Battery, Noise, and Heat

While the Sony VAIO S' performance (at least in our configuration) is fairly middle of the road, we're now squarely in its home turf. There were multiple points during the VAIO S' battery testing where I would actually check on it and then roll my eyes because the screen was still on. I tested the VAIO S using its "Stamina" mode and our traditional settings (including setting the screen's brightness to 100nits).

So basically what we have is a mainstream notebook with a netbook's running time. Note that of our platforms, only Brazos is able to get close to the relative battery life Sony's managed to squeeze out of the VAIO S; Atom + NG-ION can't compete, and even the other Optimus-equipped Sandy Bridge notebooks are left in the dust, including the low voltage Alienware M11x R3. The optional sheet battery is almost redundant, but it's there for those of you that want to marathon the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy on a 13.3" screen.

There's a tradeoff, though. While the notebook honestly doesn't get particularly hot (I imagine the AMD Radeon HD 6630M version might), the exhaust fan can get irritating in a hurry. It's noisy in a way that a dB reading won't measure, because the fan is very high pitched. Some users will probably be able to adjust to it, but unfortunately you're probably going to want to check out the VAIO S in retail before you make a final determination. And how about those thermals?

The Radeon gets a little toasty, but otherwise the notebook runs remarkably cool. Surfaces warmed up but never got uncomfortably hot, and it's unlikely that your palms will start sweating profusely while using the VAIO S. It's worth mentioning that the sheet battery will cover up the bottom ventilation, leaving tiny channels on the sides, but that didn't seem to cause any serious issues; most of the VAIO S' air circulation is done through the rear vent.

Gaming Performance The Mediocre Matte
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  • Malih - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    a Sony VAIO S with Llano in it would be awesome
  • KPOM - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    This compares pretty favorably to the 13" MacBook Pro, and since it's a Sony it should hold up pretty well. That they can cram a discrete GPU into this is small package is impressive and ought to get the engineers at Apple motivated to do the same for the next MacBook Pro, unless the Ivy Bridge chip is substantially better in the graphics department, in which case I wouldn't be surprised to see the 13" Pro dropped.
  • hardwareguy - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    The 13" MBP already doesn't have discrete graphics. I think they keep it around for people who need a little more connectivity or hdd space than the Air offers.
  • Roland00Address - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    I am still baffled why sony sent the 160 shader version and not the 480 shader version. The price between the two is barely anything.
  • JarredWalton - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    I'd guess the SA is going to run pretty damn hot/loud as the major issue. I've actually got an Acer TimelineX 3830TG; run a game and the CPU throttles after about a minute because the CPU+GPU overwhelms the HSF. Part of that is Acer's BIOS, no doubt, but GT 540M and HD 6630M should generate comparable heat so unless Sony has better ventilation....
  • waldojim42 - Saturday, September 10, 2011 - link

    Heat was never really an issue when I had the 6630 version. In reality, the machine would turbo up to about 3.2Ghz in most games, and be quite happy to run there all day. Doesn't change the fact that the fan can be annoying though. Nor does it change Sony customer service... or lack thereof.
  • nutral - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    I actually have this laptop, with the sheet battery.

    I also got in the amd 6630, wich is actually pretty good for gaming, i can run call of duty or deus ex on it pretty well. It does get hotter with the amd,, but it's not that bad.

    The bloat is kind of bad, i reinstalled windows 7 right when i got it and also put in a intel 80gb ssd, in the cd drive i put in the 500gb harddrive and i also exchanged the 1000wifi for a 6200 and put in 4gb extra.

    Right now it is a power machine, works very long on a battery and still very light and thin. i usually don't even have to take the charger with me.

    with the 6630M this does become a pretty good road notebook, with some gaming.
  • waldojim42 - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    You guys really needed to test the SA. I did purchase the SA, with the Intel 2620 i7 and the AMD 6630. It did not get that warm, and still ran all day. The fan is still annoying though. I really do think you guys would have a totally different view of the machine though, if you considered the amount of portable power the i7/6630 delivers.

    I no longer own it though, as that fan died within 30 days. They then took over a month waiting on a motherboard to arrive. I finally coerced them into a refund, but was without a machine or my money for over 2 months.
  • OCedHrt - Saturday, September 10, 2011 - link

    Sony provides a Fresh Start option for free (for the most part) for all their CTOs without the Sony bloat. Not sure if them not sending a unit configured like that is a good thing or bad thing.
  • I am as mad as hell - Saturday, September 10, 2011 - link

    First off, we don't own any Apple products in my household, except an old iPad Nano.

    Now to the rant: All of those Windows PC based OEM's are spineless and make super boring products. The notable exceptions are ACER and Samsung.

    Gosh, can any of them make a decent laptop that puts Apple to shame?

    It's not that hard. There is just lack of creativity and commitment to excellence.

    A good PC Laptop should have the following mandatory specs besides the obvious ones:

    High Quality NONE GLOSSY! IPS or better LCD display
    Non-Glossy Bezel
    1x SSD boot drive with at least 64GB Ram
    1x HDD with at least 500GB capacity
    Back-lit Keyboard
    Built-in Logitech/Microsoft Mouse
    Wireless RF Headset receiver for Sony, Sennheiser, etc... wireless RF sets)
    Built-in 3D cameras (1 one the front, 1 on the back)
    External SATA port
    HDMI port
    One Laptop model option with optional external Blu-ray burner (don't need to use an optical drive all the time)
    High Quality Speakers (making good use of the saved space, by not having an internal optical drive)
    External Speaker port on the backside
    USB ports away from the left/right front side of the base. They should be placed more to the back left/ right side of the laptop (2 on each side)
    Paint that won't wear off!

    Dear Windows OEM's,
    Got that, good!

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