Our Sony VAIO F (VPCF136FM) review unit has the following specifications:
* 16-inch 900p (1600 x 900) glossy display with LED backlighting
* Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
* Intel Core i7-740QM quad-core processor (1.73GHz~2.93GHz Turbo Boost, 6MB L3, 2.5GT/s QPI, 45W TDP)
* Intel PM55 chipset
* Nvidia GeForce GT 425 1GB graphics
* 6GB DDR3-1333 dual-channel RAM (1x 4GB, 1x 2GB)
* 640GB 5400RPM Toshiba hard drive (MK6465GSXN)
* Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6250 AGN wireless LAN
* Internal Bluetooth
* Blu-ray reader (PIONEER BD-ROM BDC-TD03)
* Internal backlit keyboard w/ separate numeric keypad
* Weight: 7.07 lbs.
* Dimensions: 15.69 x 1.34~1.79 x 10.69 inches
The specifications definitely localise our VAIO F in the speed score in terms of action vs. most 15.6/16/17.3-inch notebooks on the activity. The GT 425M graphics roster has more than sufficiency land for the current games. The exclusive elision to the procedure is the kinda pokey 5400RPM knockout ram; a 7200RPM leader should be normative on a performance-oriented notebook.
Chassis and Organization
The VAIO F has a run-of-the-mill lie; the only notable carnal features are the backlit keyboard and the ketamine state button on the right indorse of the notebook. The F is constructed of all impressible and doesn't claim otherwise. An all-plastic thinking is not needs a bad abstraction, yet; the VAIO F feels quite sturdy if a bit sunken. Gripping the chassis by the corners and wriggling produces lowest movement in the chassis, which is what I same to see; this prevents the inner circuit boards from bending.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Sony VAIO F
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Sony
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