Sony Vaio C1MW PictureBook Review
daanger0us writes "There is an excellent review of the Sony Vaio C1MW PictureBook that uses the Transmeta Crusoe CPU and has a built in camera so you can capture all those special moments. Here's an excerpt:
'Size is not the only identifying attribute of this VAIO. The built in Motion eye camera is really the most intriguing part of the design - and probably the selling feature. The camera is built in on top of the screen and can flip to point to or away from the driver. The software loads at the push of the capture button and live video begins showing up within seconds. JPEG shots or MPEG2 video can then be recorded and replayed quite easily. With the included 30 Gigabyte hard drive a quick calculation shows that about 10 hours of streaming video and audio can be recorded at a time before running out of room.'"
Looks cool, but what else would one expect from sony? Only thing, and i hate to bitch is I hate the CPU! I know im a linux user so im not alowd to hate it, but i used a HPC with one and it was sluggish at best, To really to a good job I would like to see an XScale appearing in these types of devices in the near future.
Everyday You see me is the worst day of my life -Office Space
Maybe I'm missing something, but I don't see the advantage of this over a traditional notebook and a digital camera. Although that requires two different devices, it lets each of them be smaller, lighter, and more suited to their specific task without harming their ability to work together. This, on the other hand, means that whenever you want to take a video you have to bring your computer, and whenever you want to send an e-mail, you're carrying your camera with you.
Best place for picture book info still has to be http://www.stevebarr.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/barrst/go to.pl?c1mv
sounds like something isn't proportioned just right yet. Cool gadget, but I agree with the article that this is bound to be a niche product. Not enough power for serious data usage, too high price to be a toy.
Black holes are where God divided by zero
The camera is built in on top of the screen and can flip to point to or away from the driver.
That shit was a line from the post, you didn't even have to read the article. I'm assuming you're so lazy you stop breathing at some points during the day, right?
Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
How about sound applications? Can it run Impulse Tracker? I have hounded and hounded ppl with transmeta based laptops, but cannot get a clear answer.
*I used to be quite irreverent and ignorant. I am probably much smarter now. I seem to realize this every 45 days or so.
This notebook has been out for over a year and I've been looking at it and looking at it thinking that maybe it's size, weight and portability we make it ideal. But then, I notice it's price, I notice it's processor, I notice that no updated models have ever been made (is it an orphan?) and I walk away and wait for something better.
I think there is a place for laptops of this form factor but only Sony seems to make one. And the one they make is expensive and not part of their main product line. Is something wrong since no one else is making laptops like this?
I just can't see this size taking off - it either has to fit in your hand/pocket like current PDA's, or is about the size of a binder you carry under your arm like a note book. Anything in between is too small for serious work, and too big to carry around all the time.
W9x:Thanks for the make-work project Bill.
How exactly is this news? Okay, it's a new review maybe, but the machine has been on the market for over a year now if i'm not mistaken. One of my coworkers already had one when I started my current job in December 2001.
It's a nice machine, sure, but worthy of a slashdot frontpage post a year later?
--
If code was hard to write, it should be hard to read
I own one of the original VAIO Picturebooks (C1VN). There is very little difference between mine and the new model. You would think that given 2 years Sony could have really done something with it. I like my P-Book, but don't consider it a real laoptop either (which helps emmensely in the learning to like it deparment). In reading the review on the new one, I found myself feeling like I was reading a review on mine. Yes, the resolution's a bit higher, HDD a bit larger, it does MPEG2 now, etc...but big deal. These are things that I felt were "missing" in the original two years ago. Oh well. I find the Fujitsu P2000 a much stronger contender in the "man that's small but feature packed" mini-notebook division.
ER
.
This seems kind of small to me.
I'm sure this is an "excellent review" seeing as the guy who posted it has the same url as the review.
Specs from article
Memory: 245216K total, 128880K free, (add type, clock here..)
Chipset: (add ID string here)
Male memory:
Memory: 245216K total, 128880K free, forgets birthdays, knows all Major legue baseball starting pitchers from '79-80
Female memory:
Memory: 245216K total, 128880K free, if-you-don't -know-i'm-not-telling-you
Why, o why must the sky fall when I've learned to fly?
Really, if Im going to buy a new hardware id like to see some benchmarks. 3DMark would be nice, just for the hell of it.
Also noticed it only has MMX support, wheres SSE?
