Sony VAIO TT 11.1-inc Notebook

Welcome to the new Sony VAIO TT 11.1-inc Notebook - World’s Lightest Blu-Ray Laptop, wallet shredding, high-end for lappie credit crunch-resistant people, sports a 11.1-inch widescreen display Sony’s XBRITE-DuraView LCD technology pack more energy-efficient white LED backlight and an optional Blu-ray recorder / player.
Sony claims that the screen with a 16:9 aspect ratio is ideal for Blu-ray Disc movies, and there is also HDMI output connector for hooking up to a little lappie to Beastie screen plasma or projector for the extra pixel joy.
Purring along on the Intel Centrino 2 processor, selected TT VAIO notebooks with two channel features 256 gigabytes (128 gigabytes X 2) solid state disk (SSD) with RAID technology for rapid boot-up times, faster and run applications overall souped-up exercise.
On the notebook comes with integrated wireless Wide Area Network (WAN) technology for the American Sprint Mobile Broadband Network users, even though it will cost them lump-sum payments on top.
On the TT model series starts emptying your wallet to 2000 dollars for the basic version, rising to $ 2700 for Blu-Ray version, while the SSD model (128 gigabytes) will have your bank balance around the block for beating a good day to leave its fiscal 2750 the kingdom $ worse.
Categori: notebook.
Tags: Sony VAIO TT 11.1.




I’ ve had occasion to try out taksi, it worked well for GDI capture, but for Direct3D capture on the engine I used it failed in CTaksiDX9:: GetFrame during GetRenderTargetData. I’ ve found a solution by disabling the avi feature (I didn’ t need it) and using screen capture through the texture api with a direct surface to file save- I used D3DXSaveSurfaceToFile. GetRenderTargetData failed with INVALIDCALL- I didn’ t investigate further, but your comments and the msdn documentation suggest it could happen due…