![]() Sony claims the battery will last for 7 hours (10 if you buy a bigger battery), with the laptop weighing in at 1.78kg with a thickness of 24mm.Įxpect to see the S series from 18 January and the Y series from 1 February along with a pre-loaded copy of 64-bit Windows 7. What you lose in performance, though, you gain in portability. The Y series is a slightly less powerful beast, with an ultra-low voltage Intel Core 2 Duo SU4100 processor running at 1.3GHz, an Intel graphics chip, 4GB of memory and a 320HB hard disk. ![]() There's an HDMI port for hooking it up to an HDTV, and some of the models will also have a backlit keyboard. With an Intel Core i5-520M chip inside running at 2.4GHz, 4GB of memory, 3G to go with the Wi-Fi, a 500GB hard drive and an Nvidia GeForce 310M graphics chip (with 512MB of graphics memory), it will be pretty powerful for such a small machine.Ī built-in DVD-writer takes the weight of the machine up to 2kg, with a thickness of 28mm. Most fully featured is the Vaio S series. Two new lines, the Vaio S (pictured above) and Y series are due for release here in the next few weeks.īoth have the same 13.3-inch, LED backlit display with a resolution of 1,366x768 pixels, along with fast 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and a webcam, but there are a few other differences between the models. In a world full of cheap netbooks, Sony isn't letting itself be distracted from its mission of pumping out high-end ultra-portable computers.
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