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- fasophiafrance
- 2017年5月16日
- 讀畢需時 9 分鐘
This Vaio also has Intel Wireless Display (WiDi), a useful way to stream HD video from your laptop to an HDTV. WiDi requires a separately purchased converter box that plugs into your TV, but once that's set up, you can use WiDi to turn your big-screen TV into a second monitor, with a slight delay in transmission time. Streaming Web videos, DVDs, and Blu-rays are supported for playback, and applications look good over the connection, too, but games requiring quick response won't work.The Vaio SA has an average set of ports for its size, as well as plenty of customizations. In addition to an HD Webcam and fingerprint reader, an USB 3.0 port, HDMI, and Bluetooth come standard. Also available are optional mobile broadband (Verizon/AT&T/Sprint, $50), and a chance to swap the DVD drive for Blu-ray ($100) or even a Blu-ray burner ($200). The Vaio SA is also TPM-certified, a function used by some corporate IT departments.Our configured Vaio SA41FX/BL came with 4GB of RAM, a 500GB 5,400rpm hard drive, and a 2.5 GHz Core i5-2450M processor. The Vaio SA can be upgraded up to 8GB of RAM, and Sony offers SSD drive upgrades starting at 128GB for $280 and climbing all the way to a whopping 1TB for $2,980. At that point, you might as well dip your laptop in solid gold and call it a day.
The Vaio SA has an average set of ports for its size, as well as plenty of customizations. In addition to an HD Webcam and fingerprint reader, an USB 3.0 port, HDMI, and Bluetooth come standard. Also available are optional mobile broadband (Verizon/AT&T/Sprint, $50), and a chance to swap the DVD drive for Blu-ray ($100) or even a Blu-ray burner ($200). The Vaio SA is also TPM-certified, a function used by some corporate IT departments.Our configured Vaio SA41FX/BL came with 4GB of RAM, a 500GB 5,400rpm hard drive, and a 2.5 GHz Core i5-2450M processor. The Vaio SA can be upgraded up to 8GB of RAM, and Sony offers SSD drive upgrades starting at 128GB for $280 and climbing all the way to a whopping 1TB for $2,980. At that point, you might as well dip your laptop in solid gold and call it a day.Still the highest-end of Sony's Vaio laptops (after all, nothing comes after Z in the alphabet), the Z-series is a rare animal these days. It's a PC that starts close to $2,000 and goes up from there.
When the current iteration of the Vaio Z was first released in the summer of 2011, it was an impressive ultrathin 13-inch laptop, along the lines of the MacBook Air or Samsung Series 9. It outdid those machines by adding a separate docking station that included a few extra ports and connections, as well as an optical drive (upgradable to Blu-ray), and an AMD Radeon GPU.But in the months since then, the perception of what a slim 13-inch laptop should do, and what it should cost, have changed. The current wave of ultrabooks (laptops that meet Intel's checklist for using that trademarked name) are just as thin, with 13-inch screens, current Core i5 processors, and SSD hard drives. The biggest difference is that ultrabooks start at $799, and few creep past the $1,000 mark, while the Vaio Z starts at $1,649 and can go past $3,000. This review unit came in at $1,999.The design and build quality are, as expected, excellent, and it feels as solid and sturdy as anything in this category short of a MacBook Air. The only visual/usability note that seems off is the postage-stamp-size touch pad, which is dwarfed by the clickpads in many ultrabooks.
The stand-alone GPU dock is still a unique feature, and if you're looking for an ultrabook-like laptop that can play serious games, it's got that market locked up. But beyond that, the Vaio Z is a very, very expensive example of what we sometimes call an executive laptop--as in, only the CEO gets one to show off how important he is.The slim, black carbon fiber body of the Sony Vaio Z is essentially unchanged from the 2011 version of the system, and my aesthetic reaction remains largely the same. The matte-black finish and slatelike chassis look and feel very high-end, although all the various joints and seams stand in contrast to Apple's unibody construction.A few oddities make the Vaio Z feel clunkier than it should. Our package (which included the optional slice battery) had two separate AC adaptors, only one of which--the larger one--fits the docking station. The stiff proprietary cable that connects the two components eats up the onboard USB 3.0 (but is replaced by another USB 3.0 port on the docking station), and it's short, so you can't place the dock more than a few inches away.
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The flat-topped keyboard used here has the now-standard island-style layout, which Sony has been using for years (along with Apple and a few others). Because the body of the laptop is so thin, the actual keys are extremely shallow, even more so than on most ultrabooks. You can get used to it, but it may not ever be a favorite for long-form writing. The keyboard is, however, thankfully backlit. The touch pad seemed fine in the mid-2011 version of this laptop, but since then, several low-cost ultrabooks have included much larger touch surfaces. The smaller pad here has a subtle patterned texture, with attached, but nontextured, mouse button zones separated by a fingerprint reader. Despite wanting a bigger pad, the multitouch gestures, such as the two-finger scroll, worked better on this system than on nearly any Windows laptop I've tried.The native resolution of the 13.1-inch display is 1,600x900 pixels, which is exactly where a high-end 13-inch should be. The last Vaio Z we tested included an upgraded 1,920x1,080-pixel display--as high as mainstream laptop screens get. On a 1080p screen, text could be so small it was hard to read, so that's one add-on that you can safely skip (even though it's only $100). For personal use, the onboard audio, with Dolby Home Theater technology, is fine, but immersive gaming or cinephile video watching would be better served with a set of high-end headphones.
