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Reports and inital impressions of new IT products

Thursday 8 October 2009, 6:06 PM

Sony's super-thin, super-light VAIO X

Posted by First Take

Sony is touting the VAIO X as the world's thinnest, lightest notebook — and it probably is. Weighing as little as 655g and only 13.9mm thick, it beats the Apple MacBook Air's 1.36kg and 19.4mm, and is aimed at the style-conscious business user.



Sony's claiming a battery life as long as 16 hours, although you'll need the extended battery to achieve that, adding a few millimetres to the depth and a significant amount to the weight of the machine. Normally, you'll get eight hours autonomy. The 11.1in. diagonal, 1366-by-768 resolution screen is backlit by power-saving LED technology and you can specify one of three solid-state disk (SSD) sizes: 64GB, 128GB or 256GB. Only with a 64GB SSD and without the optional, HSPA-capable 3G module does it achieve 655g; the added components boost weight by 130g to 785g. Still, hardly a heavyweight.

The lightweight carbon-fibre casing is either gloss or matte finished, depending on whether you specify, respectively, the top-end VPC-X11Z1E/X with a 2GHz Atom processor and a 256GB SSD, or the entry-level VPC-X11S1E/B, which sports a 1.86GHz CPU and a 128GB SSD.

The entry-level model's matte finish is arguably more attractive and, unlike the top-end model, doesn't need constant polishing to remove fingerprints, although I was assured by the product manager that the glossy model includes a polishing cloth. Both come with 2GB DRAM, an Intel graphics subsystem and 802.11n Wi-Fi connectivity. Also standard are a pair of USB ports, a neat, space-saving Ethernet port, SD card and Sony Memory Stick slots, Bluetooth and a camera. You get VGA-out too for powering a projector.

Despite the cumbersome names, the models are both attractive and very easy to walk around with and to use. Usability features include a multi-finger touchpad (although I didn't test this) and it comes with Windows 7. The only question mark is the screen: it's just over 2mm thick and flexes alarmingly, although it didn't seem to suffer from being picked up by the corner of the panel.

The Sony VAIOX is a very attractive piece of kit that hits the high end of the desirability scale, but only some time spent with it will tell if it delivers what it promises. Expect a full review in these pages soon.

Available from November 2009, the entry-level VAIO X costs £1,299, while the the top-end model costs £1,799.

Manek Dubash

Comments on this post

ZDMV2009

This comment has been deleted at the users request

Updated by ZDMV2009 on Oct 8, 2009 7:12 PM

ZDMV2009

If you value reliabilty, service and your business, I would NOT even touch Sony with a barge pole, hope this saves others from serious down-time and embarrassment when using VAIOs for mission-critical apps/business. Designed to fail and a complete rip-off!

Posted by ZDMV2009 on Oct 8, 2009 6:51 PM

roger andre

Here Here, I've come across may non starting vaios, and it's usually the motherboard gone. I've seen many an apple with the same problem too.

Posted by roger andre on Oct 8, 2009 7:33 PM

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