PCG-Z
This page is currently WIP!!
Overview
The Sony VAIO PCG-Z505 (sold in the US and Japan) or PCG-Z600 (sold in Europe) was a subnotebook released by Sony in April of 1999. It looks like Sony made a sort of design refresh of the PCG-505/N505 with a slimmer, rectangular battery compared to the round battery found in the previous models. The bezels were also slimmed down compared to the already slim bezels of the N505. Other than that the laptop is pretty similar compared to the N505. Sony was really showing off their skills of miniaturisation in the 505 line, making laptops so thin and stylish that people would walk into Sony shops just to gaze at them. On the right side, a jog dial was added, which is used by the jog dial utility to launch applications and control various settings. The jog dial also functions as a power button, by pressing it when the computer is off. The VAIO uses a full metal construction, so it feels extremely solid.
Detailed Specs
Processor: Pentium II 333MHz, Pentium III 650-800MHz, Celeron 500-600MHz
Graphics: ATI RAGE Mobility-M1 or NeoMagic MagicMedia256XL+(NM2380)
Chipset: Intel 440ZX AGPset 100MHz
Memory: Standard 64MB/128MB - Maximum 256MB
Display: 12.1" TFT color, XGA, 1024 x 768
Storage: 6.4GB - 15GB IDE HDD (Maximum 64GB size limit - BIOS limitation)
Weight: 1.7kg
Original OS: Microsoft Windows 98 Second Edition or Windows 2000 Professional
MSRP: ~$2000 (Unconfirmed)
Daily Usage Today
This laptop is unusable today apart from some offline office tasks like Word, Excel, PowerPoint and some extremely basic websites. Don't expect late 90s-2000s games to run on the laptop, at least at high settings, these are better suited for MS-DOS gaming due to the low power graphics chip. They will not run any OS beyond Windows 7, due to the missing PAE-NX support on the Pentium III, and any OS above Windows XP will run very poorly on this hardware. You will need the external CD drive in order to get an OS onto the laptop easily, this can potentially be very expensive as it only works with the original VAIO CD drive (PCGA-CD5 (meant for PCG-505 but still works), PCGA-CD51, PCGA-CDRW52, PCGA-CDRW51) that uses a PCMCIA interface. Sadly resellers have picked up these drives and are selling them at expensive prices as "Amiga compatible", however they can be found easily from Japan at a much more reasonable price.
Resources
PCG-Z600TEK Recovery (Windows 2000) (Bad dump, but driver disk is valid)