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TOSHIBA
A200-1MV LAPTOP
High Street Shop R.R.P:
£599
Used
Product / New Condition
Condition: Absolutely
Spottless!
Part
No: PSAE4E-01T00WEN
Processor:
Intel Core Duo T2330 - 1.60GHz (x2), 533MHz
FSB, 1MB L2 Cache
RAM: 2GB DDR2-667MHz
Hard Drive: 160GB
Screen: 15.4" Widescreen TFT (1280x800)
with TruBrite Technology
Optical Drive: DVD±RW Super Multi Double
Layer
Graphics: Intel GMA X3100
Wireless LAN: 802.11b/g
Weight: 2.72Kg
Operating System: Windows Vista Basic
Fast Ethernet 10/100
S-Video Output
Firewire Port
6 In 1 Card Reader
Built-In Stereo Speakers
CONTENTS
INCLUDES
Laptop (Unboxed)
Battery
A.C Adaptor
Os Microsoft Vista
(Pre-Installed Only)
Os Installed & Formatted
To Fact-Status
Company's Sales Receipt
14 Day Faulty Replacement
1 Year Manufacturer's Warranty
DELIVERY
OPTIONS
£20
Next Day UK Mail Delivery
Free London Cash On Delivery
Free Local Courier Collection
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ITEM'S
FEATURES
The
Satellite Pro A200-1MV is the right choice when
it comes to style, performance and value. With
its 15.4" widescreen Toshiba TruBrite display
for vivid images and an Intel Dual Core processor,
it is designed to deliver maximum efficiency
and mobility to serve the business needs of
small and medium sized companies. Toshiba's
design team has played it safe. The lid's blue-grey
colour should appeal to consumers and 'suits'
alike, but the oversize Toshiba logo screams
function more than fun. The inside of the laptop
is even less adventurous -- the screen bezel
is black and the keyboard section is, surprise
surprise, silver. In contrast, there's an almost
boy-racer-esque Satellite logo on the left front
edge. Its blue backlight reminds us of those
cheesy neon lights beneath modified cars and
its very inclusion makes us think Toshiba was
just ticking the boxes of what it thinks will
appeal to as broad a market as possible: inoffensively
coloured lid? Check. Silver interior? Check.
Blue LED lights? Check. It's a laptop, alright.
Other design quirks include the ubiquitous Wi-Fi
switch -- which is positioned under the laptop
where you can't see it. Then there's the keyboard,
which is truly lovely, apart from the enter
key, which is inexplicably too small. Finally,
the front-facing volume adjustment is perfect
for adjusting volume quickly, but it never stops
spinning -- there's no lock when you reach the
absolute minimum or absolute maximum volume.
Not that you'd want to use the internal speakers
much anyway -- they're dire, even by laptop
standards
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