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Reddit mentions of Sony VAIO VGN-UX280P 4.5-inch Laptop (Intel Core Solo Processor U1400, 1 GB RAM, 40 GB Hard Drive)

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Sony VAIO VGN-UX280P 4.5-inch Laptop (Intel Core Solo Processor U1400, 1 GB RAM, 40 GB Hard Drive). Here are the top ones.

Sony VAIO VGN-UX280P 4.5-inch Laptop (Intel Core Solo Processor U1400, 1 GB RAM, 40 GB Hard Drive)
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Amazingly small micro PC fits in your hand--4.5 inch LCD touch screen and hidden keyboard1.2 GHz Ultra Low Voltage Intel Core Solo U1400 processor, 40 GB hard drive, 1 GB RAMTri-mode Wi-Fi (802.11a/b/g), wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN) with Cingular SIM card, Bluetooth connectivityOne built-in USB 2.0 port and Memory Stick slot; includes port replicator with three USB, one FireWire, Ethernet, VGA out, composite A/V outMicrosoft Windows XP Professional
Specs:
Height3.74 Inches
Length1.5 Inches
Number of items1
Weight1.2 Pounds
Width5.91 Inches

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Found 2 comments on Sony VAIO VGN-UX280P 4.5-inch Laptop (Intel Core Solo Processor U1400, 1 GB RAM, 40 GB Hard Drive):

u/diredesire ยท 3 pointsr/shittykickstarters

This just reminds me that the Sony Vaio UX series was way, way before it's time: https://www.amazon.com/Sony-VGN-UX280P-4-5-inch-Laptop-Processor/dp/B000IALP88

Of course, that thing was way more expensive, but even today, it'd crush this thing in performance. I was also interested in tiny mobile PCs that didn't suck and ran "full" windows. I was super excited about netbooks, but those had anemic performance with the original atom line(s), the Surface Pro 2 was a near perfect machine in my eyes (when it came out), but it was bulky and battery life sucked. With the improvement of the Gen 4+ intel mobile chips, the ultraportable form factors got really nice, but manufacturers moved away from the super compact machines (still talking about full windows feature sets here). The new Surface Go is pretty good, but also running low end CPUs. The one differentiator is that the low end CPUs are actually decent these days, but now that there's ultrabooks and 2-in-1s, I feel like the draw of machines in this form factor just simply aren't good enough to live with the compromises - namely display resolution, touch sensitivity, and foldable, compromised-layout keyboards.