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Sony VAIO E Series 14in review

in Laptops

Verdict

Sony’s smallest VAIO E Series comes in colours that inevitably polarise opinion, but if the styling suits, it's a great little laptop

Review Date: 1 Apr 2010

Reviewed By: Sasha Muller

Price when reviewed: £574 (£674 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
5 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
5 stars out of 6

Performance
4 stars out of 6

PCPRO Recommended

Details
Part Code VPCEA1S1E/L.CEK
Review Date 1 Apr 2010
Price ex VAT £574
Price inc VAT £674
Overall rating 5 stars out of 6
Features & Design 5 stars out of 6
Value for Money 5 stars out of 6
Performance 4 stars out of 6
Warranty
Warranty 1 yr return to base
Physical specifications
Dimensions 345 x 238 x 39mm (WDH)
Weight 2.290kg
Travelling weight 2.8kg
Processor and memory
Processor Intel Core i3-330M
Motherboard chipset Intel HM55 Express
RAM capacity 4.00GB
Memory type DDR3
SODIMM sockets free 0
SODIMM sockets total 2
Screen and video
Screen size 14.0in
Resolution screen horizontal 1,600
Resolution screen vertical 900
Resolution 1600 x 900
Graphics chipset ATI Radeon HD 5145
Graphics card RAM 512MB
VGA (D-SUB) outputs 1
HDMI outputs 1
S-Video outputs 0
DVI-I outputs 0
DVI-D outputs 0
DisplayPort outputs 0
Drives
Capacity 500GB
Hard disk usable capacity 466GB
Spindle speed 5,400RPM
Internal disk interface SATA/300
Hard disk Seagate ST9500325AS
Optical disc technology DVD writer
Optical drive Optiarc AD-7585H
Battery capacity 3,500mAh
Replacement battery price inc VAT £0
Networking
Wired adapter speed 1,000Mbits/sec
802.11a support no
802.11b support yes
802.11g support yes
802.11 draft-n support yes
Integrated 3G adapter no
Bluetooth support yes
Other Features
Wireless hardware on/off switch yes
Wireless key-combination switch no
Modem no
ExpressCard34 slots 1
ExpressCard54 slots 0
PC Card slots 0
USB ports (downstream) 4
FireWire ports 0
eSATA ports 1
PS/2 mouse port no
9-pin serial ports 0
Parallel ports 0
Optical S/PDIF audio output ports 0
Electrical S/PDIF audio ports 0
3.5mm audio jacks 2
SD card reader yes
Memory Stick reader yes
MMC (multimedia card) reader no
Smart Media reader no
Compact Flash reader no
xD-card reader no
Pointing device type Touchpad
Audio chipset Realtek HD Audio
Speaker location Above keyboard
Hardware volume control? no
Integrated microphone? yes
Integrated webcam? yes
Camera megapixel rating 0.3mp
TPM no
Fingerprint reader no
Smartcard reader no
Carry case no
Operating system and software
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
OS family Windows 7
Recovery method Recovery partition, burn own recovery discs
Software supplied N/A
Battery and performance tests
Battery life, light use 3hr 50min
Battery life, heavy use 1hr 13min
Overall application benchmark score 1.27
Office application benchmark score 1.03
2D graphics application benchmark score 1.38
Encoding application benchmark score 1.15
Multitasking application benchmark score 1.54
3D performance (crysis) low settings 53fps
3D performance setting Low
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User comments

small question

Probably asking in the wrong place, but what is the difference between i7 and i3, in my opinion i7 is better than i3, so lets see, there was pentium 1,2,3,4, then cores 1, 2, 4, then came the i7, and suddenly the numbers started to go down, i5 and i3. what is going on, are we no longer progressing or what, i know i9 (or i think it actually has a name) is coming out or already out, but what is the point of all these i5 and i3??? and also if you are giving it an HDMI and HD quality screen, where is the blu ray drive. I not know of services except BBC's HD iplayer, where i can watch films and tv shows in HD, so only other way to do is to watch a blu ray, ok i know this is not meant for gamers (either) but normal people do deserve something too, i am talking generally too, i see more laptops with i3 and i5 than i7 and blu-rays in them, the market is booming but no one is there to pick it up. sorry to waffle

By mobilegnet on 1 Apr 2010

i7 was released first, has I think triple-channel memory support, dynamic overclocking and hyperthreading. i5 is the same with dual-channel memory support. i3 is the same except they are dual-core without dynamic overclocking, and have an integrated graphics chip on-die. I think some of the i5's do too? Most i7's are on the 1366 socket, except one or two which are socket 1156. All the rest are 1156. See, easy. (/irony). I'm probably wrong somewhere in the above... :-/

By piphil on 2 Apr 2010

Thank for explanation

So my assumption was corrected there is a downward trend for this. hmm, thanks again piphil

By mobilegnet on 2 Apr 2010

Downward trend?

Not really! As piphil quite correctly stated, Intel just decided to launch the super-powerful exciting stuff first.

Don't forget, even Intel's lowly Core i3 is a serious step up from its Core 2 predecessors. Multi-tasking performance in particular leaves the older chips for dust.

Core i5 and i7 are significantly more powerful again, but most people will be perfectly happy with i3 for the forseeable.

As for Core i9, I sincerely doubt you'll see six-core CPUs hitting the mobile market before sometime in 2011.

Sasha Muller
Laptops Editor
PC Pro

By SashaMuller on 6 Apr 2010

Why no Firewire?

Yet again PCPro raves about a laptop with a serious shortcoming, no FireWire (IEEE 1394). The power of laptops nowadays is perfectly adequate for video editing on the go, but with no FireWire there is no simple way of capturing video from many camcorders. I realise a FireWire port can be added using the ExpressCard 34 slot (present on this laptop but in itself not ubiquitous), but FireWire used to be an integral part of laptops, so why has it disappeared? As a minimum shouldn't PCPro list the presence or absence of Firewire when it reviews laptops?

By pr00se on 8 Apr 2010

Why no Firewire?

Yet again PCPro raves about a laptop with a serious shortcoming, no FireWire (IEEE 1394). The power of laptops nowadays is perfectly adequate for video editing on the go, but with no FireWire there is no simple way of capturing video from many camcorders. I realise a FireWire port can be added using the ExpressCard 34 slot (present on this laptop but in itself not ubiquitous), but FireWire used to be an integral part of laptops, so why has it disappeared? As a minimum shouldn't PCPro list the presence or absence of Firewire when it reviews laptops?

By pr00se on 8 Apr 2010

Firewhere?

Hi pr00se,

Due to some technological gremlins, FireWire ports aren't showing up on the specification page. We're looking into it and hope to have it fixed asap. Apologies!

I'd argue that FireWire is far from essential these days, though. Most new camcorders use USB 2, so a cluster of USB ports is all many people, camcorder enthusiasts included, will ever need.

By SashaMuller on 8 Apr 2010

Blue tooth?

It this the model with blue tooth? its still very desirable this why I have bought a fw series.....You should be able to run Unix enterprise systems on this for Enterprise use.I cannot figure out why the graphics card is not NVIDIA..is this a vendor lock in?

By trickii1 on 28 May 2010

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