Sony VAIO TT: unboxing, hands-on and impressions
It's not too often we get to toy around with a $4,449.99 laptop (these start at around $2,000), but that's precisely what we were able to do when Sony's packed-to-the-hilt VAIO TT (VGN-TT198U to be precise) arrived on our doorstop. The model we received included dual 128GB SSDs, a Blu-ray writer, 11.1-inch LED-backlit display, HDMI output, built-in MOTION EYE webcam, 802.11n WiFi, a 1.4GHz Core 2 Duo SU9400 CPU, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, Bluetooth and a pair of USB 2.0 ports. The 2.87-pound unit is essentially a huge thumb of the nose to netbooks everywhere, boasting a frame that's in the same ballpark (in terms of size) with innards and a price tag that contrast sharply. For those just interested in seeing what south of five large can buy you these days, head on down to the gallery below; if you're actually considering one of these puppies, hop on the past the break for a few impressions.
On the surface, Sony's VAIO TT is a real marvel of engineering. Here's a few thoughts on the beast-in-a-netbook's-body:
On the surface, Sony's VAIO TT is a real marvel of engineering. Here's a few thoughts on the beast-in-a-netbook's-body:
- Unlike Lenovo's IdeaPad U110, the gloss factor wasn't an issue, as the matte keyboard and only slightly shiny display kept glare to a minimum.
- Man, is this thing ever light. The carbon-fiber chassis makes it so you barely notice that this machine is even in your carry-on.
- The keyboard is vastly better than that of the U110. The spacing is adequate, and your fingertips don't slip and slide all over. Sure, the keys themselves are small, but it's nothing you can't adjust to (and even enjoy) after a few hours of typing.
- The port selection is quite robust given the size, but then again, we'd expect nothing less for nearly $4,500.
- The trackpad is a delight to use, though the left / right click buttons don't have enough "give" for our tastes.
- During basic testing of real-world use (web surfing, multimedia playback, word processing, etc.), it was as zippy as we could hope. We've got no benchmarks to prove it, but anyone worried about sluggishness here in basic computing shouldn't be.
- The XBRITE display is magnificent. Clearly viewable from every angle, images are crisp and brightness is fantastic.
- We really appreciate the screen's ability to recline to nearly flat. A big boon when typing in those awkward spaces (like in the rear of a cramped taxi).
- Too much bloatware -- Sony loaded on a myriad of programs that really bogged things down when first entering into Vista. We'd prefer these applications on a disc for the user to install if he / she sees fit.
- Sexy, but subtle design. Truth be told, the all-matte external finish makes this less of a looker than we originally anticipated, but the chrome accents and diminutive footprint still makes it drool-worthy. In fact, we'd wager that most folks out there willing to shell out a few Gs on this will prefer the subdued look over the garish -- not that we don't adore the Envy 133's flashy exterior or anything.




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Either make it sleek or make it conservative, not both!
NO THANKYOU. I realize that HDMI on a laptop is pretty tight stuff... but seriously? THAT MUCH? 1.4 GHz?!?! $4500!
@ZaxCG2
Its surely an amazing notebook, but $4500 is definitely too expensive!!! I agree that other netbooks are not even a quarter good compared to this one...But HELLO!!! $4500 !!!
Wish Engadget has a Give-away for it and I get it!! :)
As a college student/owner of an Eee PC 1000H, this is a ridiculous buy.
When I become the CEO of Sony? Still no, the max I would spend on a traveling notebook would be 3k. Anything more than that is just stupid. Unless you're a multi-millionaire, but what kind of a company builds a notebook targeting such a small demographic?
For 4.5k, there damn well be 5 USB 2.0 ports and a personal chef.
I enjoyed the picture of the open soda can next to the $4,500 laptop. I'd take the Envy 133 over this any day
I rather buy the new Apple laptop. October 14th is coming. :-)
October the 15th is also coming, but I won't make such a big deal of it!
