To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more




The launch of Windows 8 may have inspired a whole new generation of notebook-tablet hybrids, but the Toshiba Satellite L855-148 proves that the traditional style of laptop still has a lot to offer.

It’s a big piece of kit, measuring 380x242x33mm and weighing a fairly chunky 2.3kg, but while it may not be the most mobile of laptops, the L855-148 is still a highly capable machine. It has an Intel Core i7-3610QM processor that runs at 2.4GHz, but Intel’s Turbo Boost technology can increase this clock speed to 3.6GHz when there’s enough thermal headroom. Paired with a huge 8GB of RAM, this laptop is incredibly fast, and it completed our multimedia benchmark tests with a very impressive score of 90. For reference, a desktop Intel Ivy Bridge Core i5-3570K scores 100, so this makes the L855-148 easily one of the fastest laptops we’ve seen.
There’s one big drawback to this amount of power, though; the laptop chews through its battery. In our light use battery test the L855-148 only lasted 4 hours and 9 minutes on a full charge; far less than the five hours we expect to see from a laptop.
The L855-148 doesn’t just stop at application performance; it also has a powerful dedicated graphics card. The AMD Radeon HD 7670M chipset isn’t the fastest mobile chipset available, but it’s reasonably powerful considering it’s fitted to a sub-£650 laptop. This chipset produced an impressive average of 38.2fps in our Dirt Showdown benchmark at High Quality settings and 1,280×720, so the laptop can play modern games at high detail settings at smoothly playable frame rates.

We liked the laptop’s input devices, too. All the keys are evenly spaced and had plenty of bounce to them. The keys give plenty of tactile feedback, which helps you judge easily when you’ve struck a key, leading to fast typing speeds. There’s also a useful numeric keypad, which makes it far easier when working with plenty of numbers in a spreadsheet.
The touchpad is offset to one side, and we found it didn’t get in the way when we were typing. We particularly liked the touchpad’s slightly textured surface and its support for multi-touch gestures, as this made using Windows 8 a much more pleasant experience than trying to navigate its new interface with a mouse or the touchpad itself. Just a swipe of the touchpad from the right to left brings up the Charms bar like it would do on an ordinary Windows 8 touchscreen, and it makes pinching to zoom in applications as simple as can be without a dedicated touchscreen.
We weren’t so keen on the L855-148’s glossy display. This suffered badly from overhead reflections, but there’s plenty of screen tilt to help remedy this problem. The keyboard’s black glossy finish means it will also pick up fingerprints, but the rest of the laptop’s brushed aluminium finish looks classy and doesn’t suffer from the same problem. Around the base of the laptop you get the usual connectivity options, including VGA and HDMI outputs to connect to an external display, one USB and two USB2 ports and an SDXC card reader to copy photos from your camera. You also get Gigabit Ethernet, which is useful for super-fast file transfers over your home network.

The icing on the cake would have been a full HD display, but sadly the L855-148 has to settle for the usual 1366×768 resolution. The glossy finish may cause problems with reflections, but the positive side is that such displays tend to give colours added vibrancy and punch. The L855-148’s display is also bright, but this doesn’t come at the expense of contrast; we saw plenty of detail in both light and dark areas of our test images. Laptop screens keep getting better, and this is another impressive example.

Toshiba’s L855-148 is an excellent machine which goes to show how much laptop you can have for your money if you just fancy a traditional keyboard, touchpad and screen rather than a fancy touchscreen or convertible tablet. It may not have fantastic battery life, but the L855-148 proved itself more than capable of handling anything we threw at it, making it by far one of the best laptops out there in its price range. It wins our Best Buy award.