Sony VAIO VGN-T27GP

Sony VAIO VGN-T27GP It's not a machine that's suitable for long-term work, but if you're after a great-looking truly portable laptop, then the VAIO T27 fits the bill nicely.

The T27 is undeniably one of the cutest little ultraportables on the market today. In fact, if you've got the opportunity, it's hard to resist the urge just to pick it up and look at it, as it's something of a marvel of design in that it matches so much functionality in PC terms up to a case that's still attractive to look at, not to mention tiny.

If your prime criteria for notebook purchases is that you have a laptop that doesn't look like the run of the mill, then we'd suggest you need a broader outlook -- but still, the T27 fits the bill nicely. It weighs in at a scant 1.38kg including battery, and measures only 272 by 34 by 205 millimetres, with a silver finish that Sony refers to as "Frosty Silver". The flipside of cramming as much functionality into the T27 as Sony has done is that there's virtually no surface that isn't crammed with ports, buttons or plugs -- there are a combined fifteen buttons, ports or interfaces around the main body of the notebook. That's more of an aesthetic issue when you've got other peripherals plugged in, however; when not in use the common ports don't stand out that much. It's clear that Sony intends the T27 to be something of a flagship for the VAIO line, and, as such, they haven't skimped on the essentials, or, for that matter, the little luxuries, although that's rather amply reflected in the notebook's hefty $3,999 asking price. For that much money, though, you get an ultraportable with integrated dual-format DVD burner, an Ultra Low Voltage Intel Pentium M 753 Processor (running at 1.20GHz), 512MB of memory, 60GB of hard drive space split across a primary 15GB partition and a 45GB data partition and integrated wireless in both Bluetooth and 802.11g flavours.

About the only arguable weak point in the T27's arsenal is that it only uses the onboard Intel 855GME chipset, rather than a dedicated graphics processor. Then again, at this size and with this size keyboard, the T27 was never much of a gaming/3D rendering machine anyway. It does make quite a good portable DVD player, thanks to the 10.6" display's widescreen aspect and sharp 1280x768 pixel display. The T27 resolutely resisted all of our efforts to benchmark it, failing repeatedly to run Bapco MobileMark 2002 in either its performance or battery testing reader modes, so it's a little hard to definitively compare it to other ultraportables in a strict numerical sense. Still, in terms of PC performance, we found little to be concerned about. The T27 swiftly installed applications, surfed the Net and copied discs without complaint. The arrangement of hard drive partitions may not be entirely to your liking, as while it does allow for system restores without impinging on user data, if you've got applications that will only run from the primary partition, you may find it a little cramped within a 15GB environment that has to house Windows XP, Norton AntiVirus and the usual run of Sony-branded applications already.

In the absence of hard battery life benchmarking data it's likewise hard to assess the T27. Sony claims that it's capable of up to 8.5 hours of battery life -- that's presumably with the screen resolution turned right down, no wireless and little to no optical disc activity. The interesting thing about that claimed battery life, even if it's only half accurate in real world conditions, is that while it indicates a unit with plenty of staying power, whether you'll have staying power with the T27 is debateable. It's no real fault of the design of the notebook, but the combination of a very small, high resolution screen and a shrunken keyboard make for a unit that is quite physically and optically challenging after only a very short period of work. However, this effect can be mitigated somewhat by fiddling with things like font size settings.

If you regularly need to take small trips -- like, say, a train or bus to work -- then the T27 would make an excellent portable notebook solution, as long as you then have the capability to plug in an external keyboard and monitor once you hit the office. If you're looking for something to use for longer stretches than this, however, we'd suggest a long trial of a T27 in-store before plunking down your cash, as the physical obstacles this notebook presents aren't tiny ones, and ergonomics is something that nobody should play fast and loose with.

