July 16th, 2008 Tim Danton

Sony VAIO FW-Series

While three out of the four VAIO ranges announced by Sony yesterday are squarely aimed at businesses, the FW-Series has one mission in life: to entertain.

The chief sign of this is its 16.4in screen, with 1,600 x 900 pixels to help make high-definition movies look great (it’s also enough to view two programs side by side with ease).

And, from my brief encounter with the Blu-ray version of Spider-Man 3, they do: colours pack a punch and viewing angles are good too. The only possible complaint is that the screen is quite reflective.

All but one of the models include a Blu-ray drive that can burn DVDs, but only the top-end will have the capability to write to Blu-ray discs as well.

As standard, all FW-Series laptops include Sony’s Click to Disc Editor too. This allows you to import video from, for example, an HD camcorder and create high-definition Blu-ray (or standard-definition DVD)  discs of your own events, complete with interactive menus of course.

Continuing the entertainment theme, pressing the AV button on the top-right of the chassis brought up a menu at the top of the screen with all the usual media-related apps. It’s a handy way to avoid hunting through menus or loading up Windows Media Center to find your chosen application.

Side shot of VAIO FW-Series

The speakers looked impressive, with a huge grille above the keyboard, but we couldn’t test them meaningfully in the exhibition hall - this will have to wait until we have the laptop in our Labs (I’ve been assured one is already on its way).

The final notable feature is a generously sized keyboard, which - like most of the new VAIO ranges - uses the “isolated” keyboard with well separated keys.

It worked well in my brief time tapping away on it, and benefits from the keyboard itself being well positioned: some big laptops like this push the keyboard right to the top of the chassis, which means your palms sit in a slightly uncomfortable position when typing.

Sony VAIO FW-Series from the sideWith any laptop that includes such a big screen, portability is never going to be its biggest strength. But the FW-Series is by no means the worst offender at 3.1kg and measuring a slim 37mm tall.

However, its width of 384mm means it isn’t a natural for slinging into a bag and it seems that battery life will be somewhere around three hours.

If I was looking for an entertainment laptop, though, I’d certainly consider the FW-Series. Especially as the top-of-the-range model includes a highly respectable ATI Radeon HD 3650 graphics chip.

Prices range from £799 inc VAT for the FW11E, which includes a DVD writer but no Blu-ray drive, to £1,299 inc VAT for the FW11ZU.

Look out for our full review soon.

The specs:

Sony VAIO VGN-FW11ZU: £1,299 inc VAT

  • 2.53GHz Intel Core 2 T9400
  • 4GB RAM
  • 300GB hard disk
  • 16.4in 1,600 x 900 TFT
  • ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3650 graphics
  • Blu-ray reader and writer
  • Gigabit Ethernet
  • 802.11abg+draft n WLAN
  • 384 x 261 x 37mm (WDH)
  • 3.1kg
  • 1yr C&R warranty
  • Windows Vista Ultimate

Sony VAIO VGN-FW11M: £899 inc VAT

  • 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 P8400
  • 4GB RAM
  • 250GB hard disk
  • 16.4in 1,600 x 900 TFT
  • ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3470 graphics
  • Blu-ray combo drive (reads Blu-ray, burns DVDs)
  • Gigabit Ethernet
  • 802.11abg+draft n WLAN
  • 384 x 261 x 37mm (WDH)
  • 3.1kg
  • 1yr C&R warranty
  • Windows Home Premium

Sony VAIO VGN-FW11M: £799 inc VAT

  • 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 P8400
  • 3GB RAM
  • 250GB hard disk
  • 16.4in 1,600 x 900 TFT
  • ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3470 graphics
  • Dual-layer DVD writer
  • Gigabit Ethernet
  • 802.11abg+draft n WLAN
  • 384 x 261 x 37mm (WDH)
  • 3.1kg
  • 1yr C&R warranty
  • Windows Home Premium

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5 Responses to “First look: Sony VAIO FW-Series”

  1. David Wright Says:

    Why are all of the displays 1600×900? That means that they can’t show any HD format at its native resolution… :-S

    I could understand 1920×1080, worse than 1920×1200, but perfect for HD video playback, but 1600×900? Seems to be a bit of a mis-match…

  2. Sony Rep Says:

    Have you ever watched a Blu-ray movie and there was black bars top and bottom?

  3. David Wright Says:

    Yes, most movies are shot at something wider than 16:9 (or 16:10 which most widescreen computer displays use). But TV series will be mainly 16:9.

    And what about the missing 320 horizontal pixels? Last time I looked, films didn’t have huge black borders left and right… :-S

  4. Paul Ockenden Says:

    On that size screen I really don’t think you’d notice whether HD content was playing out at native resolution, or scaled.

  5. Alan Titcombe Says:

    Do you know when the full review will be available ? Thx.

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