Also, if your going to run linux on it, is there any compiler flags to make it faster for the cursoe chip? Also noted it had 0k level 2 cache, ouch.
and I would seriously look at getting one. Seriously, how practical is that camera. It's only 640X480. The form factor and size is enough to get me to consider getting one. The only other thing I have to ask is how easy is it to get linux on that thing without a Sony CDROM Drive.
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Sony VAIO C1MW PictureBook Review
Date: October 4th 2002
Author: Benj Mauck
Score:
Related Link: Sony Style
Introduction
In case you still think the PDA & notebook are still distinguishable, guess again. Sony's new VAIO C1MW PictureBook Series Notebook blurs the boundaries of both form factors and offers a solution to impress your family, friends, and colleagues. But at a cost of about $2000, can it really compete? Read on to find out...
Features:
Two very notable features set this Sony Picturebook apart from competition; first and foremost - its petite proportions. The form factor is halfway between a PDA and a notebook; yet with nearly all the features of a full size notebook. Unfortunately it is not quite small enough to fit in your pocket, yet not quite big enough to have a full size keyboard and screen. This might leave some people wondering if there is really a need for such a crossover vehicle in the electronic realm - something we have also been pondering. The half-height LCD (1280x600) and slightly compressed keyboard probably will eliminate the device from many business, home, and gaming markets. Yet there are certainly some benefits - especially when computing on the bus, train, or plane in coach class - where even a laptop can seem bulky. The intermediate size would also allow lugging around only a small backpack or large purse. Wearing it on the hip or in the pocket will unfortunately not quite work as well as a PDA. But at only 2.2 lbs, the extra weight is nearly inconsequential if you are already using a briefcase or backpack.
Size is not the only identifying attribute of this VAIO. The built in Motion eye camera is really the most intriguing part of the design - and probably the selling feature. The camera is built in on top of the screen and can flip to point to or away from the driver. The software loads at the push of the capture button and live video begins showing up within seconds. JPEG shots or MPEG2 video can then be recorded and replayed quite easily. With the included 30 Gigabyte hard drive a quick calculation shows that about 10 hours of streaming video and audio can be recorded at a time before running out of room. The possibilities with this are actually quite interesting. The immediate application that comes to mind would be recording business meetings or lectures at school. Because the camera lens is extremely small and can flip toward the front of the room, it is far more inconspicuous than to manipulating a video camera or even a tape recorder in class. In fact it is doubtful that that it would be recognized for anything but a PDA or calculator in school. The video quality is fairly impressive, though the resolution is only 640x480. Playback may drop a few frames if other applications are going - but will look smooth after burning it on CD and playing it when you get home on your desktop. No need to be stationary while recording, but do not expect all the features of a camcorder either. Video editing software is included to allow for some decent home video creation immediately after recording.
Extended battery life is the biggest boast of the Transmeta Crusoe CPU inside this Sony Picturebook. Unfortunately it is also one of the more difficult to benchmark, as this CPU does voltage and frequency scaling on the fly to limit power consumption according to need. A clear comparison can be made only with a standard load, such as DVD playback. Starting with a full battery we were able to make it to just before Wesley, Fezzik and Inigo Montoya storm the castle in The Princess Bride. That is exactly 75 minutes: maybe long enough for some of those new fangled movies like MIB II, but not long enough for a true classic. Obviously the included external CD-W/DVD draws a large portion of the power, and drastically reduces the battery life. For more common sporadic usage (including benchmarking, video capture, and idle time) we were able to demonstrate an average battery life of between two and three hours. This is comparable to many notebook computers - despite some claims of the CPU manufacture otherwise. Of course, a larger battery is available if your main concern is finishing your movie on the airplane.
Several other features are notable. There is one type II card slot - which would be perfect for an 802.11b wireless card. Built in stereo speakers provide adequate volume. The audio quality during DVD playback was good - as we would expect from Sony. The high resolution (1280x600) screen is excellent for watching wide screen DVD's, although we had to play around with the settings for a while to get the widescreen DVD to fill up the entire width and height. Unfortunately this size is not so convenient for office style applications - where viewing full pages is preferable. In such cases it would probably be a nice feature if the monitor could rotate 90. Games and graphics also suffer due to the limited height. Fortunately a port replicator is included to allow simple docking and connection to a full size monitor. The data transfer abilities via memory stick, ILINK (IEEE 1394), and AV in/out allows quick & easy access to many nice toys: camcorders, cameras, and gadgets. Of course modem and Ethernet are also included to talk to big brother - the PC.