Sony VAIO VGN-T27GP
Company: Sony
Price: AU$3999
Phone: 1300 720 071

Talkback 7 comments

    looks like an apple powerbook ...Anonymous -- 19/04/05

    looks like an apple powerbook 12" wannabe to me

    frosty silver? cheap plastic impersonation of the aluminium powerbook. and its slower and less featured and more expensive.

    poor imitation at best.

    vaio vgnt27gp Anonymous -- 08/02/06

    the piece of crap powerbook couldn't even start to compare to this thanks :)

    Vio T27 DEEPIKA BHONSLE -- 16/10/08 (in reply to #120128823)

    THE WORST QUALITY SONY MODEL. I PURCHASE ON1,24000 INDIAN RUPEES IN DELHI. AFTER ONE TEAR TWO MONTHS MY DISPAY GONE & WHEN I REACH TO AUTHORISED SERVICING CENTER IN LAJPATNAGAR IT HAD BEEN TOLD THAT MOTHERBOARD HAS GONE. I WAS SHOCKED AS I HARDLY USED MY LAPTOP & AFTER ONE YR COMPANY DON'T GIVE WARRANTY. SINCE THAT TIME I AM TELLING EVERYBODY DON'T USE SONY PRODUCT AS REPLAIR COST OF PRODUCT IS HIGH. IT WILL COST 50000RS FOR MOTHER BOARD, THEN IT WILL BE WISE DECESION TO PURCHASE NEW LAPTOP OF HP OR OTHER BRANT.

    vaio vgnt27gp Anonymous -- 08/02/06

    the piece of crap powerbook couldn't even start to compare to this thanks :)

    none Anonymous -- 13/05/06 (in reply to #120128824)

    u suck go eat a dick moron

    GREAT laptop Anonymous -- 30/09/07

    I used this laptop for more than 2 years across the middle east for work and play, and considering the punishment it received being driven along hundreds of miles of dirt track during that time it did well - excellent battery life, great for movies and picture editing etc. Bit slow for movie editing though.

    My problems with this machine were as follows :

    1. The DVD cannot be region-freed. That's right, a machine designed for ultra-portability will not let you play a DVD you've bought in Houston duty free if you already set it to play UK DVDs.
    2. The wifi/bluetooth radio unit (inside the machine) on my machine came loose a couple of times, which meant paying an engineer to fix.
    3. One day my machine decided it had a different BIOS password to the one I'd set. Dubai Sony service want about 600$US to fix it by simply putting in a new motherboard, so the machine is now a doorstop.

    Sony Vaio VGN-T27GP - Awesome Anonymous -- 04/11/08

    I use this daily, have since new about 3 yrs now. Traveled around the world many many many times. I can't see some of the letters on the keyboard but I know how to type so this is irrelevant. Trackpad works great, wifi is great, bluetooth, DVD+-RW is beautiful. DVD movie controls below the screen are convenient, especially on flights. This powerhouse PC lacks nothing. It would be difficult for people that have eyesight trouble but I have it on high res and use it daily for at least 8-10 hours most days. If you travel, it's the perfect machine. Someone mentioned slow with movie processing, yes..but at least it's got firewire built in and loves to link to my Sony vid cam and Olympus...no issues. Oh...it has about 5-8 dead pixels now, down near bottom center..no big deal. Bought in Hong Kong at super price. My 15GB C: drive is too small, WindowsXP has grown like a fat pig as usual, so I will use a partitioning software to move some of the spare space on my D: drive over to the C:...should fix my problem, because daily it's under 200mb free on C: which makes Windows slower..yuk. I'd love to reformat and start again but I don't have the original discs with the Sony goodies. I might just try entering in Linux, deleting the massive swap files and reboot with a nice re-install of WinXP with SP3 slipstreamed in overtop of this current install. Of course...I'll try to backup first. Wish me luck! My best laptop EVER...seriously. And if you like phones, check out the TytnII from HTC in Taiwan...hacked with Windows Mobile versions obtainable from xda-developers.com it's a full PC in your pocket.

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