VGN-TT

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Revision as of 13:37, 3 August 2022 by Romanio0089 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "thumb|Black VGN-TT The Sony VAIO VGN-TT Series is a range of high-end ultraportable laptop computers, released by Sony in 2008. The VGN-TT is the last Sony VAIO netbook style laptop that can be considered high-end. Being the successor of the highly praised VGN-TZ, it is clear that some design elements were reused, like the small but comfortable keyboard, palmrest design, and 11.1" display form factor. thumb|Black VGN-TT The VGN-TT was o...")
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Black VGN-TT

The Sony VAIO VGN-TT Series is a range of high-end ultraportable laptop computers, released by Sony in 2008. The VGN-TT is the last Sony VAIO netbook style laptop that can be considered high-end.

Being the successor of the highly praised VGN-TZ, it is clear that some design elements were reused, like the small but comfortable keyboard, palmrest design, and 11.1" display form factor.

Black VGN-TT

The VGN-TT was offered with various color choices: black, red (black case, red display assembly) (Crimson Red), and a collector's favourite, gold(ish) (Champagne Gold). The gold variant is very rarely seen today, and is considered one of the rarest VAIOs out there.

The TT is an excellent example of quality over price. They are built extremely well, with carbon fiber all around and metal accents. Original MSRP ranged from 1000€ for lower-end models, and all the way up to 3700€ for top-end models. The TT was the best, and most expensive "netbook" on the market at the time, and probably still is, the best and most expensive (to buy used) netbook to this day.

Red VGN-TT

The VGN-TT offered some features that were generally only seen on bigger, bulkier laptops, like a Blu-Ray optical drive and a very solid battery life. Performance was pretty good, thanks to an ultra-low voltage Intel Core 2 Duo CPU that was considerably more powerful than the Atom offerings of the time. Higher-end models also featured generously sized blazing fast SSDs.

The 11.1" 1366x768 was highly praised for it's excellent, crisp, image quality thanks to Sony's XBRITE-DuraView LCD technology. An LED backlight was equipped instead of CCFL in order to improve image quality and make the display assembly thinner.

Despite it's small size, the TT packed a generous selection of ports: two USB 2.0 ports, HDMI, FireWire, VGA, Ethernet, a 2-in-1 memory card reader that supports Sony's MagicGate copy-protection and SD cards, as well as an ExpressCard/34 slot, headphone and microphone jacks.

The TT was featured in a James Bond film, though it wasn't clearly seen, or used.

Gold VGN-TT

Detailed Specs

Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo ULV (ultra-low voltage) SU9300 (1.20GHz) or SU9400 (1.4GHz)

RAM: DDR3, 1x2GB soldered, one slot free, up to 4GB

Display: 11.1" 1366x768 Sony XBRITE-DuraView LCD with LED backlight

Storage: 1.8" uSATA (very rare form factor)

WIP