- Intel Pentium M Processor Ultra Low Voltage 753 (1.2GHz)
- 2MB L2 Cache
- 400MHz FSB
- 512MB (Non-removable) of PC-3200 400MHz DDR2-SDRAM (expandable to 1.5GB)
- Integrated 802.11b/g Wi-Fi Wireless Network Adapter
Product Details
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The Basics
Connectivity and Expansion Slots
The VGN-TX650P/B features Sony's SmartWi technology, which seamlessly integrates wireless Wide Area Network (WAN), 802.11b/g wireless LAN and Bluetooth technologies, enabling you to toggle among your wireless connectivity options depending on your surroundings. With the Bluetooth connectivity, you can communicate and synchronize with Bluetooth-enabled peripherals such as PDAs and cell phones. You get a good offering of connectivity options, including both USB 2.0 and iLink (Firewire):
Preloaded System and Software
This system comes with the Windows XP Professional Edition (which adds Microsoft's IIS Web server, back-up and recovery utilities, Remote Desktop, and other enhanced business features) with Service Pack 2 featuring Advanced Security Technologies, which helps to reduce unwanted downloads and pop-ups while surfing the Web. It also comes loaded with a bevy of Sony multimedia software: Click to DVD (DVD creation), SonicStage (digital music), SonicStage Mastering Studio (with MP3 encoder), Vaio Media (network file sharing), DVgate Plus (digital video), and Image Converter (for PSP transfer). Other preloaded software includes Quicken 2005 New User Edition, Microsoft Works 8.0 (with word processing, spreadsheet, and calendar), Norton Internet Security (with 90-day subscription), Intervideo WinDVD, Roxio DigitalMedia SE, Adobe Photoshop Album starter edition, and SpySubtract (with 30-day subscription).
Dimensions and Weight
Amazingly small and light, the VGN-TX650P/B weighs 2.76 pounds with standard battery and measures 10.7 x 1.12 x 7.7 inches (WxHxD).
Power
It's powered by the VGP-BPS5 lithium-ion rechargeable battery, which produces a battery life of between 4 and 7.5 hours.
What's in the Box
This package contains the VGN-TX650P/B notebook PC, rechargeable lithium-ion battery, AC adapter, Cingular Wireless SIM card, and operating instructions. It is backed by a one-year limited hardware warranty, and Sony offers 1-year of toll-free telephone technical assistance.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A true go-anywhere office,
By Headbang8 (Bogenhausen, Munich) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sony VAIO VGN-TX650P/B 11.1" Laptop (Intel Pentium M Processor 753, 512 MB RAM, 60 GB Hard Drive, DVD+R Dbl Layer/DVD+/-RW Drive) (Personal Computers)
I just bought a TX690, which I believe is the same as this model except with a blue cover and a half a gig more RAM.
Light, thrifty with the juice, and just as powerful as some of its larger cousins, I am very happy with this purchase overall. I can see no reason to go back to a bigger notebook for any reason. It fits in a backpack with the rest of my gear; no need for a separate laptop bag. The connectivity is superb, and once you get the hang of it, the VAIO connections manager software makes it incredibly easy to switch from one internet connection to another. The Cingular EDGE feature is extraordinary. You can pluck broadband out of the sky across wide stretches of the USA--no more searching for Starbucks or other hotspots. And if the EDGE network doesn't reach where you are, the Bluetooth feature makes it easy to do dial up via your mobile phone. Just a couple of gripes that bust my rating from a 5 to a 4. Sony has integrated the EDGE system into the software, so you can't switch telcos. And with the most common plan at $80 a month, it's a bit pricy. The screen is exceptional for its size, and the keyboard works as well as can be expected in such a small space. But Sony could have improved the array of outside controls. There's a set of buttons above the keyboard which is supposed to let you operate the machine as a dumb-terminal personal DVD player without booting up the whole system, but it's never worked 100% properly for me. The touch-pad is, if you'll pardon the expression, touchy. And the volume and mute buttons are fiddly. The tight packing of so many components does cause a little interference in the built-in speaker--this disappears when connected to external speakers, but it kind of makes it useless as a personal DVD. That said, if you really want a full functioned office that you can operate from anywhere, you can't go past the new TX series.
