Published on May 31st,2010 at 2:57 PM
By >Daimaou - G.G-B

[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution

New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution

As you must be aware of by now, Sony introduced a new upgrade of its ultra tiny Vaio P around the world. Not yet available in the Stores, we had the chance however, to secure a review unit in order to get to the bottom of this upgrade and check if this new Vaio P is really worth the few more bucks that Sony are asking.

Sony Vaio P
- Atom Z530 @ 1.60GHz
- 2 GB SDRAM
- 64GB Of SSD
- WiFI / WiMax
- 8” LCD with a 1600 x 768 resolution
- 0.619 Kg / 1.36 lbs

First Impression
Relatively similar to the First Vaio P, our newest edition however, comes with many little improvements as well as some design tweaks. Keeping the same Hi-res screen, our Vaio P with its 8” 1600 x 768 monitor comes now, like most of the compact notebooks, with a kind of optical sensor provided on the left of the screen and mouse buttons on the right. Unlike the previous Generation both the power switch and Wireless Lan Switch are now located on the side of our Vaio P rather than on its front. Add to this are a new set of colors and “Voila” the only major differences between our 2 generations of Vaio P.

Every day Usage
Although “physically” speaking our new Vaio P does not feature much change after all, things get more interesting once you boot-up our little new wonder … By default, Sony revised the Vaio P specs and now bring more RAM with 2GB instead of 1GB, a more powerful CPU with an Atom Z530 @ 1.6Ghz instead of the usual Z520 and its 1.33Ghz, and by default 64GB of SSD in place of the usual HDD.

On the paper this may sound already much for most of you, however, there is even more to it. First of all, it is when you start using the Vaio P on a daily basis that you notice how faster this New P is compared to the previous stock generation. Added to this, there is now better power management bring-up thanks to Sony’s hardware change and software optimization, a battery life announced at 5.5h instead of the previous 4h hours.

Feeling “lighter”, Windows 7 runs pretty smoothly for your everyday tasks on this new Vaio P, and we do not have much to complain about it. Sure we would love to be able to watch full HD Videos running smoothly or to hook a “Blu-Ray” player and watch our favorite movies on-the-go, but come on, let’s be reasonable here. We agree that it would indeed be pretty nice but the Vaio P may just be a little bit underpowered in its stock version to be fully capable of giving us this yet, then why don’t we keep on enjoying our average DivX and a bit of Hulu on-the-go?

Now we appreciate our new Vaio P’s specs bump, but there are also 3 new gizmos in our new computer that are worth mentioning and that do really make this new P worth checking if you are looking for a compact and stylish notebook.

The very first noticeable improvement comes with the addition of an optical keypad on the left of the screen and mouse button on its right. Far more than just a simple gadget, this new mouse is in fact extremely useful when holding the Vaio P with your 2 hands standing up or in a crowded environment. The second very useful thingy is our Vaio P’s movement sensor that will automatically rotate your screen orientation if you are tilting the Vaio P to the left or to the right giving you a nice screen real-estate for either reading articles on the web or any kind of e-Book.

Sony also extended these features to its proprietary Photo software preview allowing to you to jump from a picture to another by simply flicking the Vaio P to the left or to the right.


Download video

The last but not the least, it comes with the Vaio P Support of the PS3 Remote Play and Remote Keyboard. Like your PSP, our P is now capable of giving you direct access to your PS3 just as your PSP and does pretty much everything that Sony are allowing you with the Remote Play. If indeed you can hook-up your Vaio P to a PS3, the reality is however quite disappointing… The overall experience on Wireless (N) for us was sluggish and dead slow, accessing to Video stored on the PS3 was a real pain and we just had frozen pictures with audio only. Switching from a menu to another was incredibly slow, something that our PSP was doing smoothly just before we tested the Vaio P with the PS3.

