Sony trounces Apple with super-thin, super-light Vaio X
Blog Comment 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.
[October 8, 2009, 18:51]
Sony trounces Apple with super-thin, super-light Vaio X
Blog Comment 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.
[October 8, 2009, 19:33]
Sony's super-thin, super-light VAIO X
Blog 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.
[October 8, 2009, 18:06]
Baylis Logistics Drops Unix and Windows to Increase Productivity With Red Hat Thin Client Architecture
White Papers Baylis invited IT systems provider and Red Hat Advanced Partner LinuxIT to perform a review of its IT infrastructure in light of the issues it had identified. With the PCs primarily used for browser-based and telnet applications and only some...
[December 3, 2007, 0:01]
Sony VAIO B1 Series: a first look review
Reviews With a thin-and-light design derived from the VAIO Z line, the B1 series offers standard fare: 14.1in.screens, mobile processors, optical drives and up to 60GB of hard drive capacity. Sony's thin-and-light design will appeal to business users who...
[October 1, 2004, 9:50]
IBM ThinkPad T40 review
Reviews Other thin-and-light manufacturers would do well to mimic the ThinkPad T40 series' exceptionally solid design. At 31.1cm by 25.5cm by 2.66cm and 2.27kg, the T40 is svelte by thin-and-light standards -- most of its rivals weigh more than 2.5kg.
[June 11, 2003, 8:19]
Sony VAIO X review
Reviews Designed for maximum visual impact, our VAIO X was both extremely thin (1.39cm) and light (780g without the A/C adapter or extended battery), and was also clad in blingy gold. Incredibly thin and light, thanks to its carbon fibre chassis and solid...
[November 5, 2009, 11:28]
IBM ThinkPad T43 review
Reviews At 2.4kg, the ThinkPad T43 is of average weight for the thin-and-light category. The ThinkPad T43 includes all of the ports and slots we'd expect to see in a thin-and-light notebook for business use. Configured this way, our test unit cost more...
[May 25, 2005, 14:30]
MIT makes quantum leap in display technology
News In addition to being used for extraordinarily thin, bright flat-panel displays, MIT said, the QD-OLEDs may be used to create very stable light for scientific experiments and to miniaturise scientific equipment.
[January 13, 2003, 15:57]
NVIDIA GeForce Go 7400
Downloads NVIDIA GeForce Go 7400: NVIDIA GeForceGo 7400 graphics processing units (GPUs) deliver all of the high definition (HD) graphics and video features as well as the outstanding performance of the award-winning GeForce 7 Series GPU architecture to...
[December 8, 2005, 7:00]
Sempron 3000+ to make mobile debut in Europe
News AMD's Sempron 3000+ and ATI's Mobility Radeon X300 graphics chip will add juice to thin-and-light notebooks, which typically weigh about five pounds. It markets another for thin-and-light notebooks that weigh around 3.5 kilos and often come with 14...
[November 24, 2004, 12:55]
Get ready for the 9-to-5 notebook
News Today, a high-performance thin and light notebook might come with batteries that can provide 58 watt hours of energy. It's now asking them to produce thin and light notebooks by 2008 that can run for eight hours without the use of additional...
[June 7, 2005, 11:25]
Dell Latitude D630 review
Reviews The Dell Latitude D630 includes most of the ports and connections we'd expect on a thin-and-light, plus a few extras. That's near the outer limit for a thin-and-light system, though just 181g heavier than the Lenovo ThinkPad T61.
[May 29, 2007, 10:19]
Via announces cheap laptop chip
News In the USA notebooks classed as being 'thin and light' typically weigh 2.3kg or less and cost more than $1,000 (£550), while those classified as bargain notebooks weigh about 8 pounds and can be had for as little as $650 these days.
[May 27, 2005, 16:15]
Ultralight notebooks for your business review
Reviews Business travellers should consider sub-2kg ultaportables, or 2-3kg 'thin and light' notebooks. No single configuration will be right for every business user, but for most, we recommend a thin-and-light with one of the slower Pentium M processors...
[May 18, 2004, 6:55]
Fujitsu LifeBook S7220 review
Reviews Weighing 2.2kg and measuring 33.4cm by 24.2cm by 3.7cm, the LifeBook S7220 falls into the 'thin-and-light' rather than 'ultraportable' (sub-2kg) category. Fujitsu's LifeBook S7220 is a solidly built 'thin and light' notebook, and its integrated...
[July 6, 2009, 16:49]
3D displays emerge as commercial reality
News OLEDs use organic polymer material as the semiconductor material in light-emitting diodes, and the resulting displays can be thin, light and allow for a wide viewing angle. Several three-dimensional display technologies are in the works, and...
[November 13, 2003, 9:45]
Fully equipped: the mobile professional review
Reviews Thin & light What you select will vary according to what you do: if you require no-compromise productivity on the road, for example, you'll need a well-featured 'thin-and-light' notebook; as portability becomes more important, you'll consider...
[November 26, 2007, 12:44]
Transmeta revs up Crusoe
News Thin-and-light notebooks weigh four pounds to five pounds and include a slot for a floppy or CD drive. Incorporating higher processor speeds with low-voltage capabilities gives Transmeta a good foot in the door into the.thin-and-light category.
[June 14, 2001, 10:01]
Transmeta completes Japanese invasion
News Notebooks using Transmeta's processors are of the thin-and-light variety, which leaves them well positioned in the long term as the market shifts away from the heavier.variety," Promisel said. Intel released a power-saving mobile processor in late...
[May 18, 2001, 10:06]



