Thu Jan 24, 2008 1:57PM EST
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When Steve Jobs took the stage at Macworld and held aloft the MacBook Air, he compared it to a slim Sony laptop. This is that Sony: The Vaio TZ150.
At just 2.7 pounds, the TZ150 is 10 percent lighter than the Air, but it's got a smaller screen, too: Just 11.1 inches to the Mac's 13.3. At 1.2 inches thick, it's also fatter than the Air, but I'm not sure that's a measurement anyone actually cares about. Weight, in my mind, is a far more important issue, and considering the TZ150 comes with an optical drive that the MacBook Air lacks, the extra half an inch is worth it.
The Air has been criticized for a number of omissions, notably the aforementioned lack of an optical drive and a dearth of expansion ports. The TZ150 has a full double-layer DVD burner, VGA output, a Memory Stick Pro slot and an SD card slot, microphone jack, and 2 USB ports. Ethernet, FireWire, modem, and ExpressCard port are all included. The TZ also has dedicated media playback controls. The Air has none of that, just a mini-DVI jack and one USB port.
The TZ's real killer feature, though, is its inclusion of a 3G radio courtesy of Sprint. It has the usual Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, but adding 3G to the mix makes the machine so much more useful. Even the keyboard, shrunken down to fit the 11.1-inch chassis, is surprisingly easy to type on, and you can do so from anywhere.
Sounds good so far, right? Well, unfortunately the TZ has some flaws that make it difficult to recommend. The most glaring problem is performance. The TZ is slow at just about everything. Slow to boot, slow to run apps, slow to respond to requests. Even Task Manager calls take forever to become usable. Though it packs a 1.06GHz Core 2 Duo CPU, it just doesn't do much with it. In fact, I've rarely, if ever, seen benchmark scores this low.
The machine is also not very stable, which likely has to do with the scads of extra software Sony always loads its laptops to the brim with. I know Vista isn't the most rock-solid OS out there, but I should at least be able to play a DVD movie without having to reboot. Twice.
Still, there are more plusses: The screen is super bright, battery life is 3 hours exactly, and, though it lacks the postapocalytic styling of the Air, the TZ looks plenty cool. At $2,000, the price isn't out of bounds, but it isn't cheap, either. Though I can't openly recommend the TZ due to its performance issues, it's not a laptop that doesn't have its share of charms.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Here's a hint to anyone who gets a new computer, desktop or laptop. Unless you plan on using the demo apps, just reinstall the OS when you get a new computer. When you do this your computer's performance will be as good as the hardware allows.
I have a K23 which, after purchase a few years ago, all my friends laughed at. "If you buy a Sony, buy a desktop not a laptop!" they said. Looks like new Sony laptops didn't learn from the old ones. I had to take it to a pro-geek to de-install all the crapware that it's loaded with to make the performance somewhat tolerable, and added memory to make it 1gb. It's slow, it's unstable, battery doesn't last long, and I would never use it as the hub of a entertainment center as Sony envisioned VAIO in the marketing material. I bought it because I used to like Sony stuff. I'll get some more use out of it, then buy a different brand to replace it. I'm leaning toward a Lenovo with maxxed out ram and docking station w/ widescreen. Forget the entertainment stuff, it's the convenience and professional reliability that's cool.
It is relatively easy to install Windows XP on the TZ, the drivers and applications are available for it and XP works like a charm on the TZ, this is what the TZ needs. I installed it the day I got my TZ and wiped off Vista. I agree that Vista is too slow and bloated on it. XP is much faster and leaner.
a dual core is a dual core. the writer of this article needs to learn how to shut down on all the commercial programs that are running and he will get his power. when has it NOT been like this? this laptop is great.
Sony's latest noise-cancelling headphones offer excellent comfort and sound. The earcups are incredi ...
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1 Posted by alan_r_cam on Thu Jan 24, 2008 9:38PM EST Report Abuse
In the left corner, we have the Mac Airbook. Runs well, but has losy connectivity. In the right corner, we have a Sony Vaio, every port you could want but runs like a slug. And sitting on the sidelines taking notes- Dell and HP. Come out fighting at the bell. I'd ask for a clean fight with no hitting below the belt, but who am I kidding ?