Following in the footsteps of Sonys premium Vaio Z series, the Sony Vaio Pro 13 oozes style from every corner. Its sleek, minimalist design looks stunning from every angle, but what makes the Pro 13 particularly impressive is its featherweight carbon-fibre chassis. Weighing a mere 1.05kg, its the lightest 13in Ultrabook weve ever tested, and we could feel a real difference when we held other 13in laptops like the Dell XPS 13 and Samsung Series 9 in each hand.
Such meagre dimensions come at a price, though, and the first thing we noticed was a worrying amount of flex in both halves of the chassis. We feared we might snap them in half if we applied enough pressure, and the keyboard tray also had a tendency to undulate underneath our fingers while we were typing. This made it feel far more fragile than either Dell or Samsungs flagship ultraportable, and its travel-friendly weight wasnt quite enough to balance out our concerns over the longevity of its build quality.
A super slim chassis also means theres precious room for air to escape, and while theres a small vent on the side of the Pro 13, even web browsing was enough to set them whirring quite loudly. This means the Pro 13 gets quite hot, and we found this was a real problem in our multimedia benchmarks.
Our review sample came with one of Intels latest fourth generation 1.8GHz Intel Core i7-4500U processors that can Turbo Boost up to 3GHz when theres enough thermal headroom: the same processor that powers Sonys Vaio Duo 13. While the Duo 13 produced an overall score of 55, the Pro 13 only managed 46.
Its Intel HD Graphics 4400 chip only managed 17.8fps in our Dirt Showdown test on High Quality settings at a 720p resolution, which is quite poor compared to the 26fps achieved by the Duo 13 under the same conditions. Gaming at its native 1,920x1,080 resolution was disappointing as well. We were only able to get above 20fps when we disabled the anti-aliasing and setting the quality to Low, but the sheer amount of noise emitted by the fans means the Pro 13 is likely to prove more frustrating than any decrease in graphical detail.
Its worth noting that Sonys Vaio Control Centre does allow you to alter the noise of the fan, but its tied in with CPU performance. It comes with three options: Silence, Standard and Performance. We ran our all of our tests in Performance mode, but when we ran our tests again in Silence mode, the difference in fan noise was barely noticeable. It also capped the processors Turbo Boost at 1.84GHz when it reached the video encoding section of our benchmarks, making it run even slower, and this just isnt worth sacrificing when theres such a negligible improvement in fan noise.
This is disappointing, as we quite liked the rest of the Pro 13. Flex issues aside, the backlit keyboard was very comfortable to type on and the bouncy-Chiclet style keys gave much more tactile feedback than the flatter keys of the Duo 13. The Pro 13s rear hinge also gives the keyboard a slightly elevated angle, too, which was much better than typing completely flat.
Its smooth all-in-one touchpad was very responsive as well. It was a little too sensitive when we tried using it to pinch-zoom, but other multi-touch gestures like two-finger scrolling worked perfectly, and we didnt have any problems bringing up the Windows 8 Charms bar or switching between individual windows.
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