By
Michelle Thatcher
27/06/2006
URL:
http://asia.cnet.com/reviews/notebooks/0,39050488,39260523p,00.htm
Taking some of the most innovative elements of
the T-Mobile Sidekick and the OQO Model 01, the Sony Vaio UX is a tiny
ultraportable with a 4.5-inch (diagonal) widescreen display that
slides up to reveal a QWERTY keypad. Despite its small size, the UX
runs on a full-fledged laptop CPU--an Intel Core Solo--a full
version of Windows XP and it features a touch-screen interface. These
characteristics make the Vaio UX a key competitor for true ultramobile
PCs, such as the Samsung
Q1. And with its intuitive user interface and
actual built-in keyboard (most UMPCs are slate tablets that require you
to type on an onscreen keyboard or plug in a USB keyboard), the Vaio UX
is the most practical of these new small tablets that we've seen to
date. Unfortunately, it's also cursed with the poor battery life and
ridiculously high price tag of most UMPCs, making it really suitable
only for gadget-heads who can afford a S$3,499
toy. The rest of us are
better off buying either a smart phone for mobile Web surfing or a
small-form-factor tablet, such as the S$3,488
Fujitsu
LifeBook P1510.
Design
While supplies of the Vaio UX currently remain tight in North America,
we received a Japanese version from an importer. What first
impressed us was the product's weight; the featherlike Vaio UX weighs
slightly more than half a kilogram, making it slightly lighter than
the Samsung Q1 UMPC (which lacks a keyboard) but nearly three times the
weight of other portable devices, such as the
Treo
650 and the
Sony
PSP. Measuring 150.2mm wide, 100.5mm deep (129.5mm with the
screen extended), and 38.2mm thick, the Vaio UX is a compact, if
stout, package. Its tiny two-prong AC adapter brings the device's
travel weight to 0.73kg.
Because of its small size, the Vaio UX's 4.5-inch
(diagonal) widescreen display is just a touch larger than the Sony
PSP's. Considering the screen's fine 1,024 x 600 native resolution,
most
users will be in for a lot of squinting; icons and text are tiny. We
found the display size to be adequate only for pounding out quick
e-mails and minimal Web surfing, with one exception: The sharp
resolution does make videos pop. However, the screen's glossy finish is
so reflective that our own face was reflected over every video we
watched in anything other than a theater dark room. Sony tried to
offset the tiny screen by adding a zoom button that can magnify an area
of the screen up to three times its size, but it's an inelegant
solution; zooming causes the image to become pixelated, and there was
often a lag between our input and a change onscreen. On the plus side,
the display is touch sensitive, letting you navigate windows and menus
with a stylus or your finger--although the UX's highly reflective
screen easily picks up fingerprints and smudges. Using the Palm-like
stylus is easy enough, though, and when not in use it tucks
conveniently into a slot on the back of the device.
As with the Q1, the UX has buttons around the
screen to help you navigate without a mouse; unlike the Q1's, the UX's
are very intuitively laid out. You can move the cursor using a square
pointing stick on the upper-right side of the display, while two
buttons on the left side function as right and left mouse buttons. Back
on the right side (beneath the pointing stick) are dedicated buttons to
zoom in and out; on the left (beneath the mouse buttons) is a button
that calls up a touch-screen menu of frequently used controls,
including screen brightness, volume, and quick-launch keys for
applications and folders. A switch allows you to turn the system's
Wi-Fi radio on and off. Other cool features include a handy fingerprint
reader that lets you log on to Windows and your favorite Web sites with
the swipe of a finger, plus two cameras: The one that faces out from
the front acts as a Webcam, while the one that faces out from the back
lets you take photos. Two gripes: The speakers on the top and the
bottom of the unit emit weak sound, and we wish there was a hardware
switch to easily control system volume.
Taking a cue from the T-Mobile Sidekick, the UX's
screen slides up to reveal a backlit QWERTY keypad. Though we were
excited to see an integrated keyboard on such a small tablet, a few
minutes of typing tempered our enthusiasm. For those of us accustomed
to pounding out messages on a Treo keyboard, the keys on the Vaio UX
feel like they're spaced a bit too far apart for comfortable thumb
typing, though the extra space certainly cut down on typos. More
importantly, because the keys are embedded flush with the case (a
necessity of the sliding cover), we had to press really hard to get a
response. As a result, our thumbs ached after typing just a few
sentences.
Features
Given its tiny size, the Vaio UX's feature set is impressive. In
addition to its two cameras and biometric fingerprint scanner, you'll
get headphone and mic jacks, a USB port, a Memory Stick slot (typical
to Sony, no other flash formats are supported), and a CompactFlash
reader that can be used as an expansion card slot. Networking
connections on the Japanese and Asia-Pacific model include 802.11a/b/g
wireless and
Bluetooth; the North American version includes Cingular EDGE WWAN. The
system's included dock adds FireWire, VGA, and three more USB ports,
plus an Ethernet jack. It's an impressive lineup of ports and
connections that matches that of any late-model laptop. About the only
thing missing is an optical drive for transferring DVDs to the hard
drive, plus support for more media card formats.
The only part of the Sony Vaio UX that doesn't meet
Microsoft's requirements for an ultramobile PC is its operating system:
It runs on Windows XP Home instead of the tablet edition. As a result,
the UX lacks some of the handwriting recognition and annotation
features found on most tablets--something most users are unlikely to
miss, unless they've already been working with a tablet PC. Its robust
software package includes Microsoft Streets and Trips navigation
software (for use with an optional Bluetooth GPS receiver), Microsoft
Works 8, media player software, and a handful of homegrown recovery,
security, and file transfer utilities.
Performance
And
Battery Life We reviewed the Sony
Vaio UX50, a Japan-only release that costs US$1,699 (S$2,716.61).
Clearly you're
paying for the petite form factor more than components: The case is
stocked with a modest 1.1GHz Intel Core Solo ultra-low-voltage
processor; 512MB of slow 400MHz RAM; a tiny 30GB, slow 4,200rpm hard
drive; and integrated Intel 945GM Express graphics. Other regions in
the Asia-Pacific region will retail the Vaio VGN-UX17GP model with a
faster 1.2GHz Core Solo processor at a higher price of
S$3,499.
The
specifications were enough
to help the UX50 outrun the Samsung Q1 on CNET Labs' mobile benchmarks,
but not on a par with an ultraportable such as the Fujitsu LifeBook
P1510. In short, the
UX17GP's performance should be sufficient for surfing the Web and
playing
media files, but it definitely isn't enough to replace your laptop.
Mobile application performance(Longer
bars indicate better performance)
| BAPCo MobileMark 2005
performance rating | |
Like
the Samsung Q1, the UX50 is crippled by its
poor battery life. We think a mobile device should run for at least 5
hours if it's going to be truly indispensable, but the UX50 lasted just
2 hours 27 minutes in our battery drain tests. That's below average
for a laptop (even the Q1 lasted 22 minutes longer), and it eliminates
the option of making the UX50 your primary computer on the run.
Battery life(Longer bars
indicate better performance)
| BAPCo MobileMark 2005 battery
life in minutes | |
Service
And
Support Sony Vaio notebooks have
a one-year local warranty. At Sony's support Web site, Vaio owners can
download the latest drivers. For simple problems, the company offers an
online knowledge database for troubleshooting. Should the unit require
further diagnosis or repair, the customer will have to send the unit to
the service center. For an additional
S$90,
consumers can purchase the Vaio Overseas Service package which provides
a 24-hour call center for repair requests and international warranty
coverage at designated countries.