Wednesday, March 11, 2009

The Sony P-series Lifestyle PC: Just don't call it a Netbook

Much like Apple, Sony likes to keep its Vaio products aimed at mid-to-high-end buyers and generally eschews the budget end of the market .

When it comes to Netbooks, it's no different; Sony's entry into the very hot minilaptop category shares a lot with Netbooks such as the Dell Mini 9 or Asus Eee PC, but clearly goes out of its way to avoid being lumped in with them.

The P-series Lifestyle PC is one of the smallest laptops we've seen; it is almost similar to a UMPC, but with a traditional clamshell laptop design. The widescreen 8-inch 1600x768 display and tiny keyboard make for a form factor that has roughly the same footprint as a standard white business envelope, and is less than 1-inch thick, weighing 1.4 pounds.

To fit a reasonably full-featured PC into a chassis this small, some sacrifices had to be made, and we're worried the lack of a standard touch pad (instead there's a ThinkPad-like pointing stick), will keep this new system from being as useful as it could be. It does, however, include a 3G mobile broadband antenna, 802.11n Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth, with mobile broadband service provided by Verizon.

Like several other laptops we've seen recently, there's a pre-Windows instant-on operating system, which uses the familiar Sony cross-media bar menu found on the PlayStation 3 and handheld PSP consoles. Once you boot into Windows, instead of the XP variety found on most Netbooks, it has Vista, although the 2GB of RAM (up to 4GB capacity) should help it run smoothly.

Sony was planning on marketing this almost clutch-size laptop specifically to women, saw these lines in the official press release:

"Designed for the fashionista in all of us, it's the ideal companion..."
"The spacing between keys has also been engineered to help reduce typing mistakes making it perfect for long fingernails."

Options include solid state (up to 128GB) or standard hard drives and a variety of colors, including garnet red, emerald green, onyx black, crystal white, and classic (matte) black, with matching accessories including a fitted leather case. More photos are after the jump.




HTC Touch HD : Windows almighty

The Touch HD is storming the WinMo stage to leave a footprint the size of half the HTC portfolio. Not so long ago we saw Windows Mobile changing for the better thanks to the TouchFLO 3D, The latest flagship gets things even hotter with a multimedia twist. And the new screen… well, beauty's in the numbers.

Looks like all that stands between the Touch HD and legend is the actual performance. A bold statement it is, so what we're about to do is push it to its limits. An unforgiving spec sheet calls for unforgiving scrutiny. Join us as we set sail to explore the HTC Touch HD big sway and little secrets.


Key features

  • Massive 3.8" 65K-color WVGA display
  • Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional OS
  • TouchFLO 3D Home screen and gesture controls
  • Wi-Fi and built-in GPS receiver
  • Qualcomm MSM7201A 528 Mhz CPU and 288 MB DDR SDRAM
  • Dedicated graphics chip (64MB RAM reserved for graphics)
  • Quad-band GSM and dual-band HSDPA support
  • 5 MP auto focus camera with nice image quality
  • microSD card slot
  • Accelerometer sensor for auto screen rotation and turn-to-mute calls
  • Proximity sensor to automatically turn the screen off during calls
  • Fingerprint resistant rear panel
  • Touch sensitive keys with vibration feedback
  • Stereo FM radio with RDS
  • Standard 3.5mm audio jack
  • miniUSB slot and Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
  • Active magnetic stylus
  • MS Office Mobile document editor
  • Excellent Opera 9.5 web browser
  • Rich retail package, including 8GB microSD card

Main disadvantages:

  • A wee bit overweight
  • Sizeable body (still within acceptable limits though)
  • Average sunlight legibility
  • Video recording maxes out at CIF@30fps
  • There's no dedicated camera key or flash
  • No D-pad (offers more precise navigation)
  • Power key is really hard to press
  • No TV out port

HTC Touch HD is simply the next big thing in the Windows Mobile realm. And big is by no means limited to size. Indeed, the handset does come out a little too hefty but the feature pack is the kind to make you forget about size. The massive screen and so-unlike-WinMo multimedia skills give HTC Touch HD the kind of crossover appeal to reach beyond the hardcore PocketPC following.