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Sony has equipped its latest Vaio laptop with one of AMD’s latest processors, the triple-core Phenom II X3 P820. Even though it’s paired with 4GB of RAM, its performance in our benchmarks was so slow we reran the tests just to be sure. It came at the bottom of the charts in all our application tests and couldn’t keep up with laptops equipped with Intel dual-core processors.
The Vaio isn’t well-suited to working away from a power socket, either. It lasted just two hours and 24 minutes in our tests – one of the shortest times we’ve seen recently. Surprisingly, its Mobility Radeon HD 5145 graphics chip did quite well in our demanding 3D graphics test, running Call of Duty 4 at 20fps. With some tweaking, it can play most of the latest titles smoothly.
Most 15in laptops can’t accommodate a keyboard and a numeric keypad without making some sacrifices and the EE2S1E is no exception. Although Sony has managed to squeeze one in without any odd key layouts, the keys are a little small. This simply meant that it took longer than usual to get used to their size. The touchpad is large and accurate with buttons that give just the right amount of feedback when pressed. You’ll either love or hate the pad’s textured, grainy feel, though.
We wanted to like the EE2S1E. It looks classy and comes with a useful software bundle, but its short battery life and below-par Windows performance means we can’t recommend it. Even if you’re tempted by the Vaio’s 3D performance, there are better alternatives here.