Setup and Installation:
As expected no unusual setup or installation is necessary. Windows XP Professional is installed, as is Corel WordPerfect Office 2002. Boot time was one minute thirty seconds - perhaps a bit on the slow side when compared to other laptops, and even slower if compared to PDAs. Ample documentation is provided - but none is necessary to start playing. One push of a button pulls up the video capture program, momentarily turning the monitor into a mirror.
Benchmarks:
Not intending to replicate benchmarks taken elsewhere on the Crusoe we have just run a basic set. PC Mark 2002 gave a score of 1606/1440/339 for CPU/Mem/Hdd. Below are results from Rightmark and CPU Bench. The performance on most metrics shows it slightly lower than a PentiumIII at the same frequency. This may be disappointing to some given that most similarly priced laptops have nearly twice the performance. But clearly raw performance was not the intention of this device & must be weighed accordingly.
Find the latest reference results on http://cpu.rightmark.org
Linux can be done. http://vaio-pcg-c1.sourceforge.net that should start you off well.
And the production version uses XP, not CE.
> The bad news is, it uses PocketPC/Windows CE
No, it doesn't.
I prefer my computing devices to have full-sized keyboards so that I can touch type on them. I prefer my cameras to take high quality pictures. This product wasn't designed for people like me. I still, however, think the picturebooks are spiffy.
On the other hand, Sony didn't really design the picturebook for people like me. This design originated in Japan with Japanese people in mind. In case you didn't know, the Japanese are absolutely crazy about little electronic devices, especially if they take pictures. The size and style are more important than the sheer power and functionality.
I'd estimate that nearly 20% (conservative estimate)of all new cell phones in Japan have high-res color screens and cameras built into them. I'm most curious to see how the picturebook fares against competition from these phones, which are even smaller and more stylish.
I know this is supposed to be the entire point of the product, but I say ditch the video camera, and this would be a really nice product. Also, who needs a CD Writer in such a tiny system? Without the camera, this might be considered an anorexic sub-notebook. I'm sure the screen looks extremely sharp. With a built-in 8x DVD-ROM drive and a nicer battery, this would be a really nice tool for computing on the road. The 30gb hard drive is far more than any PDA will provide for the next year or so, at least. Right now, all the features which I consider to make this product impractical (camera, external optical drive, fact that it's a Sony) also contribute to making the product more expensive. A system this size, with the modifications I have suggested, and maybe with a smaller hard drive to even things out, would be nice to have for around $999. Who's with me?
Better yet, try the PowerBoook.
But neither of those laptoops has a digital camera attached.
--
pants ahoy
When I go somewhere with my digital camera, I take pictures like Austin Powers does, and soon run out of the 133 high-res photos on my flash card, meaning I have to go back to my hotel room or wherever I'm staying if I'm on vacation, transfer it to my laptop, and go and take pictures again.
With this, I can store 30gb of data and only have to bring one single package on vacation -- I can also use it for writing poetry, journals, or whatever else I feel like, and can show people videos and pictures on a huge LCD screen without having to get new batteries after 10 minutes.
$2000 is actually a pretty good price for it, considering how much you'd pay for everything else combined.
Honestly, this is blatant advertisement. I saw design technica's ad earlier on in another story and now this. I dont know how else slash ought to operate, but ads disguised as reviews is so Cnet.
Faraz
If you want video, a digital camcorder is smaller, cheaper, and better. There are even some portable MPEG-4 recorders with hard disk coming out.
The C1 series has been going for years. It has quite a following.
The latest in Japan is quite impressive with a 60 Gig HD. You can buy it at http://www.dynamism.com/c1mzx/index.shtml .
The Fugitsu Lifebook is bigger but is very nice too. I think Fry's sells those.
If you want to see computers that are this size, go to Transmetas website. There are a few on the market.
Rumor has it that the future Picbooks will use Intel Opteron chips, instead of Transmeta Crusoes.
Good Luck in your search!
The Sony U1 is smaller than the C1 and has almost the same amount of features, only much smaller. The camera on the C1, seems to only be good for things like videoconferencing. Other than that, I would never use it. The plus side, is that the picturebook has usb and firewire. That combined with a sizeable HD makes it a good place to dump pictures from a real digital camera while out in the field.
I linked a couple good sites above that have Linux info with a C1.
good luck
I'm amazed the p-2000 doesn't get more press, it packs everything I need in to small package without using any external gadgets.
