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The Sony VAIO FW139E/H is a 16.4" semi-desktop replacement notebook configured with an Intel Core 2 Duo P8400, which runs at 2.26GHz with a Front Side Bus speed of 1066MHz, 3GB of DDR2-800 RAM, an ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3470 dedicated graphics card, and a 250GB HDD. This model is one of the first VAIO FW models to come out and is meant to be sold at retail stores.
Reasons for Buying This notebook was primarily purchased as a PC to take to college. Now when you think college, you probably are thinking of portability.
Being an Engineer major, portability comes second to power. This notebook was meant to provide up to four years of casual and heavy computing. The GPU was the important decision maker; I needed something dedicated, and the market was flooded with possibly defective nVidia GPUs. I narrowed my choices down to the VAIO FW and HP dv5t. I ended up going with the VAIO FW because of the larger screen and faster processor at my price range. Where and How Purchased The VAIO FW139E/H was purchased at NewEgg.com for about $995. This was the best deal I could find, because the retail model shipped with 3GB of RAM and the Radeon GPU already included in the price and it was available sooner. I believe it was a fair deal because a similar Centrino 2 model would have been almost $200 more at the time. Build and Design I'm impressed with the overall build of the VAIO FW. It's cased in Magnesium alloy, which makes it look semi-metal and semi-plastic at the same time. It is a very sturdy looking laptop; the screen hinge is perfect and stands strong, rubber feet under the laptop keep it from moving, and I have not yet been able to make a scratch on it. Design wise, it is fashionably sound. It carries the traditional VAIO look; the model I reviewed is the Titanium Grey model with black colored keys. It has a very professional look. The power button is located on the right side of the hinge, and it glows green when turned on and orange when in hibernation. The media buttons are located on the right side, right above the keyboard. The speakers are on top of the keyboard, as well. The keys make the laptop stand out, as well. The black spaced-out keys make the laptop look very sharp to the eye. The "Motion Eye" camera is located right above the screen. Screen The screen on this model of the VAIO FW is an XBRITE-ECO LCD with a native resolution of 1600 x 900. Not only is this a unique sized screen at 16.4 inches, but it has a unique aspect ratio of 16:9. This aspect ratio is the true widescreen aspect ratio that HDTVs feature. This true widescreen size is perfect for managing windows while multitasking. You can have about four or five average sized applications on screen comfortably in the native resolution. The screen is a bit on the glossy side, but there are no reflections when there the laptop is turned on. When off, it doubles as a tinted mirror. Speakers The built in speakers above the keyboard are of average quality. You can definitely tell the difference between the VAIO FW's speakers and the average external speakers. Headphones are a must if you want to enjoy a movie or play music. I wouldn't recommend portable speakers as a replacement; the sound quality would be equal to that of the VAIO FW. I wasn't expecting much from speakers, though. Speakers aren't the highlights of laptops, anyway. Processor and Performance Now for the fun part! The P8400 Core 2 Duo is remarkable fast in Vista; I have yet to experience a slowdown caused by the CPU. The bottlenecking component of this laptop is the hard drive, running at the average laptop HDD speed of 5400 RPM. The transfer of a large file via a 100Mbps network was fairly slow; this wasn't all the laptop HDD's fault, though. The laptop is capable of 1000Mbps transfers, and the file contained a large amount of subdirectories and files and slow transfer down in Windows. Bootup is fast, even when multiple startup applications are present. Gaming wise, this laptop will be fine for last generation games. It plays Halo: Combat Evolved at native resolution and everything turned on perfectly. It also plays Benchmarks Super Pi @ 2M: 1m 11s (20 iterations, no AC adapter plugged in) 3DMark06: 2,569 3DMarks (869 SM 2.0 / 1023 SM 3.0 / 2021 CPU Score), AC adapter charging battery. No 3DMark06 benchmarks performed on battery power. Heat and Noise This laptop is built well to handle heat. After gaming for about 30 minutes, the laptop was still cool. It doesn't get very hot at all, and is probably one of the very good things about Sony's engineering. When not reading a disc, this laptop is silent as if not even on. When it reads a disc, however, it gets very loud for a brief 3 to 5 seconds. The fans are fairly silent when gaming, too. Heat and noise wise, it is a very well engineered machine. 




Half-Life 2 with almost all settings on High (AA disabled) on the native resolution.
Super Pi @ 2M: 0m 53s (20 iterations, AC adapter charging battery)


