dell laptop replacement part
PC Magazine reviews the Sony VAIO VGN-A690 and writes - 'The Sony VAIO A690 is built with the 1.86-GHz Pentium M 750, 1GB of DDR2 RAM, and an ATI Mobility Radeon X600. SYSmark 2004 scores were average, and BatteryMark results were disappointing at 2 hours 15 minutes. Sony needs to add a bigger battery pack than its 44-Wh solution, but then again, it's unlikely you'll be lugging the 8.6-pound A690 far from a power source. Gaming, Cheap Laptops
something Sony usually falls short on, is actually quite decent on this
system, which beat the Qosmio E15 on our Doom 3 and Halo tests. The Dell Inspiron XPS Gen 2 is still, however, the system to pick if gaming is your Cheap Laptops
thing. A system targeted at multimedia with a great DVR solution needs the largest hard drive it can get, and Sony smartly accommodates with a whopping 100GB, currently the largest hard drive you can get on a notebook. The system also comes with a dual-layer
DVD±RW drive for burning up to 8.5GB of data. Currently, the media is hard to find and a bit pricey, but we expect that situation to Cheap Laptops
improve.' CNET Reviews has reviewed the Sony VAIO VGN-A690 and recommends - 'The sprawling Sony VAIO VGN-A690 is one of the most versatile desktop-replacement laptops on the market.
At $2,800, it costs about what you'd spend on an LCD Cheap Laptops
television, a DVD player, a DVR, and a typical wide-screen notebook combined, but it squeezes all of those devices into one monstrous laptop-and seven additional pounds of accessories. Though its companion port replicator offers virtually any connection you might need and its external speakers sound great, Cheap Laptops
they're still extra bits and pieces; the VAIO VGN-A690 simply isn't as self-contained as
our mighty Editors' Choice, the Toshiba Qosmio G25-AV513, which costs $300 more. That's not to say the VAIO VGN-A690 isn't a great system-it's a prime-time contender in the high-end, multimedia desktop-replacement category, giving Cheap Laptops
both the HP Pavilion zd8000 and Dell Inspiron 9300 a run for their money.'
PC Magazine reviews the Sony VAIO VGN-A690 and writes - 'The Sony VAIO A690 is built with the 1.86-GHz Pentium M 750, 1GB of DDR2 RAM, and an ATI Mobility Radeon X600. SYSmark 2004 scores were average, and BatteryMark results were disappointing at 2 hours 15 minutes. Sony needs to add a bigger battery pack than its 44-Wh solution, but then again, it's unlikely you'll be lugging the 8.6-pound A690 far from a power source. Gaming, Cheap Laptops
something Sony usually falls short on, is actually quite decent on this
system, which beat the Qosmio E15 on our Doom 3 and Halo tests. The Dell Inspiron XPS Gen 2 is still, however, the system to pick if gaming is your Cheap Laptops
thing. A system targeted at multimedia with a great DVR solution needs the largest hard drive it can get, and Sony smartly accommodates with a whopping 100GB, currently the largest hard drive you can get on a notebook. The system also comes with a dual-layer
DVD±RW drive for burning up to 8.5GB of data. Currently, the media is hard to find and a bit pricey, but we expect that situation to Cheap Laptops
improve.' CNET Reviews has reviewed the Sony VAIO VGN-A690 and recommends - 'The sprawling Sony VAIO VGN-A690 is one of the most versatile desktop-replacement laptops on the market.
At $2,800, it costs about what you'd spend on an LCD Cheap Laptops
television, a DVD player, a DVR, and a typical wide-screen notebook combined, but it squeezes all of those devices into one monstrous laptop-and seven additional pounds of accessories. Though its companion port replicator offers virtually any connection you might need and its external speakers sound great, Cheap Laptops
they're still extra bits and pieces; the VAIO VGN-A690 simply isn't as self-contained as
our mighty Editors' Choice, the Toshiba Qosmio G25-AV513, which costs $300 more. That's not to say the VAIO VGN-A690 isn't a great system-it's a prime-time contender in the high-end, multimedia desktop-replacement category, giving Cheap Laptops
both the HP Pavilion zd8000 and Dell Inspiron 9300 a run for their money.'
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