Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Charles McLellan

View blog's RSS Feed

Product Central

Dispatches from the Reviews Editor's desk

Thursday 8 January 2009, 2:50 PM

Sony's 'not-netbook'

Posted by Charles McLellan

The announcement of Sony's tasty-looking 638g, 8in. VAIO P (below), which launches over here in February, has sparked a debate in the ZDNet UK office about what is, and what isn't, a 'netbook' (we take these things seriously round here).



Before ASUS and its Eee came along in 2007, the laptop landscape was relatively simple, comprising desktop replacement (big, hefty), mainstream (biggish and heftyish), thin-and-light (quite thin and quite light) and ultraportable (light enough to actually travel with) systems. Very small and light notebooks such as Toshiba's Libretto, Sony's VAIO C1 and HP's OmniBook 300 had been around for a long time, and were often called 'mini-notebooks' to distinguish them from more powerful ultraportables (which you could do proper work on).

Then along came Intel and Microsoft with the Ultra-Mobile PC or UMPC, which was basically a combination of mini-notebook and Tablet PC. Clearly the world needed another category of 'very small PC', because Intel followed up the UMPC with the MID (Mobile Internet Device). A smartphone, of course, is both 'mobile' and an 'internet device', but it's not an MID. Confusing isn't it?

Anyway, back in 'small computer'-land, the ASUS Eee ushered in the 'netbook' category, which is essentially a mini-notebook -- but, even more essentially, a very cheap one. Fair enough, except that now everyone and their dog has produced a 'netbook', some prices have crept well over the £400 mark. Which is where we came in: is Sony's £849 VAIO P a 'netbook'? Sony finds the word beneath it, almost certainly because of the 'cheap' association. The spec is pretty good: 1.33GHz Atom Z520, LED-backlit 1600x768 screen, integrated mobile broadband, Draft-N Wi-Fi and more. It also features Sony's XMB (XrossMediaBar) pre-boot OS for quick access to messages, the web and music if you don't want to fire up Vista. According to those who have handled the thing, the build quality (especially the keyboard) is excellent.



So what shall we call this officer-class 'not-netbook'? Suggestions are welcome. A brief straw poll on the ZDNet editorial desk gathered the following: 'PoshBook', 'CoffeeTableBook', 'ChequeBook'...

Comments on this post

utzy

PetBook

Posted by utzy on Jan 8, 2009 3:00 PM

Karen Friar

'Not Cheap in My Book'

Posted by Karen Friar on Jan 8, 2009 3:33 PM

roger andre

It would have to be capable of running some nifty graphics in my book.
And...what would it feel like carrying around such a pricey volume ?

Updated by roger andre on Jan 8, 2009 8:31 PM

Tezzer

Massively overpriced (typical Sony).
No choice of OS.
No battery life info.
No chance of me buying one.

Posted by Tezzer on Jan 9, 2009 8:42 AM

Charles McLellan
  • Charles McLellan
  • London
  • Member since: October 2006
ZDNet Staff

Contacts' Latest Discussions

Number of Tracked Discussions: 1,506

J.A. Watson J.A. Watson

Using Windows Is Like...

Sunday 8 November 2009, 8:38 PM

5 comments
J.A. Watson J.A. Watson

Using Windows Is Like...

Sunday 8 November 2009, 6:06 PM

5 comments
manek manek

Email archiving - who needs it?

Friday 6 November 2009, 10:24 AM

4 comments

Contacts' Latest Blogs

Number of Contacts Blogs: 21

Avatar J.A. Watson

Using Windows Is Like...

Saturday 7 November 2009, 6:34 AM

5 comments

Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters