
Sony Vaio Tap 20 review
Last reviewed
It's a 20-inch tablet. It's an all-in-one PC. It's everything at once - except brilliant. It's not that.
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It's a 20-inch tablet. It's an all-in-one PC. It's everything at once - except brilliant. It's not that.

The Sony Vaio L Series demonstrates that beautiful can also be powerful

Media centres and living room PCs are set to become one of the rising technologies of the next twelve months, and Sony is hoping that its brand new VAIO TP2 media PC will set the standard for the rest of the competition. Its timing couldn't be better either, because in 2008 more people than ever are waking up to the dream of building a digital home.

Taken out of the context of video editing, this machine looks like little more than a cynical excuse to extract money from unsuspecting pockets using clever design.

Sony has always been led by design. It's what makes us punters pay that little bit extra, instead of going for some ugly bit of kit that does pretty much the same job. The Vaio RM1N, you'll be unsurprised to hear, doesn't break with this tried and tested formula, although it does challenge our notions of the PC

One of the best known brands in the world, Sony's VAIO range includes both consumer and corporate laptops. Unveiling a new design, the Sony VAIO VGN-N11S/W is a straightforward consumer laptop, ideally suited to the first-time buyer
The idea of an all-in-one computer is hardly new. The likes of Elonex and Hi-Grade have been building PC systems into monitors for several years now, while Mac users have spent the past few months purring over the stylish G5