Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 38 examens experts du Sony Vaio VGN-TT1 Series et l'estimation moyenne est 79%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Sony Vaio VGN-TT1 Series.
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Les éditeurs ont aimé
Le rêve pour un nomade ! Complet
Très autonome
Ultracommunicant
Ce TT est aussi un vrai bijou de design. Moins
Cher
Le bijou. Dommage
Du coup
Que l’écran ne soit pas parfaitement uniforme et que le Bluray soit absent. Processeur Intel Core...
As with most cases, we can not conclude our comparison with "go for this". If you are working with Office documents, Internet, if you do not place heavy demands on multimedia tasks such as video editing and finally if portability is your utmost priorit...
Extrait: Sonys newest high-end ultra-portable notebook is thin, light and very, very expensive. Keep reading as we take a look to see if its qualities live up to its hefty price tag.What can you get for $4,500 in these troubled economic times? With that sort o...
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Publié: 2009-04-08, Auteur: Andrew , review by: techworld.com
For the money, we’d expect first-rate build quality and performance, yet the Sony VAIO VGN-TT11WN fails to deliver on the former, while startling us in some respects with the latter. Screen quality and battery life are both unparalleled by any other n...
If you're in the market for an ultraportable notebook, and you can stand the hefty price tag, the VGN-TT190EIN makes an excellent choice. Sony's VAIO products have always been a cut above in performance and quality, and the VGN-TT190EIN is no exception...
Overall, the VGNTT180C is an excellent product. It lives up to Sony's usual high standards for the VAIO series, and offers excellent performance and features. It's on the high end of the price scale, but you get a lot of quality and state-of-the-art fe...
Weighs only 2.8 pounds. Dual SSDs. Integrated Blu-ray drive. 4GB of memory. Insanely long battery life. Mobile broadband.
Underpowered. Fresh Start option is available only with Vista Business and is a $50 "upgrade." Keyboard is too small for stubby-fingered typists. Way too expensive.
The Sony VAIO VGN-TT190 is sub-3-pound laptop that houses a Blu-ray drive and dual 128GB solid-state drives (SSDs). However, there are a few drawbacks, including a superhigh price, that keep me from getting too excited about the TT190....
Publié: 2008-11-06, Auteur: Vincent , review by: slashgear.com
Extrait: In a world of $250 netbooks and credit crunch, is there a place for a high-end ultraportable that, in its peak configuration, costs $4,345? That’s the question Sony - and plenty of others - are asking about the new Vaio TT, its latest luxury notebook....
Publié: 2008-10-21, Auteur: Dan , review by: cnet.com
Sleek, carbon-fiber chassis; includes Blu-ray drive and HDMI port; twin 128GB solid-state hard drives, 16:9 display; excellent battery life.
Painfully expensive; faster than Atom-powered Netbooks, but still not a speed demon.
Small laptops have become synonymous with low-cost Netbooks, but Sonys Vaio TT reminds us why some ultraportables can cost almost 10 times as much (hint: the 256GB SSD helps). Specifications: Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo (1.4 GHz); RAM installed: 4 GB ...