Sony will tell you a lot of things about the new Vaio Pro, which
replaces the Vaio Z at the top of its laptop heap. It might say that
it's exceedingly light, and made from carbon fiber. Or it might say that
it's got new Intel Haswell guts. But what it should really say is just
this: It doesn't suck. And that's the biggest change to Sony laptops in
years.
The new Vaio Pro (11-inch and 13-inch models; $1150 and
$1250 starting configs, respectively; out June 9 in black and silver)
does away with almost all of the crap that made the Z so unusable. That
too-shallow, too-small, too-awful keyboard is gone, replaced with a
usable, typable island keyboard with nice spacing and travel distance.
The cramped and tiny and also totally unusable trackpad is replaced with
a big glass one that seemed to work reasonably well when we saw it a
few months back, when its software was still in the early stages. The
screen is a very nicely balanced 1080p. And it retains its lightness
with the carbon fiber body, but adds an aluminum wrist plate to give the
unit a more solid feel. (There was a good amount of flex in the
keyboard as we used it, but Sony seemed to imply that it would be fixed
for final production; we'll let you know when we get review units in.)
The 11-inch weighs 1.92 pounds, and the 13-inch 2.34 pounds. They also
have the Vaio's traditional optional and ugly sheet battery, which
doubles battery life.Elsewhere, Sony has a new convertible, the Duo 13. It's basically the Duo 11, but with a larger, 1080p screen, a tiny trackpad (instead of no trackpad), and a more effective hinge design. Sony says the Duos are designed for visual professionals, which makes a little bit of sense, somewhat, but the compromise of functionality for even this improved version still seems like a lot to give up for, effectively, a touchscreen easel. It's out in Black and White starting at $1400 June 9 as well.
Source : Gizmodo
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