands 'appear' to use more of the shelf space - maybe they're more profitable... maybe consumers are warming to the idea of a mini laptop, given the sudden wash on big brands now available on the market.
Another criticism is the lack of processing power, and CD/DVD-ROM Drive. Netbooks from their early conception were designed to be simple and cheap, so the new-build Intel Atom processor was designed only to fulfill basic tasks like word processing, browsing the internet and playing light games. The advantage of having such a simple processor is that it's more efficient leading to longer battery life (also helped by having a smaller screen). The lack of a optical disc drive (your CD/DVD-ROM) is a necessary cut in order to shed the extra size and weight - and for those who really grumble about this there is a solution! An external USB disc drive costs between £20-30, or splash out on an ultra-portable notebook like the Sony VAIO TT (the world's smallest blu-ray notebook) which is only 11.1 inches in diameter.
The lack of features compared to a laptop though is a flawed argument for most people. Sure, a laptop will be able to run graphic intensive software or faster games - they have the processors to do that; but it will still remain inferior to a desktop computer. Most features on a laptop are inferior to a desktop, except for one. The portability of a laptop is its main selling point, and it's commonplace to think that's the standard. But when moving around, like a laptop is designed for, how often is it that you'd need all that computing power? All the extra features? All that extra weight and bulk? All that extra expense?
Yes, there will be professionals who will need powerful, yet portable computing power, but such will tend to go towards the 'ultra-portable' range of laptop computers anyway, devices such as the Sony VAIO Series or Apple MacBooks (for graphic designers). Mini laptops and netbooks are becoming evermore sophisticated, and already in their short time in existence they've managed to take aroundabout 10% of the laptop market already.
The last question, what do you think of it?
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Dell XG900 keyboard(Genuine and new! )
Dell NADP-90KB AC Adapter(DC19.5V 4.62A Power: 90W )
Compaq K022546A1 keyboard(Compaq K022546A1 keyboard )
HP 384020-001 AC adapter(DC18.5V 3.5A Power: 65W )
PA3469U-1ACA(6.3mm/3.0mm Tip)
Compaq Presario R3000 battery(Capacity: 6600mAh)
Dell Inspiron 9400 battery(Capacity: 6600mAh)
Gateway M460 AC Adapter(Input: AC100-240V (worldwide use) Output: DC19V 3.42A)
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