I maintain the Linux-Sony Mailing List -- for running Linux on your Sony of course; mainly Sony Laptops are discussed on the list.
There is also a google search of the archives available.
rtnz
lmfao!!!!!
Surprised not to see samples in the review-- how could you have your hands on one of these and not upload a video of your dog or something?
Talked my bro-in-law into getting one of these. I think it's very kewl. Plug 802.11b card into it and you're VERY portable and your webcam expierence is ideal. He's an airline pilot, so he's almost ALWAYS travelling, and this is the smallest way to get onto compuserve we could find (need to get to cserve to do bidding for airline pilot job).
M@
Krispy Cream is people
I use it for taping concerts (and nothing else). It's very, VERY slow. Slower than any other modern laptop. The Crusoe chip REALLY is nothing to write home about. It's probably as fast as a PII-500, if that. The screen is tiny but it's sharp. The hard drive is slow, but quick enough to record audio.
Like I said, all I use it for is taping, mostly because it's tiny and the battery lasts forever. It doesn't seem to be a very practical day-to-day laptop. I have another laptop (PII-266) that I use as my "actual" laptop.
- A.P.
"Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
The U1 is a produstion machine...soon the U3 will be out ...here is the Japanese site http://www.vaio.sony.co.jp/Products/PCG-U3/
_ ma ster.html
The specs are here in Japanese
http://www.vaio.sony.co.jp/Products/PCG-U3/spec
I'm just curious who's driving with this thing.
Software sucks. Open Source sucks less.
Unlike you, the main reason, except of course the size, I would want one these is the processor.
I'm not looking for a laptop to replace my workstation, but I am looking for a small laptop with long battery life.
Sure, you would have a considerably faster machine if you slabbed in one of those new PIVs, but the battery would probably last about one tenth as long. Its great to have a fast computer, but if it means that you can only use it for like an hour between recharges, it makes it pretty much useless to me.
I think people are generally too obsessed with processor speed, specifically when it comes to the laptop market, where speed is often bought at the expense of usability in the form of long battery life.
(But then again, I'm probably not too representative of the geek crowd in that aspect, considering that I'm writing this on my PIII 500 workstation, which I consider faster than I will ever need.)
Well, that's just my $ 0.02 anyway
I just really want a serial port on there so I could use it for a very sweet console when I'm onsite. Does anyone know of a solution that would work with this? Maybe usb to serial? My present Fujitsu is great, but really overkill for most things I need to use it for. A little pad like that would be much more convenient.
_damnit_
It's my job to freeze you. -- Logan's Run
Wow, somebody stored their mod-points in the wrong orifice this morning.
At least, next time, find something more inventive than "Troll", eh? If you're going to be a silly moderator, try using imagination. I suggest:
-1, Short-Post, -now-you-all-must-pay!
-1, Too-many-big-words
-1, Responding-to-trolls
-1, I-don't-understand-irony
-1, hey,-aren't-you-the-goat.se-guy?
-1, I-got-turned-down-by-the-girl-in-accounting-again
If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
The camera swivels a full 180 degrees.
- A.P.
"Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
> The camera is built in on top of the screen and can flip to point to or away from the driver...
Do you need to go to school and get license to operate this laptop? What kind of safety features does it have? Seatbelts? Airbags?
sudo eat my shorts
"The video quality is fairly impressive, though the resolution is only 640x480"
My guess is first that it dosent begin to compare to even an analog Hi8 camera in quality. But who ever wrote this is a video novice (both computer and camcorder). 640x480 30fps video rarely works for webcams. Somebody please show me a higher resolution camcorder / webcam (30fps) that isnt like $50k !
I think that if the new Zaurus is close in price to the old one it will be a much better choice the this sony. I have a vaio and love it. I really wanted the picture book when it came out, but its just a little to expensive. The new zaurus on the other hand is about the same size and I bet even with the optional zaurus cam will be less the half the cost.
Business News and Resources: www.usasource.net
Thank you for your enlightening reply. My, I see you certainly have a way with numbers. I would like to clarify one item. Your wrong. Below you will find the specifications for both computers, straight from the respective manufacturers web sites. You do the math genius. Sony C1MW Size (H x W x D) 1.2" x 9.9" x 6.0" Weight 2.20 lbs (incl. bundled battery) Fujitsu P2000 * 10.6"(w) x 7"(d) x 1.59"(h) * Only 3.4 lbs with combo drive and main battery * Approximately 2.8 lbs with weight saver
Hi, Slashdot? You know shoes, those things people have been putting on their
feet for thousands of years? THEY HAVE LIGHTS NOW! POST TO THE FRONT PAGE!
