VAIO E15, R7 3700U
Specifications
Price comparison
Average of 1 scores (from 2 reviews)
Reviews for the VAIO E15, R7 3700U
Source: Tech2.in.com
It’s nice to see that Vaio is back, and that it ditched its pretentious designs for something more down-to-earth and familiar. Still, at Rs 76,000, I just can’t recommend the Vaio E15. At this price, I see no reason to accept anything less than a modern, 11th Gen Intel CPU or, at a minimum, a 4000 series APU from AMD. Eighty thousand bucks is Lenovo YogaBook and Dell XPS 13 territory, and just 10K shy of Apple’s extraordinarily powerful M1 MacBook Air. I’d normally expect a laptop with these specs to retail in the 35-45k range — like last year’s Honor MagicBook 15. The Vaio E15 isn’t a bad laptop, but that Vaio badge isn’t worth an additional 40k.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 05/17/2021
Source: Gadgets Now
Vaio E15 is a pretty good laptop under the budget of Rs 80,000. The laptop is powered by AMD Ryzen 7 series processor and runs Windows 10 operating system. It is a smooth performer and also delivers good battery backup. Its stylish and sturdy looks of the laptop also make it ideal for people on the go.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 04/12/2021
Rating: Total score: 60%
Comment
AMD Vega 10: Integrated graphics card of the Ryzen APUs based on the Vega architecture with 10 CUs (=640 shaders) and a clock of up to 1300 MHz.
Modern games should be playable with these graphics cards at low settings and resolutions. Casual gamers may be happy with these cards.
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
R7 3700U: A laptop-grade APU featuring four Zen+ cores clocked at 2.3 GHz to 4 GHz and a Vega graphics adapter with 10 CUs clocked at up to 1,400 MHz.» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.
15.60":
15-inch display variants are the standard and are used for more than half of all laptops.
The reason for the popularity of mid-sized displays is that this size is reasonably easy on the eyes, often allows high resolutions and thus offers rich details on the screen, yet does not consume too much power and the devices can still be reasonably compact - simply the standard compromise.
» To find out how fine a display is, see our DPI List.60%: Such a poor rating is rare. There are only a few notebooks that were rated even worse. The rating websites do not give a purchase recommendation here.
» Further information can be found in our Notebook Purchase Guide.