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Notebook,
Notebook Sony
With the quad-core mobile Core i7 making a
triumphant debut a few months back, we were eager to find out how its
budget dual-core sibling would stack up. It lacks some of the fancy
features found on the pricier models, such as the excellent Turbo Boost
technology, which dynamically overclocks certain cores at the expense
of others when a task would benefit. But it does support hardware
virtualisation, and we’re pleased to see Hyper-Threading present,
allowing the two cores to handle as many as four threads at once in
appropriate applications.
While the 2.13GHz Core i3-330M model at the Sony’s heart is the cheapest of Intel’s Core i3 range, you’re not likely to find that a problem in everyday use. An overall score of 1.35 in our application benchmarks makes the Core 2 Duo look geriatric, and a closer look at the numbers only reinforces the i3’s superiority. In particular, its score of 1.61 in our multitasking test puts it in a different league from its predecessors.
The Core i3-330M’s strength isn’t only its speed, though. The 32nm die and TDP of just 35W theoretically make it efficient too, so we were keen to put the VAIO through the wringer away from the mains. With this in mind, a light-use battery life of just 3hrs 16mins is disappointing; pushing it to the limit reduced this further to 1hr 12mins.
It isn’t the result we’d hoped for, but there are other factors in play than just the processor. Rather than making use of the Core i3’s on-chip graphics to keep power draw to a minimum and maximise battery life, Sony has seen fit to pair the Core i3 with discrete graphics in the form of ATI’s entry-level Radeon HD 5470. Graphics chips guzzle power, so it’s tough to gauge the Core i3’s real-world efficiency on this showing.
While the 2.13GHz Core i3-330M model at the Sony’s heart is the cheapest of Intel’s Core i3 range, you’re not likely to find that a problem in everyday use. An overall score of 1.35 in our application benchmarks makes the Core 2 Duo look geriatric, and a closer look at the numbers only reinforces the i3’s superiority. In particular, its score of 1.61 in our multitasking test puts it in a different league from its predecessors.
The Core i3-330M’s strength isn’t only its speed, though. The 32nm die and TDP of just 35W theoretically make it efficient too, so we were keen to put the VAIO through the wringer away from the mains. With this in mind, a light-use battery life of just 3hrs 16mins is disappointing; pushing it to the limit reduced this further to 1hr 12mins.
It isn’t the result we’d hoped for, but there are other factors in play than just the processor. Rather than making use of the Core i3’s on-chip graphics to keep power draw to a minimum and maximise battery life, Sony has seen fit to pair the Core i3 with discrete graphics in the form of ATI’s entry-level Radeon HD 5470. Graphics chips guzzle power, so it’s tough to gauge the Core i3’s real-world efficiency on this showing.

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