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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect Portable Solution., January 14, 2004
If you're looking for a sleek, performer that you can carry anywhere, don't look any further. First things first. This is not a desktop replacement. Its a Pentium-M processor at 1.60GHz, which is close to a Pentium 4 at 2.3GHz. If you're looking for a blazing processor, buy one with a quick Pentium 4. If you're looking for something that'll sip on battery juice, this notebook with the Pentium-M is exactly what you're looking for. If you're using the computer away from a wall socket, the battery life will be extremely important. Especially if you're trying to finish your paper and you hear the battery chime ringing at 10% 'til dry. This notebook is extremely portable. I tend to carry the Sony around everywhere because I just don't mind the weight. I never realized that subconsciously, weight would determine my willingness to take my notebook with me. Whether its around campus, or out to lunch from work. My 14.1" iBook feels like carrying marble slabs in my bag. Not for gamers. The Sony comes equipped with a ATI Mobility Radeon 16MB graphics chip. Graphic intense games get so choppy, you'll get motion sickness. Then again, this notebook is not advertised as a gaming unit. I still play games like Age of Empires 2 and things with ease though. Wireless networking built in. Sometimes, when we go to Starbucks or a book store and we need to jump on the net, the built-in 802.11b works like magic. I'm planning on setting up a wireless, backwords compatible, 802.11g router soon. If you get a 802.11g card, it'll be like 10 times faster than the 802.11b. Also, I've ordered the wireless modem from T-Mobile with unlimited internet access for like 30 bucks a month. The built-in CD-RW/DVD combo drive is smooth and quiet. Although running things in the drive of any notebook will drain the battery at a higher rate, at least this drive is quiet while you're watching your movies. I've heard some people complaining about the high resolution and how the font is tiny and hard to read. Well, heres my answer, go to the display settings menu and check the large font option. If all you do is lower the resolution, the fonts will look fuzzy. But if you just enlarge the font, everything will be "normal". BTW, I work with Photoshop and Illustrator on a daily basis and I'm truly amazed with the monitor. It displays images and color vibrantly. If you think this is one gorgeous laptop, you're right. It wasn't by mistake, how the design came to be. There's a whole thing on the design and creation process at the Sony website. Check it out. If you need to be away from your desk to explore the creativity in you, take the Sony Vaio PCG-Z1VA along. Its perfect.
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