THE GEEKS HAVE A RIGHT TO KNOW!
This article is moronic. It's completely unjustified since the focus of the
technology (the shiny little camera) has been out for coming up to THREE YEARS.
So it has a DVD/CD/RW drive? Every piece of technology better than a wristwatch
has those now.
Or maybe it's that TRANSFORMER CROOSO processor, huh? Doesn't your criminal
ringleader LINEOX TORVALDEZ work for them? Explains a lot.
Seriously, don't post any more gadget reviews unless it does something /. reader.
--jobbytotally amazing. Something like unleashing rapid ninja death on a person of your
choosing, or getting a female human to walk within ten feet of a
wow,
i'm shocked by the negative comments about the Crusoe.
My lab partner and I both have the fujitsu ultralight with transmeta crusoe 5800 processors (same as the sony).
i have NO problems with the cpu. i get 4-5 hours using one regular battery. i get 10 hours with the additional extended battery.
THERE IS NO FAN. which is critical for us who attend regular meetings.
the machine is plenty fast enough. i regularly program, use mathematica (wolfram, inc.), word process, solid model (truespace, caligari.com), create macromedia presentations, play games, do advanced video editing... lots of reasonably processor intensive functions. i have a 30gig HD and 390 meg of ram. of course, it's not as fast as my dual athlon mp1900 desktop, but heck, i can't stuff my dual athlon into a butt-pack!
it doesn't appear sluggish at all. in summary, i love my fujitsu/crusoe. it's awesome, and all my friends are completely jealous:)
my question is, how many of you who claim to hate the crusoe 5800 actually have one ??
maybe you are confusing with the older crusoe chips that were not so good.
my 2c,
ap.
ps. the fujitsu is only 1500 bucks and it has a built in DVD player and CD burner (yes). i'm not sure why anyone would want the sony, unless they need the camera.
I wanted the Picturebook C1MSX because it has built in bluetooth and 802.11b. The form factor kicks butt. The reasons I don't have one already are: poor linux support for built-in devices (said bluetooth, camera, etc) and the really low 384 max RAM. I can't live with that.
Now, the Toshiba Libretto L5 I can live with. Similar form factor, no silly camera, 512 RAM, bluetooth, 802.11b, etc, etc, etc. It has been my experience that Toshiba hardware has much better support. Check out the L5 here
The 10 hours of video is an artifact of being able to fit a 30GB disk in the laptop, not because they thought that was the ideal amount of video capacity to have. You'll probably use much of the space for other things. (Besides, if you're shooting that much video, you're usually either somewhere you've got electricity or you're filming things that you'd rathe r have a real videocamera for.)
By the way, if you remember Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon, this is the kind of machine Randy used to surreptitiously record his meeting with somebody-or-other, probably the Dentist, when they were busy convincing everybody of their plans for Increasing Shareholder Value. Predecessors of this machine design were available back then.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
One of my favorite things about the unit is the extended battery. It's big (folds under the unit), and expensive (think it was a good chunk of $1K), but getting 8 hours of battery life really made those long flights productive. It was truly amazing. Even in it's later life, it got close to 5 hours on the battery. (Unfortunately, my picturebook died recently, works fine, but won't charge any batteries. Sigh.) With the transmeta, the battery life should be even more amazing.
Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
Yes, but, as I said, then you have to deal with tape. I've had enough of linear-access-only video.
Of course, if I actually needed to record video for some reason, I'd deal with it (or find some alternative.)
I Can't Believe It's A Law Firm, LLP does not necessarily endorse the contents of this message.
Tell me you weren't making orgasmic moaning sound effects after going here and clicking "action" after rotating around to the sides... :D
I browse at +5 Flamebait- moderation for all or moderation for none.
and this got modded +1 funny?!
After 1 year I'll say this:
I really like the long life, I get a total of ~8 hours of use between rechargings, with my spare double strength battery. (Ideal for 14 hour flights to Oz & other plane or outdoors trips I take). I think other laptops find this hard to beat.
I also like the size. I put in in the outer pouch of my backpack, don't even notice its there. Weight is 1 kilogram, 2.2 lb.
