The Sony VAIO E15 is as stylish a mainstream laptop as you're likely to find. Starting at only $500 with a 15.6-inch screen
and state-of-the-art ports and connectivity, it's an inexpensive way to
impress your fellow humans with your astute judgment of things
computing, as well as your fine taste in design.
Though
inexpensive in its least formidable configuration—which sports an Intel
Pentium B970 CPU—the VAIO E15 may be configured with faster stuff up to
about $1350 (Core i7). Our "nicely configured" $700 test unit has a Core
i5-3210M CPU, 6GB of system memory, a CD/DVD burner, and a 5400-rpm,
750GB hard drive. Options include a Blu-ray player, but sadly, no
7200-rpm hard drives or SSDs.
It is most likely the slowish hard
drive that held the E15 in check during our testing and hands-on. As the
chart below suggests, a WorldBench 7 score of 87 is a little below
average even for an affordable laptop, and its subjective feel (the
speed of menus and windows opening, icons being drawn, and so on) is
slightly sluggish until Windows has cached icons and the like. On the
other hand, 1080p video plays very smoothly, and sound through the
speakers is more sonorous than with most laptops, which is to say, it’s
not grating. The 1.3-megapixel webcam gives a nice image as well.
Gaming
frame rates delivered by the integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics are
generally playable up to the 15.5-inch display's maximum 1366 by 768
resolution, but only in low detail; tougher games will require you to
knock said resolution down a notch or two. The AMD Radeon HD 7550M
discrete GPU that's available for either $100 (1GB of dedicated memory)
or $150 (2GB of memory) will improve frame rates tremendously.
At
14.65 inches wide, 1.3 inches high, and 10 inches deep the VAIO E15 is a
midsize laptop in every respect. It travels at 6.3 pounds (that
includes the 0.9-pound AC adapter), and run time is an acceptable 4
hours, 14 minutes with the standard 4000mAh battery. You can increase
that considerably (along with the weight) with the 5300mAh ($20) or
7950mAh ($100) batteries.
Ports on the VAIO E15 are a modern mix
and include a single always-on USB 3.0 port, three USB 2.0 ports, and
VGA and HDMI outputs, as well as a Kensington lock port, headphone and
microphone jacks, and a gigabit ethernet port. Bluetooth 4.0 and 802.11
b/g/n Wi-Fi round out the connectivity, and the front has SD and Memory
Stick ProDuo card slots.
The backlit Chiclet-style keyboard
recessed into the upper deck of the VAIO E15 is large, covering nearly
the entire width of the laptop. The spacing and layout are top-notch,
including the 10-key numeric keypad, though Sony has yet to emulate the
magical "feel" of a Lenovo laptop. It's easy to set up a typing rhythm
on the E15's keyboard, but the short key travel is apparent, and you'll
never feel quite as secure on it as with a Lenovo.
The one-piece
rocker touchpad is responsive, perhaps too much so. I had a difficult
time avoiding accidental taps and had to turn the feature off. Less
clumsy individuals will probably be fine. Design flourishes include an
Assist button that turns on the laptop and initiates the software
recovery software, a Web button that does the same but with Windows and
your favorite browser, and the Vaio button that launches the application
of your choice.
Sony loves to load software onto its laptops.
Some of it is useful, powerful, and/or necessary such as the Arcsoft
Webcam Suite, Cyberlink PowerDVD, and Sony's own ACID, Sound Forge Audio
Studio, and Vegas Movie Studio HD Platinum 11. A lot of it such as the
VAIO Gate launch application, VAIO Messenger, and VAIO Smart Network
look nice but are really there to remind you which company's laptop you
bought. Ditch the applets that duplicate functionality already present
in the Windows 7 Home Premium operating system (Windows 7 Pro is an
option), and it's remarkable how much quicker the E15 responds.
Sony's
laptops are always more than the sum of their parts—a sense of style
will do that for you. The VAIO E15 is no exception and will undoubtedly
turn a lot of heads in the major electronics outlets. It's a great unit
overall. Still, it would be even better if Sony offered a faster hard
drive option.
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