Sony is selling off its PC
department - the VAIO (acronym for "Visual Audio Intelligent Organizer") brand to be more precise along with related assets and
workforce. The buyer is a Japanese investment group called Japan Industrial
Partners (JIP). With this deal in effect, Sony will no longer manufacture or
sell PCs under the VAIO brand name. According the reports the transition will
be finalized within the 1st quarter of 2014. After that you may
still be able to buy VAIO laptops but those won’t be from Sony!

Showing posts with label notebooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label notebooks. Show all posts
Friday, February 14, 2014
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Netbook market crumbles: Big OEMs are getting out
Last year, we asked the question! Earlier this year we were disappointed at what was going on! The clues were there and we anticipated bad things looking into the future. We told you 2012 wasn't going to be a good year for the Netbook segment, now it turns out to be the worst ever! In some very recent developments, it seems that ASUS, Acer and MSI are all set to pull out of the Netbook arena once and for all. According to news reports from DailyTech and Techreport, which seems to have originally generated from Digitimes, these manufacturers are about to resolve their existing inventory with no further plans to continue on future products!
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Lucid's new DynamiX software: Striking a balance on the fly?
LucidLogix may not be one of those household names in the industry, but for those among us with a keen interest in computer graphics and gaming, it certainly has earned a reputation of being an innovative and improvising entity. It's not like that there is any shortage in the numbers of companies or outfits providing graphics solutions, on the contrary - it's a very competitive market. There is a good number of graphics chip designers and manufacturers, AIB partners, OEMs and system builders competing for market share; Lucid, however, doesn't fit to any of these categories and yet delivers novel and elegant (at least theoretically) solutions for practical problems. So, when I read about Lucid laying its Hydra engine to an untimely rest - it felt kind of disappointing and anticlimactic since the concept behind Hydra was quite revolutionary. But it seems like Lucid is back once again with another impressive concept, which, just like Hydra, has the potential to shake things up quite a bit. Lucid calls it DynamiX!
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