Do you know how many hookers and how much blow you can get for that much?
depends on the quality of the hookers and the blow.
Well, you can get 9/10 of what Elliot Spitzer had.
Hey, that's my line!
That's what she said.
If only it wasn't a Sony...
Lenovo X series, copy this please.
Having performance in a netbook form factor is nice, but ultimately pointless. What would you use it for? Controls are cramped for games, and the screen is really too small to do any serious video work (although i applaud them for putting a decent resolution screen in this model). Video playback would be nice on it, but you don't need the whole spec bump they gave this machine (or the price), and you won't be crunching numbers much on it (nor using it as a server).
Really, they should just bump up the screen res on the N10, and give it dual core atom with firewire (and maybe some slightly better materials for build, although carbon fiber is overkill), it would be able to do most anything any actual user would do with a laptop of this class.
My thoughts exactly... I have an Eee PC but I can't bear to use it for more than just a quick word doc or email and blog checking. For college essay, movies and all the other desktop stuff you need more space.
I think the ideal computer situation for me would be to have all three of these:
*Super small (travelling abroad, or take notes in crowded lecture hall, watch film on airplane)
*Full-featured notebook (Long essay writing session, idling away on the web, watch a movie with friends somewhere comfortable... have it open at your desktop for quick internet searches etc while desktop is in use)
*Desktop (gaming, storing your music collection, docking all your peripherals, high definition stuff etc.... all intense tasks).
At the moment I have a desktop and a super small (Eee) PC. I need to fill the gap and get a full-featured type notebook too. I'm eying a mac to fill the void of 'full-featured computer in more convenient package' so i'll be watching engadget next tuesday.
What all of this is getting at is that a super expensive full featured tiny PC seems kind of pointless. Like you say, it's cramped and small for longer tasks, even if the hardware itself can handle it. It's all a matter of preference, but I think the best is to have 3 PCs to give you maximum flexibility. And you could probably get a powerful desktop, a macbook and an eee pc for the price of just this Sony.
The $21xx model is a worthy replacement of my Fujitsu Lifebook P7010D. Hmm...
What I dont get is it starts at $2000, and goes up to $4500??? I dont see how that many options could cost 2500 (more than the base!) I didnt bother pricing one out cause its just ridiculous...
Wow... what a blatant ripoff of the new macbook style keyboards. Save your money and buy the Air or new macbooks next week folks, nothing to see here....
Uhh dood? Sony's had this for a WHILE now...
iKurt @ Oct 9th 2008 12:50PM: I think sony has been using that keyboard since 2005.
iKurt: Flame bait: Ass
As we all have to keep reminding the fucking Apple fanboys here, Sony used this gapped keyboard style first in the X505 back in 2004, before your precious Macbooks came out in 2006.
The X505 was also the Macbook Air of its time and actually stuck in more ports than the MBA, like two USB ports, ethernet and even firewire! Granted it lacked built-in WiFi but I'm sure Sony could do it now and Wifi was not as important in 2004 as now in 2008.
Apple fanboys are the worst I've met of any company BY FAR.
Not that I don't enjoy a good Apple flame, but HELL YES Wifi was important in 2004! and 2003, and 2002, and 2001, and 2000. This is a lot like people who believed laptops didn't need onboard ethernet in the late 90s.
Seriously. Keep flaming, but be clueful about it. There was no excuse for not having wireless capability in 2004.
@ oZ
Sure it was important, but it wasnt as easily found and widely used as it is today and i believe thats what he meant.
flame fail, do your research when you flame plz or gtfo
Chin-Poh:
What nonsense.
That keyboard has nothing to do with the new Apple keyboard style.
And Sony copied something that is working very well. So?
Why the fuzz. It is like it is: the industry is lagging behind Apple.
And by the way: the X505 was nothing special. Just a result of available standart components.
I had an older, cheaper, Fujitsu Sub-Note with a 700MHz ULV Pentium that was equally as thin.
