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Toshiba Qosmio G30 review

Verdict:

The first HD-ready laptop released in the UK, but is this high-tech worth the high price?

The first HD-DVD drive in such a stylish system, but you pay a lot for the privilege.

Review Date: 18 May 2006

Price when reviewed: inc VAT

Reviewed By: Danny Bird

Our Rating 4 stars out of 5

Remember the first time you went back to a VHS tape after you'd got used to DVDs?

Well prepare yourself for a shock - high-definition video is on the way. It crams anywhere up to 1,080 lines into a picture, compared with 470 lines in a normal TV signal, and it's going to make DVD movies look as blurry and soft focused as old video tapes.

As well as being broadcast over digital TV, the new HD content will come on two types of disc - HD-DVD and Blu-ray. These are competing, mutually-exclusive standards, but they both have massive storage capacities - 15GB for HD-DVD and 25GB for Blu-ray. Writeable discs will soon follow - allowing PC users who invest in an HD-DVD or Blu-ray writer to archive massive amounts of PC data to a single disc.

Toshiba is one of the major backers of the HD-DVD standard and the Qosmio G30 is the first HD-ready laptop to be released in the UK. It comes complete with an HD-DVD disc drive, a massive HD-ready screen and a special port for outputting HD video to an HD-ready TV.

A sight to behold

Beneath its stylish silver lid the Qosmio G30 houses a 17in screen with a massive resolution of 1920 x 1200 - more than enough to display full HD video. Colours are incredibly vivid, while images are crisp, clean and beautifully bright. This is in part due to the glossy surface of the screen, which has the downside that it's quite reflective. This isn't too much of a problem in a normal home environment - it's only in airports or hotel lobbies that it will start to irk.

We tried some sample HD videos and the result is nothing short of astonishing, and even on the Qosmio's 17in screen the level of detail is truly remarkable. There are even reports of Hollywood stars hating the new technology as it shows up every wrinkle and blemish on their faces - we can well believe it.

The great picture quality is complemented perfectly by the integrated Harman/Kardon stereo speakers. Most laptop speakers couldn't possibly produce enough volume to fill a room, but these do and the sound quality is impressive. The bass is rich, making sure explosions are reproduced in all their glory, but not at the expense of details at the high end. Together they make the Qosmio G30 a realistic alternative to a TV in a study or bedroom, and there are outputs to connect to external speakers if you'd prefer.

The Qosmio also has an integrated analogue/digital TV tuner so you'll be able to watch either Freeview or normal television, depending on what services are available in your area.

HD versatility

The real focus of the Qosmio G30 is the HD-DVD drive, and although discs are not available yet in the UK - several titles such as Serenity and The Last Samurai have been released in the US - they should be arriving in the UK towards the end of the summer. The drive can only read the HD-DVD discs, so you won't be able to burn your own - but it can read and write DVDs and CDs like a normal DVD writer.

The HD-DVD drive isn't the only trick up the G30's sleeve. HD will have the biggest visual impact on larger TVs, or when displayed using a projector. The majority of HD-ready TVs and projectors receive their signal via an HDMI port, which can carry both full HD video and HD surround-sound. You could theoretically, send HD video via a conventional DVI connector - but there's a catch. Because of the copy-protection applied to it, most HD content won't display properly when sent over a DVI connection. It will either be garbled or displayed at a lower resolution. The G30, however, has one of the new HDMI ouputs that's compatible with HD-DVD's copy protection system. This means that you'll be able to use the Qosmio as an HD-DVD player and hook it up to your HD-Ready TV.

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