This article needs to be updated.(January 2018) |
Manufacturer | Toshiba (1996–2016) Dynabook Inc. (2018–present) |
---|---|
Release date | 1996 |
Operating system | Windows |
Related |
The Tecra is a series of business laptops currently manufactured by Dynabook Inc., a subsidiary of Sharp Corporation formerly owned by Toshiba. The number of Tecra notebook models available for sale is strictly dependent on the location: North and South America, Europe, Africa and South Africa, the Middle East or the South Pacific region.
The first Tecra notebook models were released in 1996, including the Tecra 500CS and the Tecra 500CDT. Both notebook models had the same design and featured similar hardware specification. The Tecra laptops built in 1996 dimensions of 299 mm × 235 mm × 58 mm, with a weight of 3.4 kg with integrated AC adaptor. The lithium-lon battery (not used in Satellite notebooks before 1997) offered a standard productivity up to two hours. The original designers of the Tecra were two engineers working at Netel communications. Kenneth Rolls and Kenneth Bailey. Original release of the Tecra was to the engineers of Nextel communications, to improve workflow and speed. Mostly used for process of cellular data. Then released general public.
Toshiba marketed both 500CS and 500CDT as fast notebooks that feature information highway with no speed limits. Toshiba included in Tecra 500CS and Tecra 500CDT important hardware features for 1996, including Intel Pentium SL Enh (120 MHz), standard main memory of 16 MB EDO RAM expandable to 144 MB EDO RAM, a hard drive of 1.350 million bytes, both floppy disk and CD-ROM drive (optional), two CardBus, Desk Station V Plus PCI bus, Card Station II, PCI bus, and ZV Port. However, the Tecra 500CS had a 12.1 inches STN LCD color display with a resolution of 800 × 600 pixels, while the Tecra 500CDT has a 12.1 inches TFT LCD color display with the 800 × 600 pixels resolution.
By September 2000 Toshiba implemented a common platform philosophy which delivered the investment protection that IT decision makers demanded. The Tecra 8100 notebook reduced long term Total Costs of Ownership. Toshiba offered the Tecra 8100 with four different processor speeds (Pentium III 500 MHz, Pentium III 600 MHz, Pentium III 650 MHz, and Pentium III 700 MHz). The basic configuration was also available in two diagonal display, 13.3 inches and 14.1 inches. The Tecra 8100 also included a floppy disk, CD-ROM drive or DVD-ROM drive, S3 Savage MX graphic adapter, two PC Card Type II or one PC Card Type III, Card Bus support, memory expansion slot, SelectBay modules, and Lithium-Ion battery (with an autonomy up to four hours). By 2000 Toshiba was adding special features to Tecra notebook models, such as Toshiba Hibernation and Resume, Toshiba Power Extensions, SecureSleep, Wake-On-LAN and Service Boot, and System Password Security.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2021) |
Toshiba is updating the Tecra series by upgrading older models or launching new notebooks, such as Tecra A11. Depending on the location there are currently three notebooks in the Tecra series. Toshiba implemented two latest upgrades in the current Tecra series. The first upgrade regards the operating system. Recent Tecra notebooks are shipped with Windows 7 operating system, while the second upgrade regards the 2010 Intel Core processor Family, which includes faster processors that deliver higher performances with Intel Turbo Boost technology and Intel Hyper Threading technology (available in three performance levels). Toshiba included in the Tecra series features for protection such as PC Health Monitor. Other Tecra laptop features are eSATAp Sleep-and-Charge combo port, and fingerprint reader for a better security. Furthermore, the Tecra series includes notebooks with either 14.1 inches diagonal display or 15.6 high resolution diagonal widescreen. Some current Tecra notebook models have durable texture finish with chrome buttons.
