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The setting is somewhat buried under a Speaker Properties menu, but it's worth digging it out as it made music and movie audio more full and round instead of flat and tinny. The P775 has Harman Kardon stereo speakers that were fairly unimpressive until I turned on the Dolby Advanced Audio processing. It's a good screen if you're just looking for extra workspace, though, with good color, brightness, and contrast and text is reasonably sharp. That's not entirely unexpected at this price, but it hurts its appeal as a multimedia system and just a little weird because of the Blu-ray player/DVD burner optical drive.
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The 17.3-inch LED-backlit display has a resolution of 1,600x900 pixels that's good enough to support 720p HD playback, but not full HD. The touchpad is a little small for a 17-inch laptop, but not uncomfortable and there is support for multitouch gestures like two-finger scrolling and pinch zoom. There's also one for toggling on and off the backlight for these keys as well as a Satellite logo and a thin strip of light at the top of the touch pad.

The keyboard isn't backlit, but above it is a row of lighted shortcut keys for play/pause, volume, mute, Toshiba's Eco Utility energy-saving mode (this can be programmed to do something else if you want), and wireless on/off. The island-style keyboard and number pad are large and comfortable, save for the oddly small space bar.
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Of course, some of this is personal preference, so if this stuff doesn't bother you than feel free to ignore me.

Add in the giant silver Toshiba logo on top, the faux metal/wood-grain design with plastic chrome accents, and abundant lights, labels, and branding, and the whole package ends up being kind of tacky. The chassis is all plastic and the lid, keyboard deck, and palm rest all have a lot of flex to them. Now, this could be seen as either good or bad, as it makes it nicer for travel, but also makes it feel cheap and somewhat fragile. What is unusual is how light it is given its size. The laptop is big, which really shouldn't be a surprise. It's not that it's a bad laptop-there are things about it that are quite good for the money-just that its best selling points aren't as impressive once you take a closer look at the whole package. There are a few holes in the P775-S7320 that make it more of an also-ran than a winner. If you feel like there's a "but" coming, that's because there is.
