Vintage  Sony VAIO PC Computer  Bundle  Laptop  VAIO VGN-A190   PCG-8Q5L
I'm a little confused the box and front badge on the computer says VGN-190, but there is another model # on the back which is PCG-8Q5L???????????????

I purchased this at a local estate auction.  The battery must be bad, because it will not hold a charge.  However, when plugged in, it does power up as shown.  It comes with everything that you see, but nothing that you don't see.  Other than basic powering up functions, nothing has been tested and nothing is guaranteed to work, beyond that basic powering up of the laptop.  

NO RETURNS, NO REFUNDS,  NO WHINING, NO BEING A CRYBABY, it's just a cool piece of vintage computer and Sony history.  BUY AS YOUR OWN RISK!

This thing is one thick and heavy laptop or PC.  

Sony VAIO VGN-A190 review:Sony VAIO VGN-A190


Review summary
Best known for creating some of the smallest and lightest notebooks around, Sony does a 180 and goes big--very big--with the VAIO VGN-A190. A desktop replacement that would need only legs to serve as a desk itself, the VGN-A190 is one large and heavy notebook that will overwhelm any airliner's tray table. But it's big for good reason, functioning as a mobile entertainment center that features a 17-inch wide-screen display, external speakers, and a remarkably well-integrated port replicator. Not only is the VGN-A190 a competent Windows XP workstation, it does extra duty as an LCD TV, a digital video recorder, and a decent stereo, making it a digital jack-of-all-trades. While its Pentium M processor provides more than enough performance, with a lifespan of just more than two hours per charge, its battery life is way too short. At $2,800 (as of July 2004), the Sony VGN-A190 is pricey, but it's well worth it for those who want a full-featured entertainment center in a package (somewhat) smaller than a desktop PC. Forget everything you know about Sony VAIO laptops being razor thin and as light as a digital feather, because the VGN-A190 breaks all the rules. Measuring 15.9 by 11 inches and between 1.7 and 1.9 inches thick, the wedge-shaped VAIO VGN-A190 is one big and heavy system. At 8.7 pounds, it weighs nearly twice that of the Sony Z1 and requires a humongous AC adapter that brings its travel weight to more than 10 pounds; throw in all the accoutrements, and it's closer to a monstrous 20 pounds. The VGN-A190 is a few ounces lighter than the Dell Inspiron 9100, and tenths of an inch larger than the Hypersonic Aviator ZX7. As such, the VAIO VGN-A190 is better suited for traveling from the living room to the kitchen than from city to city.
The VAIO VGN-A190's look is Sony through and through, with a demure gray-plastic case that has gently rounded edges and black side cutouts. All told, there are ports and inputs for every conceivable purpose: audio, FireWire, and three USB ports; slots for a PC Card, a modem, and a LAN connection; an external monitor and A/V out; and for music mavens, there's also a Memory Stick slot in the front. The VGN-A190 has a sensitive integrated 802.11b/g wireless adapter that stayed in contact with our access point for 145 feet.
With such a big case, the VAIO VGN-A190 has room for one of the notebook world's most responsive and comfortable keyboards, featuring 19.5mm-wide keys that have a generous 2.6mm of depth. Unlike any other laptop we've seen, the VAIO VGN-A190's wide-aspect touch pad is shaped to match its wide-aspect screen, but it lacks a scroll button for whizzing through long Web pages. The VAIO VGN-A190's multimedia ambitions shine through in a selection of controls for volume (plus a handy mute button), brightness, and zoom tucked underneath the screen, alongside an application-launch button.
The VAIO VGN-A190 snaps into an included port replicator, which consolidates its numerous connections, though its usefulness is somewhat limited. The replicator features excellent external speakers and a range of connectors (for external monitor, DVI-D, optical S/PDIF, Gigabit Ethernet, parallel, S-Video out, four USB 2.0 outlets, and a coaxial connector for the cable line or antenna), but unfortunately, the notebook has no internal TV tuner. You'll need to pick that up separately if you want to watch TV on the road. There are gold-plated composite audio and video plugs, but there's not enough room to connect a twist-on cable-TV connector, so you'll need to use a lower-quality slip-on plug. Although there are Sony VAIO A-series laptops with smaller screens, the VGN-A190 comes in one configuration, with a 1.7GHz second-generation Pentium M processor, 512MB of 333MHz memory, and a reasonably fast multiformat DVD+/-RW burner. The laptop's Hitachi hard drive is competent and reliable, but it's inferior to the 5,400rpm and 7,200rpm drives that come in the HP Pavilion zd7000, the Toshiba Satellite P25, and the Dell Inspiron 9100.
The VAIO VGN-A190's mammoth 17-inch screen has a 1,920x1,200 native resolution and is one of the sharpest, most brilliant displays we've seen on a laptop, but it picks up stray reflections as easily as it does dust and fingerprints. Featuring ATI's latest (as of July 2004) Mobility Radeon 9700 graphics engine, the VAIO VGN-A190's 64MB of video memory pales in comparison to the zd7000's 128MB.
For dorm-bound college students, small-apartment dwellers, or anyone else short on space, the VAIO VGN-A190 is a TV, a stereo, and a computer all rolled into one portable package. The system comes preloaded with a nice software package that includes Windows XP Professional, as well as Microsoft Works 2004 and a 90-day trial version of Norton Internet Security. Sony also throws in software that includes DVGate Plus for video editing, MoodLogic for listening to music based on mood, Click to DVD for creating DVDs, and GigaPocket for viewing and recording TV--although you'll need additional hardware to watch TV on the VAIO VGN-A190 without the port replicator. Still, GigaPocket's logical and attractive controls are superior to those of Microsoft's Media Center software. Particularly good is Zap2it, a Web site linked to GigaPocket that controls the recording process and the online TV listings. Not only can you easily scan and pick shows to record, the software features TiVo-like functionality so that you can record and watch programs simultaneously and fast-forward through commercials. There is, however, some annoying advertising, and on at least one occasion, the software failed to record the program we had selected. SysMark 2004 performance
The Sony VAIO VGN-A190's Pentium M 735 1.7GHz is the first mobile processor we've tested with SysMark 2004. Though neither office productivity nor content creation are its primary ambitions, the VGN-A190 pulled off a good performance just the same in CNET Labs' tests. It came in just 10 percent behind the HP Pavilion zd7000, which itself houses a 3.2GHz Pentium 4 desktop processor. The VGN-A190 certainly benefits from its processor's 2MB of L2 cache; the L2 cache found in the HP's processor is a fourth that size. In fact, the VGN-A190's large cache helps close the performance gap with the zd7000--a system whose processor is 50 percent faster. Though it's no performance monster, the VGN-A190 doesn't fall too short of systems equipped with higher-end desktop processors.