Depending on the location the Tecra series includes:
Model no. | Processor | Display | RAM | Graphics | VRAM | Audio | Toshiba datasheet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
500CS | Pentium 120 | 12.1" DSTN 800x600 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_500cs |
500CDT | Pentium 120 | 12.1" TFT 800x600 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_500cdt |
510CDS | Pentium 133 | 11.3" DSTN 800x600 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_510cds |
510CDT | Pentium 133 | 12.1" TFT 800x600 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_510cdt |
520CDT | Pentium MMX 166 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | C&T B65555 | 2 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 | tecra_520cdt |
530CDT | Pentium MMX 166 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | C&T B65555 | 2 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 | tecra_530cdt |
550CDT | Pentium MMX 266 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 | tecra_550cdt |
Model no. | Processor | Display | RAM | Graphics | VRAM | Audio | Toshiba datasheet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
700CS | Pentium 120 | 11.3" DSTN 800x600 | 8 MB - 40 MB | C&T 65548 | 1 MB | ESS688 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_700cs |
700CT | Pentium 120 | 11.3" TFT 800x600 | 8 MB - 40 MB | C&T 65548 | 1 MB | ESS688 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_700ct |
710CDT | Pentium 133 | 12.1" TFT 800x600 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_710cdt |
720CDT | Pentium 133 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_720cdt |
730CDT | Pentium 150 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_730cdt |
730XCDT | Pentium MMX 150 | 12.1" TFT 1024x768 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65550 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_730xcdt |
740CDT | Pentium MMX 166 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 16 MB - 144 MB | C&T 65554 | 2 MB | CS4232 & Yamaha OPL3 | tecra_740cdt |
740CDM | Pentium MMX 233 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 & OPL4-ML2 | tecra_740cdm |
750CDT | Pentium MMX 233 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 & OPL4-ML2 | tecra_750cdt |
750CDM | Pentium MMX 233 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 32 MB - 160 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 & OPL4-ML2 | tecra_750cdm |
750DVD | Pentium MMX 233 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 64 MB - 160 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 & OPL4-ML2 | tecra_750dvd |
780CDM | Pentium II 266 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 64 MB - 192 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 | tecra_780cdm |
780DVD | Pentium II 266 | 13.3" TFT 1024x768 | 64 MB - 192 MB | S3 Virge MX 3D | 4 MB | Yamaha OPL3 SA3 | tecra_780dvd |
Toshiba began production of the Tecra A5 in 2005. It has since been superseded by the Tecra A6. Older models include the Tecra 720CDT. They were produced at Toshiba's plants in Yokkaichi and Hangzhou.
The Tecra A5 has 14-inch WXGA wide-screen LCD display with a native resolution of 1280×768 pixels. The laptop's exterior is mostly black, but the back of the laptop lid has a silver finish. The laptop has stereo speakers which are located under the LCD display. When compared to its cousin the Satellite, the Tecra is generally more expensive and more business oriented, each having different features and capabilities.
The Tecra A5 has a DVD burner, multi card reader, wireless, a headphone and microphone jack, four USB ports, an S-Video port, RGB port, an internal 56k modem and an Ethernet port for connecting to LANs. Uses Intel Centrino Duo. Designed for Windows XP.
Part | Details |
---|---|
Graphics Controller | Intel GMA 900 (up to 128 MB UMA video memory) |
System Chipset | Mobile Intel 915GM Express Chipset |
Memory | 256-512 MB (standard) DDR 333 MHz memory |
Hard Drive | 40-80 GB capacity (5400 rpm) |
Optical Drive | CD-RW/DVD-ROM |
Wireless | Atheros 802.11b/g wireless |
Battery | 6-cell lithium-ion battery (4300 mAh) |
The PowerBook is a family of Macintosh laptop computers designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer from 1991 to 2006. During its lifetime, the PowerBook went through several major revisions and redesigns, often being the first to incorporate features that would later become standard in competing laptops. The PowerBook line was targeted at the professional market. In 1999, the line was supplemented by the home and education-focused iBook family.
Dell XPS is a line of consumer-oriented laptop and desktop computers manufactured by Dell since 1993.
The O2 Xda brand was a range of Windows Mobile PDA phones, marketed by O2, developed by O2 Asia and manufactured by multiple OEMs (mainly HTC, Quanta and Arima). The first model was released in June 2002. The last models came to market in 2008. The "X" represents convergence of voice and information/data within one product; the "DA" stands for "Digital Assistant", as in PDA. The name of XDA Developers is derived from it.
The Panasonic Toughbook is a line of rugged computers produced and marketed by Panasonic. The first model, the CF-25, was introduced in 1996. The Toughbook brand mainly competes with other lines of rugged computers, such as Dell's Rugged Extreme.
Dell Latitude is a line of laptop computers manufactured and sold by American company Dell Technologies. It is a business-oriented line, aimed at corporate enterprises, healthcare, government, and education markets; unlike the Inspiron and XPS series, which are aimed at individual customers, and the Vostro series, which is aimed at smaller businesses.
