Toshiba adds a gorgeous 4K screen to the Satellite P50t laptop

While it's by no means a mainstream consumer technology, nor will it be for years (if ever), 4K is certainly a hot buzzword. It's used most commonly to refer to televisions with a 3,840x2,160 native resolution. A handful of PC monitors also hit 4K resolution, but it's a feature that's only starting to come to laptops.

For example, Lenovo has announced a Y50 multimedia laptop with an optional 4K display, which we previewed at CES 2014 but have not seen available for purchase yet. Toshiba goes one better, with an actual 4K model already available for sale -- and for testing in the CNET Labs. That's the Satellite P50t, a 15.6-inch premium midsize laptop.

toshiba-satellite-p50t-product-photos15.jpg Sarah Tew/CNET Toshiba makes many different versions of the Satellite P50 series, but only one specific configuration has the 4K display, along with an Intel Core i7 CPU, 16GB of RAM, a 1TB HDD, and an AMD R9 M265X GPU. It's a powerful set of components for mainstream use, but you need that kind of muscle to run smooth 4K video streams, as we discovered when reviewing the 4K-friendly Apple Mac Pro desktop.

The 4K Satellite P50t was originally pitched as a $1,599 laptop, which felt very reasonable for a powerful, well-designed premium laptop with one very notable special feature. The system actually debuted at $1,799, which robbed us of some enthusiasm, but it looks like, as of the time of this review, that a "temporary discount" has brought the price back down to $1,599 (£1,109 in the UK). (Pricing and availability in Australia and other countries is unavailable as of this writing.)

But is this something you really need, at any price? Most video-editing professionals are using Final Cut on OS X, and there are very few sources of 4K consumer video content -- even Netflix, which is experimenting with 4K streams, is currently doing so only to certain television models. High-end video enthusiasts who need a Windows PC may like the ability to work at higher resolutions, as might photographers who want maximum real estate for high-res files. Gaming at 4K is mostly a bust, as the AMD graphics card can't push that many pixels in most current games, but it still does well for mainstream gaming at standard 1080p resolutions.

toshiba-satellite-p50t-product-photos10.jpg Sarah Tew/CNET The screen itself looks amazing, and the system includes a handy app for switching between several presets highlighting different color temperatures and display settings. There's a case to be made for future-proofing with a 4K screen, as long as you're already thinking of buying a premium 15-inch laptop with a powerful CPU/GPU combo and planning to spend about this much anyway.

It's a bit of an indulgence to be sure, but because the Satellite P50t is a very good upscale midsize laptop even without the 4K screen, it edges just over the line into recommended territory.

PC Geek Box

Toshiba Satellite P50t-BST2N01 Dell XPS 15 (2013) Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (2013)
Price as reviewed $1,799 $1,899 $2,599
Display size/resolution 15.6-inch, 3,840 x 2,160 touchscreen 15.6-inch, 3,200 x 1,800 touchscreen 15.4-inch, 2,880 x 1,800 screen
PC CPU 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-4700HQ 2.2GHz Intel Core i7-4702HQ 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-4850HQ
PC Memory 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz
Graphics 2GB (dedicated) AMD Radeon R9 M265X 2GB (dedicated) Nvidia GeForce GT 750M 2GB Nvidia GeForce GT 750M + Intel Iris Pro
Storage 1TB 5,400rpm Hybrid HDD 1TB 5,400rpm HDD, 32GB SSD 512GB SSD
Optical drive DVD/RW None None
Networking 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating system Windows 8.1 (64-bit) Windows 8.1 (64-bit) OS X Mavericks 10.9

Design and features

The Satellite P50t is not the slimmest or the most high-design midsize laptop we've ever seen, but it's not unimaginable as a $1,500 laptop, either. Toshiba has a tendency to keep many of its products pulling from the same design handbook, which is good for brand consistency but also keeps budget laptops and premium laptops looking very similar. We had a similar comment about the excellent 13-inch Toshiba Kirabook -- it looked good but didn't necessarily have a design that stood out from Toshiba's many lower-cost laptops.

What you end up with is a generic-looking, silver-gray aluminum body and black island-style keyboard. The chassis' rounded corners are mirrored by the rounded upper corners of the touchpad, another Toshiba design fingerprint. The thick body isn't going to go in your shoulder bag every day, but I've carted it between office, conference room, and lab regularly with no problem.

toshiba-satellite-p50t-product-photos09.jpg Sarah Tew/CNET The big body gives you the ability to have a generously sized keyboard, a full separate number pad, and a large touchpad. Typing was solid, and there was little keyboard flex, although I still dislike Toshiba's penchant for very short space bars, which led to typing errors for me. The only other thing on the otherwise spartan interior surface is a backlit power button in the upper-right corner.

The real star here is the 1.5-inch 4K resolution touchscreen display. The native resolution of the screen is 3,840x2,160, the same as 4K TVs. We've seen a lot of better-than-HD laptops lately, from Retina MacBook Pros to systems from Lenovo and Razer with 3,200x1,800 screens, but this is the highest native resolution I've seen on a laptop to date. Other 4K models will no doubt follow (including the one already promised by Lenovo), but until there's a lot more 4K content available -- plus a palpable consumer demand for it -- it will remain a bit of a gimmick for most of the marketplace, outside of a handful of photo and video professionals (many of whom are locked into the Mac platform anyway).

large-hero-toshiba-back-to-school2014.jpg Sarah Tew/CNET That said, the screen looks amazing, and the sampling of 4K video files we played on it were eye-catching, even from side angles. Toshiba says this is the world's first Technicolor-certified PC, which provides a tuned level of color accuracy.

An included app called Chroma Tune allows you to switch between different screen-setting defaults, including a Technicolor preset. Other presets are cool, warm, Rec. 709, and full. For the uninitiated, Rec. 709 is a widely used color standard for video content, and according to our TV expert David Katzmaier, that should be your default setting. He says, "Rec. 709 will give you a little better contrast and punch. On the flip side, Technicolor looks a little more washed out but may be better in a bright environment." Both presets have the same color points, with a slight difference in gamma.

Ports and connections

Toshiba Satellite P50t
Video HDMI
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks
Data 4 USB 3.0, SD card reader
Networking Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical drive DVD burner

Connections, performance, and battery

The key selling point of the insanely expensive Mac Pro desktop was its ability to output several video streams (including 4K video) simultaneously. Here, there's a single HDMI output in addition to the built-in display. That HDMI output does, however, support 4K as well.

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