(Credit: Hewlett-Packard)
commentary Psst...Microsoft laptop partners are ahead of Apple on critical design metrics like weight.
So, how will that play out in 2014? A snapshot of today's lightest, edgiest designs should give us an idea (I'll put aside a discussion of competing operating systems and pricing for this post).
Weight: Like tablets, generally the thinner and lighter the laptop, the better. That's what the popular MacBook Air is all about and the reason the ultrabook was developed -- Wintel's (Microsoft-Intel's) response to the Air.
Enter the carbon fiber-based Sony Vaio Pro 11 and 13, which CNET reviewers, accordingly,gave (both) 4 stars.
"The carbon-fiber-constructed Pro 13 weighs only 2.34 pounds; it's 2.9 pounds with its power supply, which is as much as the 13-inch MacBook Air weighs on its own," CNET said.
In short, Sony's 13-inch Vaio weighs about as much as Apple's 11.6-inch MacBook Air. The Vaio Pro 11 even less at 1.92 pounds.
Then there's Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon touch screen, which weighs in at a mere 3.3 pounds, easily one of the lightest 14-inch touch-screen Windows laptops out there.
What does the future hold? Rumor has it that Lenovo is working on an even thinner, lighter carbon laptop with a 3,200x1,800 display.
Sony won't be standing still either and Dell is starting to make some noise in this category with the XPS 11.
Behind the scenes, Intel is playing to the thinner, lighter trend with its newest processors. The power-sipping Bay Trail chip now offers low-end laptop performance in sub-0.7-inch-thick designs and the more power-efficient mainstream Broadwell processor is coming next year.
Touch screen: Both of the Sonys above have touch screens, a feature that is (increasingly) conspicuously absent on MacBooks.
Via: Cnet
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