Skip to main content

Sony Vaio X Series

Sony Vaio X Series
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Move over, MacBook Air. Although Dell already ripped up Apple’s envelope with the thinner-than-Air Adamo, Sony has set its own sights on the King of Thin, and the resulting Vaio X Series should put both imitator and imitated to shame.

Sony teased the Vaio X at this year’s IFA conference in Berlin, which essentially functions as the European version of CES. With no spec sheet or press release to be found, all we know are the bare essentials from Sony’s press conference: the screen spans 11.1 inches, the whole laptop measures only 0.55 inches thick (compared to 0.76 inches on the Air), and Sony has wrapped it in so much carbon fiber that its total weight comes to only 1.5 pounds. That’s just a smidge heavier than the almost-pocketable and highly flippable 1.4-pound Vaio P.

Sony Vaio X Series

The Vaio X shown at IFA used the Intel Atom processor typically found in netbooks, but Sony has pledged that its choice of hardware is not yet final. (That should be reassuring news for those who have dealt with the similarly sexy but critically crippled Vaio P.) Sony has also promised a work day of battery life, and the option for a built-in 3G modem. The engineering prototype includes two USB ports, a memory card reader, Ethernet jack, and VGA video output. In the same weight-saving spirit that drove the need for a carbon-fiber shell, the keyboard is milled from aluminum.

Unlike the far-away products previewed at CES, most products shown at IFA come down the pipe in the near future, and Sony has said the Vaio X will go on sale in the week following the Windows 7 launch on October 22. However, many products shown at IFA appear only in European markets, so it could be some time until the Vaio X floats its way over the U.S. As for price, none has yet been announced, but most industry commentators expect Sony to debut it for under $2,000 to compete with the likes of the Air and other ultralights such as the Dell Adamo and Lenovo X301.

Editors' Recommendations

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
Razer’s Naga X is a 16-button gaming mouse made to slay MMO titles
razer announced naga x gaming mouse

Razer is expanding its family of gaming mice with the launch of the new Razer Naga X, which is now the lightest mouse in the Naga lineup. The lightweight design and robust customizations on the Naga X make it ideally suited for MMO gamers, the company said, and if you're already gaming on Razer's ecosystem of laptops, the Chroma RGB lighting on the Naga X would be a nice addition to your existing setup.

The Naga X comes with 16 buttons in a lightweight 85-gram design. Like the original Naga, it looks like gamers won't be able to adjust the weight on this model, but an array of programmable buttons on the side of the Naga X makes it easy to map to essential game keys. Razer's HyperShift allows you to double the number of inputs with a secondary button profile when the HyperShift button is held down. Gamers can use Razer's Synapse 3 to map the Naga X's buttons. There's also onboard memory, so you can save all your presets to the mouse.

Read more
What will PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X games look like at launch?
what will next gen console games look like playstation 5 xbox series x nextgenconsolegraphicsfeature

The next-generation consoles, Sony’s PlayStation 5 and Microsoft’s Xbox Series X, have gamers hyped for stunning new eye candy. That desire was stoked by Epic’s reveal of an Unreal Engine 5 demo that pushes far beyond what’s possible on current hardware.

Epic’s demo was only that, however. A demo. It’s unclear when a game might live up to the expectations it sets. In fact, gamers have enjoyed precious few clips of next-gen gameplay. Even events that promised gameplay, like Microsoft’s Xbox Series X First Look, threw out mere scraps.

Read more
Rumored Nvidia RTX 3000 could destroy Xbox Series X and PS5 graphics
Nvidia RTX 2080 Super in a gaming PC.

PC gamers envious of the power that AMD is bringing to console gaming with the upcoming launches of Microsoft's Xbox Series X and Sony's PlayStation 5 need not worry too much. AMD rival Nvidia is rumored to be working on its next-generation GPU, which uses the Ampere architecture and is rumored to launch as the RTX 3000 series. It could very well give the AMD-powered consoles some major competition in graphics performance. More specifically, the RTX 3000 cards could finally make 4K ray tracing games a playable reality, according to Tom's Guide, which cited a report from YouTube channel Moore's Law is Dead.

Nvidia's upcoming -- and unannounced -- RTX 3080 flagship will come with some major upgrades, according to the channel, which will allow the cards to have performance in the range of 21 teraflops, or 9 teraflops more than the Xbox Series X. To power this much horsepower, Team Green will be giving its flagship GPU -- the GA102 -- 18Gbps of GDDR6 video memory, according to Moore's Law is Dead's sources.

Read more