Sony launched its VAIO SE series laptops. You get to play popularity
for the discrete graphics and an optional slice battery and the provided
TPM chip should be nice with your IT department. But AMD's Graphics
Switching is a clunky physical switch connected, and without the extra
disc is Sony battery life just OK.
Like the other high-end laptops
from Sony, such as the Vaio Z is the body of magnesium and aluminum,
weight for a combination of robustness and low. The look and feel is
pure Vaio, and the system looks like a matt-black panel, when closed,
offset by a square chrome hinge. This is part of a continuous
development of the Sony laptops, many years away from the stylistic
hallmark of a round tubular hinge, with the power button and AC adapter connector on opposite sides.
The
keyboard is backlit, which we always appreciate. In fact, with the
light through the white letters stamped on the main faces, as well as
around the edge of each key, this is the brightest backlit laptop keyboard
that we may ever see again. Function key commands for controlling
volume and brightness are not unfortunately make undo feature, you must
hold down the Fn key to access it, which is inconvenient for a
multimedia laptop.
The system uses Sony seems anachronistic in
comparison. A physical switch above the keyboard is "Speed" at one end
and "endurance at the other end. If you do not know exactly what are
means, blame, we do not know. Speed means that the GPU is turned on,
and endurance means that the GPU-off is turned down for a longer battery
life (or endurance). Unlike some earlier versions of this type of
switching technology, a reboot is not required, but the screen will
blink a few times. Most people are over the counter to forget and let it
decide just in one or the other position full time. to ask people
between speed and endurance, it's like you always be sound to miss
something. Perhaps the two sides of the switch should have been marked
"Tastes great" and "less filling."
With the optional slice
battery, the Sony Vaio SE ran for 6 hours and 34 minutes on our video
playback battery test laptop, the GPU to speed switch (which we expect
most users set and forget it). Without the slice battery, the system ran
for only 3 hours and 2 minutes, which is at the lower end of acceptable
medium size for a laptop. Flip the switch to persistence should, and
this time is off by at least one third, and with the dough and slice the
GPU, a full day of computer science should not be difficult to improve.
In
conclusion, the Sony knocks another elegant system with the 15-inch
Vaio SE, with some additional stimulus for business users.
the article souce: http://www.acerapple.info/sony-vaio-se-laptop-elegant-system/
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