28 July, 2014: Looking down the Vaio Tap 20′s primary features list, you’ll see that Sony made some very clear sacrifices for the sake of portability and price. The 20-inch display makes sense as a way to keep the Tap 20′s size and weight down, and in order to manage heat and battery life, Sony chose an ultralow-voltage 1.7GHz Intel Core i5 mobile CPU. The absence of an optical drive is conspicuous, but likely helps keep the Tap 20′s thickness in check, and it’s not out of keeping with other Windows 8 PCs.Other features include a 800p/1-megapixel Webcam, an SD card slot, a pair of USB 3.0 jacks, and analog headphone and microphone inputs. Sony also boasts a video engine from its Bravia TVs in the Tap 20. The impact on video was the same as with the Vaio L-Series all-in-one I reviewed earlier this year. The Bravia engine can improve color vibrancy in some cases, but overdoes the sharpness in others. Overall the benefits aren’t particularly game-changing.
Use “Undelete” to recover deleted files from Sony Vaio Tap 20 hard drive.
Use “Unformat” to recover data after format Sony Vaio Tap 20 hard drive.
Use “Recover partition” to recover files if Sony Vaio Tap 20 hard drive partition changed or damaged or deleted.
Use “Full Scan” to recover lost files Sony Vaio Tap 20 if partitions show as “raw” or recover files which can not be found with “undelete”and “unformat” and “recover partition”, recover files from raw partition, recover files of partitons which are not NTFS, nor exfat, nor fat32.
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