VPCSB: Difference between revisions
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[[File:VPCSA in black .jpg|alt=VPCSB in black |thumb|VPCSB in black ]] | [[File:VPCSA in black .jpg|alt=VPCSB in black |thumb|VPCSB in black ]] | ||
The Sony Vaio VPCSB was a mid-high laptop released by Sony in 2011 as part of the S series. It was intended to be a home laptop and offered most of the same features as the Z series but at a lower price. The laptop was a lower end version of the VPCSA, sharing many common parts with each other. The differences in hardware are the GPU choice (6470M), CPUs (i3s were available), webcam (VGA on the SB, 1.31MP on the SA) and display (1366x768). The SB came in black, silver, blue, white and pink. | The Sony Vaio VPCSB was a mid-high laptop released by Sony in 2011 as part of the S series. It was intended to be a home laptop and offered most of the same features as the Z series but at a lower price. The laptop was a lower end version of the VPCSA, sharing many common parts with each other. The differences in hardware are the GPU choice (6470M), CPUs (i3s were available), webcam (VGA on the SB, 1.31MP on the SA) and display (1366x768). The SB came in black, silver, blue, white and pink. | ||
[[File:VPCSB.jpg|thumb|300x300px|All colours available for the VPCSB]] | |||
The laptop has an all aluminium exterior and a magnesium chassis, which felt premium to the touch. It offered a backlit keyboard and the TPM standard, and could be optioned with a Blu-Ray reader/writer, 3G WWAN card and a quad RAID SSD in the proprietary LIF form factor. Accessories for this laptop include a $150 battery slab (VGP-BPSC24) which offered 2 hours extra battery life and a docking station (VGP-PRS20). | The laptop has an all aluminium exterior and a magnesium chassis, which felt premium to the touch. It offered a backlit keyboard and the TPM standard, and could be optioned with a Blu-Ray reader/writer, 3G WWAN card and a quad RAID SSD in the proprietary LIF form factor. Accessories for this laptop include a $150 battery slab (VGP-BPSC24) which offered 2 hours extra battery life and a docking station (VGP-PRS20). | ||
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'''Weight:''' 1.72kg | '''Weight:''' 1.72kg | ||
'''MSRP:''' 799-2500 euro | '''MSRP:''' 799-2500 euro | ||
Latest revision as of 23:31, 4 December 2023
This page is currently WIP!!
Overview
The Sony Vaio VPCSB was a mid-high laptop released by Sony in 2011 as part of the S series. It was intended to be a home laptop and offered most of the same features as the Z series but at a lower price. The laptop was a lower end version of the VPCSA, sharing many common parts with each other. The differences in hardware are the GPU choice (6470M), CPUs (i3s were available), webcam (VGA on the SB, 1.31MP on the SA) and display (1366x768). The SB came in black, silver, blue, white and pink.
The laptop has an all aluminium exterior and a magnesium chassis, which felt premium to the touch. It offered a backlit keyboard and the TPM standard, and could be optioned with a Blu-Ray reader/writer, 3G WWAN card and a quad RAID SSD in the proprietary LIF form factor. Accessories for this laptop include a $150 battery slab (VGP-BPSC24) which offered 2 hours extra battery life and a docking station (VGP-PRS20).
Detailed Specs
Processor: Intel Core i3 2310M, Intel Core i3 2350M, Intel Core i5 2410M, Intel Core i5 2430M, Intel Core i5 2450M, Intel Core i5 2520M, Intel Core i7 2620M
Graphics: AMD Radeon HD 6470M/AMD Radeon HD 6630M and Intel HD Graphics 3000
Chipset: Intel HM67
Memory: 4GB DDR3 soldered, 1 upgrade slot (8GB maximum, offered with 4, 6 or 8GB)
Display: 13.3" 1600x900 or 1366x768 LED display
Storage: Quad 64GB SSD configured in RAID 0 or 750GB HDD
Weight: 1.72kg
MSRP: 799-2500 euro
Daily Usage Today
The VPCSB is still usable today, and can be used for most tasks including non intensive or older games thanks to the discrete GPU (Sony really loves putting them in these small laptops). Unfortunately, the Sony drivers don't work on Windows 10 so you will need to use the modded Leshcatlabs drivers to get proper GPU switching functionality. It is strongly recommended to repaste the laptop as they tend to run extremely hot and loud and also upgrade to at least 8GB RAM.
Resources
There are no recovery disks available for this model, however you could get recovery disks from a similar series and patch them with SVRP (see menu in the top left corner).