The Power Media Dock, as Sony calls the docking station, is standard equipment for the Vaio Z, starting with the entry-level $1,649 model. Connecting the dock uses up the USB 3.0 on the system itself, so the second USB 3.0 on the dock is an even trade. Both the dock and system have HDMI and VGA ports, however. The laptop chassis itself has a standard set of ports and connections, plus the only-on-Vaio Memory Stick slot, right next to the traditional SD card slot.Our upgraded version of the Vaio Z added Windows Professional ($50), a Blu-ray drive in the external dock ($50), and the extra sheet battery ($150). You can also upgrade the CPU to an Intel Core i7-2640M ($250), and trade up the SSD from 128GB to 256GB ($200) or even 512GB ($1,100). Adding a Verizon/AT&T/Sprint 3G antenna costs $50; a Verizon 4G antenna is $150. It's rare outside of gaming machines to find a high-end 13-inch laptop with this many configuration options, so the flexibility is appreciated.
On our benchmark tests, the included Intel Core i5-2450M performed as expected, matching up with both ultrabooks and other 13- and 14-inch laptops with the same or similar CPUs. Right now the Core i5-2450M is the default go-to CPU for mid-to-high-end laptops, and has more than enough power to juggle multiple tasks, including video playback and editing, Web surfing, and running productivity apps.On its own, the Vaio Z relies on Intel's common HD 3000 graphics, standard in any current Intel-powered laptop. For HD video playback it's fine, but for gaming, you'd better forget anything beyond FarmVille. Fortunately, the dock includes an AMD Radeon HD 6650M GPU, which, via the high-speed cable that connects it, allows it to function just as an internal GPU would. Street Fighter IV, at 1,600x900-pixel resolution, ran at 15.5 frames per second without the external GPU dock, and 30fps with the dock connected.I'm dubious that too many people want to play high-end games on their slim 13-inch laptops, but if you're one of those people, this is the only mainstream version of this you're likely to find (Asus and others have played around with external GPUs before, but not in any products you're likely to find for sale in stores).
Sony's new Vaio S-series laptops offer an extra squirt of juice right where you need it, while the new C-series models provide a dash of juicy colour when you're out and about.S and C laptops all feature a Fast Boot option to start Windows quickly, or a special Web button that fires you straight on to the Internet without a full boot-up when you need to check a quick email but you're too impatient to wait for the whole thing to come on.The Vaio S series models features a 13.3-inch display with 1,366x768-pixel resolution. Selected models offer 3G connection on the go with Vaio 'everywair' 3G. They all pack a backlit keyboard and ambient light sensor, in a frame measuring less than 24mm in thickness.The S series offers a new Smart Battery idea for adding extra power when you're away from a mains socket. Instead of swapping your battery for a spare when it's running low on power, a second battery attaches for a power boost. Each battery offers 7 hours charge, for a total of 14 hours. Because you don't have to remove the original battery, the computer doesn't turn off, so you don't have to interrupt your work, game or movie.
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A Dynamic Hybrid Graphic System switches seamlessly between the integrated GPU and AMD Radeon HD 6000-series graphics card.The top dog in the S series is the VPCSB1V9E/B. The SB1 packs a Intel Core i5-2410M processor with AMD Radeon 6470M and Intel HD graphics. There's 4GB of 1,333MHz RAM and 500GB of storage. A DVD drive is built-in, along with 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 and USB 3.0.The S series is joined by new colourful 14-inch entries to the C series, pictured below. They come in silver, orange, pink, black and green. The dayglo-orange and lime-green models scatter light from the screen to the translucent lid to make the laptop glow, apparently. Inside there's an Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB of RAM and up to 320GB of hard-disc storage. Options include include Bluetooth, four USB ports -- one USB 3.0 and three 2.0 -- and HDMI output that supports 3D video and gaming.
The Vaio S series will be available from the end of March. The C series will be on sale from 21 March in John Lewis and direct from Sony, with other retailers following at a later date.Our man on the scene Luke Westaway is sorting his S from his C at a Vaio launch event this very minute, so keep it CNET UK for hands-on previews of the new models.Compared with laptops seen at CES 2012--ultrabooks and other sleekly designed variations--the ThinkPad T420 is a dinosaur, from the outside, at least. Thick and bulky, with a keyboard studded with enough auxiliary buttons to look like a space shuttle control panel, the T420 is as old-school as a laptop can be. It's also solid as a tank; not a rugged laptop per se, but outfitted with a spill-resistant keyboard and magnesium roll-cage chassis that most laptops don't have. And it's got more ports and features than most laptops, fighting the currently popular minimalist style.
The ThinkPad T420 is the laptop that escaped from your IT department, and might even be sitting on your desk as we speak. Lovers of older laptop tech won't be disappointed: a rubberized trackpoint sits in the middle of a set of thick, tapered keyboard keys, while large extra trackpoint-controlling buttons sit above the touch pad. You can light your keyboard with a top-mounted LED light next to the Webcam, thank you very much--no backlit keyboard here. Older ports are also here in force: everything from eSATA to ExpressCard, and even FireWire, is included. And, obviously, there's an optical drive (another feature frequently missing from laptops nowadays).It feels unfair to attack the design of the ThinkPad T420 too much, because it's clearly not meant for the average consumer--this vPro-equipped laptop is all business. However, we can ding the T420 a little on price: our configuration's priced climbed above $1,000, although the ThinkPad T420 starts as low as $749 on Lenovo's Web site for an entry-level version with a Core i3 processor and fewer bells and whistles.
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