36 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Would be the best if not the fragile screen,
By Dr Stone (New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sony VAIO VGN-TX650P/B 11.1" Laptop (Intel Pentium M Processor 753, 512 MB RAM, 60 GB Hard Drive, DVD+R Dbl Layer/DVD+/-RW Drive) (Personal Computers)
I almost bought this computer, but decided to go to Best Buy to actually see it. I am very glad I did: the Best Buy's floor sample had many glass cracks on the LCD panel. I wondered why, and the answer is actually simple: the screen is made very thin and while the "polycarbonate" cover touted by Sony is strong in terms that the cover itself does not break, at the same time it is very flexible and unfortunately the glass inside the screen is not flexible, so the LCD glass cracks when the screen is bent a little.
So, I imagine the glass would often break if you put your computer inside a bag with something else that could bend-in the cover or if you drop it or you are not handling this thing like a baby. None of the other computers I saw in Best Buy had the cracks on LCD panels. So, if you ever decide to buy it, I would highly recommend buying an accidental damage protection, which adds $300-$500 to the price depending on where you buy it. I also looked at Portege R200 from Toshiba. The battery life of this computer is not as impressive as Sony's and it lacks the optical drive. On the plus side it weights the same and has a much better protection of its Polysilicon screen - it does not bend and the Polysilicon screens are known to outlast the regular screens by many years. Sony might also use polysilicon screens, but unlike Toshiba they refuse to tell which components they use, which is unfortunate because you don't really know what you are buying and how long will it last. One of the reasons I looked at Sony's TX is that it might use the polysilicon screen from Toshiba, based on Toshiba's announcement of mass production of LED powered 11.1 screens with the same resolution as in TX. That screen would work very well if not the critical design flaw with the screen cover that bends easily. The Portege's hard drive also seems to be very well protected: they used a smart sensor that detects abrupt laptop movements and parks the hard drive's head to avoid damage to the disk. Not only that, it is also installed in a shock absorbing material. The hard disk and the screen are the two components that break sooner or later 99% of the time and Toshiba wins the durability test against Sony hands down. So, regretfully, while Sony's TX looks great, I just can't waste my time and money on something that would break in a few months. As far as the WAN option goes, the Cingular's web site sells the PCMCIA cards for free when you sign up, so having the WAN option built-in does not make much of a difference pricewise.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nice Notebook,
By Caffeinator "Caffeinator" (Modesto, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sony VAIO VGN-TX650P/B 11.1" Laptop (Intel Pentium M Processor 753, 512 MB RAM, 60 GB Hard Drive, DVD+R Dbl Layer/DVD+/-RW Drive) (Personal Computers)
I recently purchased this from Amazon. They offered an OK price, but also gave a $150 rebate, so the net price was about $60 less than any other vendor (online or brick-and-mortar). Filling out the rebate form on-line was easy.
I purchased it to replace a Fujitsu p1120 sub-sub-notebook. The LCD on the Fujitsu died just outside of the 1-year warranty. I expect the Sony LCD will last longer, given the quality I usually find in Sony products. The Sony is much faster (as one would expect comparing a Pentium M 1.2 GHz processor to a Transmeta 0.8 GHz processor), and has a much nicer screen. It comes with the usual Windows/MS junk such as MS Works, MS Office Evaluation Copy, etc. I deleted these to make room for OpenOffice for Windows and Cygwin. Regarding recovery disks, they can be made easily by following the instructions that appear after you first log in. It is true that 6 GB of disk space is devoted to a Windows Recovery Partition. This partition can probably be deleted after making recovery disks, but this would likely require a re-install of Windows. I have not done this. I did shrink the Windows partition using Knoppix and installed Fedora Core 4. It works well with Linux, including screen, touchpad, sound, and wireless. I am told power management works under Linux, but haven't yet tried it. I do not believe the screen is as fragile as some reviewers fear. A co-worker has 2 of these (for herself and her husband) and says she and her kids have treated it quite roughly without any screen damage. Moreover, I went down to the local CompUSA and saw the screen on one of their demo models torqued significantly without damage to it. I am so far happy with this notebook. If I had not yet purchased this notebook, I would also look at the Panasonic Toughbooks.
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