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General | Posted by Max at Jan. 18, 2009 - 10:25 pm


Sony's VAIO P may or may not be a netbook (or even fit in a pocket), but there's no denying that it's an incredibly sexy piece of hardware -- it's hard not to be immediately taken with it, at least until you see how slowly it runs Vista. (Windows 7 is a different story, obviously.) Of course, there's a story behind the unique form factor and crazy 1600 x 768 screen resolution, and designer Takuma Tomoaki shared some choice tidbits recently in an interview with Chinese site cool3c. Of particular note, the P was inspired by the Mini Cooper, which Tomoaki called "small and sophisticated," and the entire design was dictated by the size of the "smallest usable keyboard." Tomoaki also said that the insane screen res was aimed at HD movies, since it can play back 720p content natviely, and that Sony's looking towards integrating the P with both the Walkman and PSP families -- something it's already kinda-sorta doing with the XMB interface on the machine.


Yeah, this is still the most appealing netbook, of the don't-call-me-a-netbook netbooks, but it brings to light a pet peeve of mine: resolution real estate management. Widescreen is good, no credible person disagrees. But until the Internet decides to take advantage of this--where to begin is no doubt a topic for discussion in and of itself--browsers could use a tweak to take advantage of the additional horizontal space.

If Firefox had a plugin that split the main portion of the window into two or more columns, with the bottom of the first column being where the top of the next begins, that would be cool. Handy. Justifiable, especially once you break the 1680x1050 barrier...

There, one free idea for an indispensable Firefox plugin. I won't even ask for credit.
[Read Full Story at Engadget]
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