Monday, December 6, 2010

toshiba laptop satellite images

toshiba laptop satellite

toshiba laptop satellite
With exceptional power, features and room, the Toshiba Satellite P505-S8945 is a portable alternative to a desktop computer with its extra-large 18.4-inch screen–giving you the freedom to work and create, plus super-size your music, 3D games, photos, movies and more. The bright 18.4-inch TruBrite LCD (1366 x 768) has an HD+ native resolution (1680 x 945) and the P505 is great for using as a media center with the touch-sensitive media keys placed above the keyboard. You’ll enjoy seamless video playback thanks to the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4650 graphics chip with 1 GB DDR3 discrete memory.
toshiba laptop satellite

toshiba laptop satellite

toshiba laptop satellite

Friday, December 3, 2010

new latest laptop keyboard

Not long ago my old but still highly useful Toshiba Satellite (A65) had an odd breakdown. One of the shift keys shorted out in the "down" position. So it functioned as though the shift key was always pressed. That meant I couldn't type any numbers and clicking on things tended to highlight or open entire pages.

I tried several software fixes and then dug into the hardware. I even tried an external USB keyboard to no avail. After buying a replacement laptop I decided it would be a good idea to try removing the keys completely, including the board. That was a bad idea.

It didn't solve the problem and it created a new one. To make matters worse that laptop is where my Adobe software lives and I've long since lost the discs and things needed to migrate it to my new laptop.

I finally decided that the real solution was going to be installing a new keyboard and then doing a system restoreNot long ago my old but still highly useful Toshiba Satellite (A65) had an odd breakdown. One of the shift keys shorted out in the "down" position. So it functioned as though the shift key was always pressed. That meant I couldn't type any numbers and clicking on things tended to highlight or open entire pages.

I tried several software fixes and then dug into the hardware. I even tried an external USB keyboard to no avail. After buying a replacement laptop I decided it would be a good idea to try removing the keys completely, including the board. That was a bad idea.

It didn't solve the problem and it created a new one. To make matters worse that laptop is where my Adobe software lives and I've long since lost the discs and things needed to migrate it to my new laptop.

I finally decided that the real solution was going to be installing a new keyboard and then doing a system restore
new latest laptop keyboard
new latest laptop keyboard
new latest laptop keyboard
new latest laptop keyboard
new latest laptop keyboard