I like the pictures, but I have to admit it doesn't compete with a modern digital camera. Another downside is: If you see something cool, it takes a few minutes to boot up & you might have missed it already. :-(
Some of my photos can be found here: montage1 montage2 full list
Mine is 667 Mhz (down to ~300 Mhz when "crusoe" is invoked), but that's fine for Netscape, LaTeX, emacs, xboard, civ, etc. No CD. Ethernet is all I need. I've experimented with video (.avi file format, haven't used sound but it can be done) It looks good as long as the smaller size frames are used. With the larger frames it looks slow. All in all, I'm very happy with it & glad I bought it.
I have one of these notebooks. If you want to see some sample pictures, I put up a slideshow at a little get-together a little while back.
http://www.francischang.com/slides/8-2-02/
The camera is not very good, and is really bad in low-light situations.
You can put Linux on a picturebook, but as far as I know, noone's got the camera working under Linux with the latest 2 generations of the Picturebook. They've recently changed the hardware, and neglected to publish specifications.
--
#include <malloc.h>
free(your.mind);
This review would have one assume this is the first device of this form factor. Fujitsu has been selling the very similar Lifebooks for a while now, but are better in many respects.
- ROM drive is internal
- Can accept high capacity batteries and the ROM drive can be replaced for up to (so they claim) 14 hours of life
- Built in Wireless networking
- Substantially cheaper than the Sony
Check it out here
I went with the SR series over the picturebook very recently. I used a picturebook a bit, then sent it back. The half screen is just too annoying in productivity software to me, let alone gaming. I have heard the touchpad vs a keyboard pointer, but both suck, and the jogdial is just an annoyance where I like to sit my thumb on both laptops so I disable it. This leaves you with the pain of scrolling up and down to see anything on the picturebook. I love my SR even with that damn jog dial where it is, I usually run it for around 5 hours on a single charge and I don't have the extended life battery. The only thing I'm disgruntled about is RedHat being a pain in the ass to install on it because of some wierd conflict between the mostly useless sony memory stick port and the usb port. There is a work around to get the CDROM install in RedHat to work on older models of the SR's but it doesn't seem to work on this version. If anyone has had any luck with a CDROM based RedHat install with a new SR drop me a line.
SRX Series
Picturebook
Wasn't Randy's laptop described instead as having a simple pinhole-type camera? (Sorry, book on loan at the moment ;)) The Picturebooks are definitely not that ... I remember thinking that this was a potentially much better idea than putting a regular (glass-lens) camera into a laptop lid like Sony did, though of course that has its own advantages.
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
I have had one for the past six months and absolutely love it. The portability is just incredible, to the point it's been about my only luggage on my trip around the world. With the quad-battery upgrade you can pretty reliably get 8-10 hours on a full charge (nowhere near the 15 advertised, of course). And, though the transmeta is a bit sluggish, it's entirely adequate any non-gaming task (I do contract technical writing as I travel and it's paid for itself a couple times over). Furthermore, though not DoomIII-compliant, the ATI Radeon mobile is suprisingly quick and has been sufficient for me to continue 3d graphics programming while traveling. The camera is a pointless, granted (low res, takes ages to initialize, only digital zoom, manual focus), but the laptop itself is a godsend.
I think the biggest benefit of this laptop is that it's finally found a combination of speed, portability, and battery life such that you no longer have to ask yourself "should I bring my laptop today?" Instead, you just always have it in your bag, charged up the night before, to whip out at cafes or plane rides.
I can't recommend it enough.
"Because this novel new form factor falls halfway between a PDA and a notebook,"
A form factor that is 4 years old isn't "new".
How did Cowboy Neal let this one through? http://cowboyneal.org/vaio/
realkiwi
[sarcasm]I can't wait to see the reviews for the IBM 600x. And does anyone have any reviews of the last Seinfeld episode?[/sarcasm]
/. guys have raging hard-ons for tiny sony laptops)???
What is so earth-shattering about this (except that the
---
- I am made of meat.
Okay, the parent to this post did dissect my joke a little farther than I ever intended. But missed one thing. If one were to register lat.io they will only let you use www.lat.io and have it forwarded to another website. Plus they let other people register the same domain. If there are multiple registrations for lat.io they will just display a page with all the sites, and the visitor has to pick which one they wanted to go to. So if you ask me that is pretty sucky.
i found out that i can order one but i want to save money so i can buy it with the japanese os, i need to convert the unit to english. does anyone have any tips on how to do such a thing?
(German philosopher) Georg Wilhelm Hegel, on his deathbed, complained,
"Only one man ever understood me." He fell silent for a while and then added,
"And he didn't understand me."
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