And still the Air is "much" thinner, when you compare what a 1.6 - 1.8 Core2Duo does for a consumer: Everything and a lot more - to the back then already underpowered Sub-Notes like the X505, making them typing machines.
I can't stand this splitting into partys anymore.
Why this revolt against Apple?
Everything else just doesn't care about software and every PC runs with Windows, because of that.
Going the easiest way: Don't make your own OS. Just buy it.
The Industry is in a price war, and as been for a long time.
The results are aparent: NO INNOVATION.
And that's why Apple costs more. Because they have expenses for r&d and design.
Oh, and that awesome, markets best, software you get with every Mac.
Jesus, instead of being screwed over every time: get the other companies to finaly do something.
And stop the Anti-Apple BS: no serious developer / designer / it guy cares about this trolling anyway.
TMM: TL; DR
Not to mention that this keyboard, and every other vendors' EXCEPT APPLE's, has A REAL DELETE KEY.
Based on the pictures, the unboxing experience of the Envy 133 blows away the Vaio TT
WAY. TOO. EXPENSIVE. Sweet Christ.
This is the highest end model with a Blu-Ray drive and a 128gb SSD in Raid.
The TT models with DVD drives and HDDs will be half the price.
Who needs BluRay anyways... unless I feel like burning half my music collection to one disk, it feels like it'd be completely useless.
Why do you have 100GB of music? You one of those "DL the whole album of every band I even sort-of like and never delete anything" collectors?
Coming soon so your Neiman Marcus Christmas catalog... "His and Hers Sony Vaio TT's"
Yes... its a terrible habit. I just love sifting through my library on Winamp. Plus I download too many of those hour-long DJ mixes.
Funny- I don't even like 40% of the music in my library.
No mention about the battery life?
Replace the twin SSDs with a single hard drive and put in a DVD burner instead of Blu-Ray drive and you've cut $1K off the price easily. Flagship layouts are cool, but really give the wrong impression of a models pricing sometimes. This laptop will never be cheap, but it can be had for much less than $4K+.
Um I certainly hope it would cut more then 1k off the price since that would still leave you at roughly $3,500 with very VERY little to show for it.
Sweet lappy...too pricey though. Come on Sony...I'm sure this is for the jet setting exec who has tons of loot and can probably write the expense off as a business necessity. But still...some average folks would like to get all up on your T...T
Battery life concerns me. My Sony TZ give me horrible battery time, and that's with the Extended Life Battery installed.
Why did you get so low ranked? You talked about your battery life was an issue and was wondering if it was going to be the same with the TT and people low ranked you? Damn some people are heartless!
Gooood Golly Miss Molly! (ThatsGGMM ) $4500...what are you thinking???
$4500 for a little laptop. This is the perfect explanation of why Sony HAAAAATES the netbooks: they're making tiny laptops cheap, whereas Sony has been raping people for them for years. DIAF, Sony, kthxbai.
Way way too expensive. But I'm sure there will be cheaper variations of the Vaio TT. Just switching the two SSD's for a conventional HDD, and opting for 2GB of RAM should shave a couple Gs from the price.
I think this should be at least $8000. IT'S A SONY!!!!
Apparently its necessary to take a picture of the print screen button? That is a key selling point I'm sure. My macbook doesn't have a print screen button. And I'm surprised he used a sprite can instead of an iPhone. I thought it was the standard unit of measurement in electronics now. It is a very nice, though i've used a TZ before and it was too small for me. if it was a 13.3 screen i'd like to have one. But that is worth more than my jeep. I agree is a snub to netbooks and next time lets use a smaller f-stop please so I can see more than just one key.
if I buy a million of those, will I get bailed out by congress?
Really though, how much of that price tag is the dual SSD?
It should really come with some charred cash in the box too.
Nothing to see here. Steve's releasing the mother load next Tuesday!
Aw man Scooby Doo, I never knew you were a Mactard, and I watched you all the time as a kid oblivious to this fact! XD