Way back in the dark ages, when Sony owned the VAIO brand of consumer laptops, I bought one and used it happily for several years. For its time, it was a great laptop; it was relatively light to carry and had a reasonably good display, a great keyboard, a responsive trackpad, and it lasted far longer than I expected.

Sony sold off its VAIO brand in 2014, and the new owners have spun the brand off into what they obviously hope will be a line of business notebooks with the light weight and sleekness of a modern device. The company’s latest 14-inch laptop, the VAIO SX14, is indeed thin and lightweight, with a reasonable keyboard and display. And with something else that few laptops today, even those aimed at business users, have: lots and lots of ports.

Our review of Vaio SX14 Verge Score 7 out of 10 Good Stuff Has almost every port you could need

Lightweight, but sturdy

Tilted keyboard is comfortable to type on Bad Stuff Insufficient battery life

Too-small touchpad

No touchscreen or LTE options Buy for $1,299.00 from Vaio

When I say lots, I mean it. The VAIO SX14 is equipped with an SD card slot (standard size, thank you), a USB-A 3.1 port, two USB-A 3.0 ports, a USB-C 3.1 port (through which you can also charge the laptop, although not nearly as quickly as with its separate AC power port), an HDMI port, an Ethernet port, a VGA (yes, really!) port, and a headphone jack. You’d think that as a user, I would be grateful for all those separate ports, and I am. I would have been happier with fewer USB 3.0 ports and an additional USB-C port that supported Thunderbolt 3 connections, but it’s hard to complain with such an embarrassment of riches.

And those ports could come in handy, depending on what you plan to use the laptop for. For example, I have a separate monitor at home, and when I wanted to use it with a detachable Windows 10 laptop, I had to buy a compatible docking station that I could use with the laptop’s USB-C port. That wasn’t a problem with the VAIO SX14; it took just a moment to connect the monitor via the laptop’s HDMI port. (If I didn’t have a spare HDMI cable, I probably could have found an old VGA cable in the basement and used that.) In addition, in places where the Wi-Fi is wonky — a hotel room or Vox Media’s New York office, for example — the Ethernet port could come in handy, even today.

On the other hand, if you don’t anticipate using a lot of attachments, then the fact that the VAIO SX14 is equipped with all those ports won’t make that much of a difference in your life. And despite the ports, the US version is strictly Wi-Fi — while the European version offers an integrated LTE option, which is surprising in a laptop being pushed as a business machine.

Once you draw your attention away from the ports and look at the VAIO SX14 as a whole, it presents as a sleek, attractive laptop with a nice, brushed-aluminum surface. The laptop comes in four colors: black, brown, silver, and red; the last is a premium color that, according to the company, will only be available for a short while. The review unit was one of these premium units, which included an 8th Gen Intel Whiskey Lake Core i7 processor, 16GB of memory, a 4K display, and 1TB storage. This fully equipped example is priced at a steep $2,299. But don’t let the price scare you: as might be expected with a business computer, the VAIO SX14 has a variety of models, with varying configurations. It starts at $1,299 for a Core i5 processor, 8GB memory, a 1920 x 1080 LCD, and 256GB storage. There is no touchscreen option, so if that’s what you’re looking for, you’re out of luck here.

The VAIO SX14 has an interesting way of opening: the cover is a little longer than the keyboard section, so when you open the laptop, the cover pushes the keyboard up slightly so that it tilts at an angle. According to a VAIO rep, this was designed both to create a comfortable typing surface and for enhanced cooling (since there is airflow on the bottom of the system). While I was initially wary about that tilt, I have to admit that it wasn’t unpleasant to type on. I was even more surprised when I found that it was reasonably comfortable when I used it on my lap, despite the edge of the cover sitting on my legs. And although I never noticed any untoward heat — the VAIO SX14 ran impressively cool — if it did heat up, the space between the stand and the bottom of the computer would have kept my knees from frying.

I also found the backlit keyboard comfortable to type on; the keys have decent, if somewhat limited, travel and are reasonably quiet. However, the touchpad is something else. There’s nothing wrong with how it works; it uses Microsoft’s efficient Precision driver. But it is one of the smallest I’ve seen for quite some time, and is not even as wide as the keyboard’s space bar. In fact, it is so small that you really need the separate left / right mouse buttons that line the bottom of the touchpad, and which click in an old-fashioned and not especially pleasant way.

There is also a fingerprint scanner several inches to the right of the touchpad (which could make it inconvenient for lefties); the power button is a slim LED just above and to the right of the keyboard.

VAIO SX14 specs 14-inch 1080p or 4K display

Quad-core Intel Core i5 or i7 processor

8GB or 16GB of RAM

256GB, 512GB, or 1TB SSD

Ports include SD card slot, three USB-A, USB-C, HDMI, Ethernet, VGA, headphone jack, AC power

2.32 pounds, 0.59 inches thick

Starts from $1,299

The light weight of the VAIO SX14 is due, according to the company, to the uni-direction (UD) carbon fiber material that was used to build the body of the laptop. This doesn’t only guarantee that, at 2.32 lbs, the laptop is extremely easy to carry around, but it is also amazingly — in fact, alarmingly — flexible. Both the top and bottom halves flex to a point where, when I played with it a bit, I became nervous that I was going to break something. VAIO, however, claims that this is by design; in fact, it has a couple of videos online that show the top of the laptop being flexed by a robotic finger.

You would think that something so bendable would also feel cheap, but that’s not the case here. When I wasn’t trying to test the flexibility of the case, it felt solid and reliable, with none of the wobbly sensation that you get with poor-quality parts or a less-than-desirable construction. Unfortunately, there is no IP rating for liquid or dust protection; according to the company, the keyboard is water-resistant for up to three minutes.

The flexibility certainly didn’t appear to hurt the display, even after I tried bending it a bit; the 4K Full HD display was, as might be expected, perfectly fine in displaying video, and I didn’t catch any lags or jagging. The screen has a matte finish, not that usual these days, which acted to minimize glare. The display has a thin bezel on either side, and a somewhat thicker one on top; the top bezel also has the camera and, above that, a slightly overlapping ridge which holds the system antenna. The bottom bezel dips below the edge of the keyboard (since it is being used as a stand).

The system has two speakers located on the bottom of the laptop toward the front, near a strip of rubber that keeps the bottom of the laptop slightly raised, and keeps the speakers from being muffled. That being said, they are not great speakers; sound was decent but somewhat tinny.

I also wasn’t very impressed with the battery life. According to the VAIO representative, the company doesn’t release mAh information on the battery, but claims a battery life of up to seven hours and 45 minutes. After a couple of weeks of use, I found that, with reasonable use — including online web apps such as Gmail and Google Docs, an occasional YouTube video, and perhaps one or two 60-minute Netflix episodes — it lasted just under five hours. Which, for a business laptop that could be going on a six-hour cross-country flight, isn’t really adequate, or up to the standards of most higher-end laptops today.

Performance, on the other hand, was quite satisfactory, as might be expected from a system equipped with the latest Core i7 processor.

In short, the VAIO SX14 is a laptop which is rather evenly divided between positives and negatives: good performance, a very lightweight and stylish body, and a good display is offset by an awkwardly small touchpad and disappointing battery life. However, its star attraction is the impressive number of ports that it has available, which could be very handy for travelers who use a lot of connections and don’t want to carry an extra dock around with them. If that’s what you need — maybe there are still times when a VGA port could come in handy — you could do worse than the VAIO SX14.