The Qosmio series was Toshiba's consumer-marketed line of high performance desktop replacement laptops. The laptop was first released on July 25, 2004 as the E15-AV101 with a 1.7 GHz Intel Pentium M CPU, 512 megabytes of DDR SDRAM, and a 15-inch XGA 1024x768 screen. Toshiba's most powerful laptop has undergone many revisions, with focus shifting from high-end multimedia functionality to heavy gaming. The current line, the X70 series, was released in 2013, featuring an Intel Core i7 processor with up to 32 gigabytes of DDR3 SDRAM and an Nvidia GeForce GTX 770M as well as a 17.3-inch Full HD display.
The Satellite Pro is a line of laptop computers designed and manufactured by Dynabook Inc. of Japan, which was formerly Toshiba's computer subsidiary. The Satellite Pro is currently positioned between their consumer E series and their business Tecra series of products.
The Compaq Presario 1200 was a line of notebook computers produced between 1998 and 2000 by Compaq as part of Compaq Presario line.
The IBM ThinkPad 380 was a notebook computer series released May 13, 1997 by IBM as part of their ThinkPad laptop series. Notable for incorporating a CD-ROM and a floppy drive, it was considered a mid-range laptop by IBM at the time, and sold well. The series was the successor to the IBM ThinkPad 365.
The history of laptops describes the efforts, begun in the 1970s, to build small, portable Personal Computers that combine the components, inputs, outputs and capabilities of a Desktop Computer in a small chassis.
The HP Pavilion dv2000 was a model series of laptops manufactured by Hewlett-Packard Company that featured 16:10 14.1" diagonal displays.
IBM ThinkPad 310 was a notebook computer series introduced in 1997 by the IBM corporation into the market as part of their ThinkPad laptop series. It was succeeded by the ThinkPad 380 series.
IBM ThinkPad 760 was a notebook computer introduced in 1995 by the IBM corporation into the market as part of the ThinkPad 700-series. It was succeeded in 1998 by the ThinkPad 770 series.
The ThinkPad X series is a line of laptop computers and convertible tablets produced by Lenovo with less power than its other counterparts. It was initially produced by IBM until 2005.
The IdeaPad Y series was a consumer range of laptops produced by Lenovo, first announced in 2008. They were marketed as premium high performance laptops for multimedia and gaming, as part of the IdeaPad line.
The Dell Inspiron series is a line of laptop computers made by American company Dell under the Dell Inspiron branding. The first Inspiron laptop model was introduced before 1999. Unlike the Dell Latitude line, which is aimed mostly at business/enterprise markets, Inspiron is a consumer-oriented line, often marketed towards individual customers as computers for everyday use.
Armada is a discontinued line of business laptops by Compaq. They started as a more affordable version of the Contura line, but after that, they replaced Contura as a mainstream laptop line, and then the high-end Compaq LTE line were merged with Armada as a premium 7300 and 7700 sub-lines.
The CF-V21P is a notebook-sized laptop released by Panasonic in 1993. It was the first notebook computer to have an integrated CD-ROM drive as an option, albeit it only supports up to 3.5-inch-diameter mini CDs instead of standard 4.7-inch-diameter discs. It was discontinued in 1994.
The Satellite Pro 400 series was a series of notebook-sized laptops under the Satellite Pro line manufactured by Toshiba Information Systems from 1995 to 1999. Almost all entries in the line feature Pentium processors from Intel, with the final models featuring the Mobile Pentium II. Toshiba oriented the Satellite Pro 400 series at professionals who wanted multimedia features in a compact package; accordingly, all models feature a slot for a CD-ROM drive, built-in audio, and accelerated graphics. The Satellite Pro was a major market success for Toshiba and helped the company become the number-one global laptop manufacturer for much of the mid-1990s, beating out major competitors such as IBM and Compaq. Most models in the series received positive reception from technology journalists.
WideNote is a line of subnotebooks released by Sharp Corporation. The line comprises the W-100T and W-100D, both released in 1996, and the M4000, released in 2005. The W-100 series was the first laptop with a color widescreen LCD, with a roughly 16:9 aspect ratio. The W-100 series features a Pentium processor clocked at 133 MHz, while the M4000 features a Pentium M processor clocked at 1.73 GHz.