Conclusion
If you put aside the PS3 Remote Play that was more than impressive as we were expecting it to be, Sony’s new Vaio P is indeed a nice evolution of the old Vaio P. if you have not yet invested in this product but have been looking for a nice “excuse” to get one, well we can only recommend you to do so, you won’t regret it but bear in mind that an Atom-powered PC will never replace a Core 2 Duo, i3 or i5 one.

So if basic word processing, Email, Web, and light photo editing (Crop, resize), Photo viewing and basic Video playing are what you need on-the-go, the Vaio P with its awesome Screen is a dead winner for us !

Via Sony
Category Review Laptops
              
[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution
[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution[Review] New Sony Vaio P, a nice evolution rather than a real revolution
Related Articles


 

1

Mitsubishi unleash 4 new TV with HDD and Blu-Ray Recorder in Japan.

0

Irivier Japan announces an upgraded version of its E30 MATTE

Comments
 

  • Siavash

    The enter key on VAIO P series of this review has a reverse L-shape. However I couldn’t find this type of keyborad on sony website. Insted, all of sony site pics showing single row enter key button on new sony VAIO P.

    So, as I prefer L-shape enter, how can I ensure which form in this new VAIO P is the correct one? or in which countries I can buy one of them with L-shape enter?

    Thnks for your Kindly helps.
    Siavash

    • kei

      The reverse L-Shape is something specific to the Japanese market. Actually, you shouldn’t find it anywhere except in Japan.
      If you really want one with this enter key, you should ask http://www.geekstuff4U.com. This is a Japan base company reselling Japanese products to overseas.

  • Siavash

    Thanks a lot kei,
    L-shape is what I really comfortable with. so very sad that this product is specific to Japan.

    I’m a computer user since 1990 and all my computers (laptops, desktops) have L-shape enter key. its difficult for me to adobt new shape.

    Anyway, thnks again.

 

0

Sony Mobile - Compact and Stylish Wireless Headset "SBH20" - NFC quick connection with your smartphone or tablet

0

Sony Mobile - Wireless Headset "SBH50" - Enjoy music, One Seg, radio and phone call wirelessly - NFC quick connection with your smartphone or tablet

0

Privacy visor glasses jam facial recognition systems to protect your privacy

0

Japanese Robots: Honda's High-Access Survey Robot Goes to Work in Fukushima. Finally Some Action for (parts of) ASIMO!

0

Panasonic - micro SDHC memory card - with 6 "Proof" performances: waterproof, static electrical resistance, magnetic resistance, X-ray resistance, and heat resistance

0

I-O DATA - Ultra small fingertip sized - USB3.0 compliant colorful mini USB memory

0

Creating Forests to Reduce Tsunami Damage

0

Olympus - Compact digital camera "OLYMPUS STYLUS SH-50" - Will finally start selling again in late June

0

Fuji Film - Special "Kiki & Lala" and "Rilakkuma" models will be added to the instant camera "Cheki" series

0

Thanko - USB Necktie Cooler 3 - A tie that cools down your body - Savior of Japanese salarymen in the summer time!

0

Dynamic target tracking camera system keeps its eye on the ball

0

Sony - A hand-cranked battery charger/emergency radio - You can charge your smartphone/iPhone/mobile phone in times of emergency

0

Nikon Imaging Japan - Urban design, practical camera backpack - Quick access to your shooting equipment

0

Nikon Imaging Japan - Shooting Master Shoulder Bag L - Robust and water-shedding high-end camera bag made from the same material as a bulletproof vest

0

Pioneer - Class D "Direct Energy HD Amp" AV amplifier - 2 new models (SC-LX57, SC-2023)

0

Takara Tomy A.R.T.S. - LINE Town - My Touch - Toy for kids that looks like a smartphone - let's kids pretend that they are sending LINE messages - International Tokyo Toy Show 2013


Twitter

Fatal error: Cannot use object of type stdClass as array in /www/a/ak/akihabaranews.com/www/wp-content/themes/akiba/sidebar.php on line 338