After the Second World War, the pursuit of pleasure domains the entire world atmosphere, Lancel (Lancel) to adapt rapidly into the demand...
25 minutes ago by PokArrackpask on Spam sees Westnet blocked by BigPond
HP's latest business laptop, the thin-and-light Compaq 6910p, seems poised to woo corporate users away from their ThinkPads. It offers many of the same features as the Lenovo ThinkPad T61, including Intel's latest Centrino Duo platform, enterprise-level security via a Trusted Platform Module, and optional WWAN -- at a significantly lower price. The AU$3,199 Compaq 6910p also competes with the similarly configured Dell Latitude D630, making it a good choice for corporate users who need the latest business-friendly features at an affordable price.
The HP Compaq 6910p features the boxy shape and subdued grey and black colour scheme found across HP's business laptop line. Its solid construction and sturdy display hinges will no doubt appeal to IT buyers who want their laptops to last for the long haul. Its dimensions are fairly typical for a thin and light laptop and virtually identical to those of the Dell Latitude D630. The Compaq 6910p's 2.3 kilogram weight falls in the middle of the range for the thin and light category, making it an eminently portable machine on its own. Unfortunately, its half kilogram AC adaptor brings its overall weight to a level that, while still manageable, is less than ideal for frequent travel.
The roomy keyboard on the HP Compaq 6910p, though not full size, lets you pound out lengthy documents without cramping your fingers. For navigation, HP offers both a pointing stick and a touch pad, each with its own comfortable, rubberised mouse buttons. To the lower right of the keyboard, there's a tiny fingerprint reader, which frees you from having to remember your Windows and Web passwords. Above the keyboard sits a row of light touch buttons that should look familiar to anyone acquainted with HP's Pavilion laptops. In addition to a mute button and volume controls, there are buttons to launch HP's configuration tools, turn the wireless radios on and off, and adjust display settings for presentations. While the similar light touch controls on Pavilion models make an annoying beeping noise that has to be manually shut off, the buttons on the HP Compaq 6910p are blissfully silent.
The well thought out design extends to the laptop's 14.1-inch wide-screen display, which you can customise with either HP's BrightView glossy finish or an antiglare finish. While the BrightView promises to make colours pop, it's also prone to distracting reflections; the antiglare finish (which our review unit had) makes it easier to work on spreadsheets and documents for long periods of time without straining your eyes. With a native resolution of 1,280x800, text and icons looked crisp without being too small, and video looked sharp, though the colour was somewhat washed out on our display.
The HP Compaq 6910p includes most of the ports and connections we expect on a thin and light laptop, plus a few business-friendly extras. Specifically, the laptop piles on corporate level security measures, including not only a fingerprint reader but also a smart-card slot and an internal Trusted Platform Module. The Compaq 6910p also provides every possible networking connection: Gigabit Ethernet, 56Kbps modem, Bluetooth 2.0, 802.11a/g/n Wi-Fi, and your choice of EV-DO or HSDPA WWAN. We were pleasantly surprised by the laptop's stereo speakers, which were rich and clear at all but the highest volumes. About the only thing we'd wish to add to the Compaq 6910p is an ExpressCard slot.
On CNET's performance benchmarks the HP Compaq 6910p fell toward the back of a pack of similarly configured thin-and-light laptops. Its performance was matched or bested by the Lenovo ThinkPad T61, the Dell Latitude D630, and the Fujitsu LifeBook A6030. One key exception: the Compaq 6910p finished well ahead of the Dell -- but still behind the others -- on our Multimedia multitasking test. Still, any current Centrino Duo laptop, including the HP Compaq 6910p, will be able to easily handle the Web surfing, document editing, and productivity work that compose the bulk of office tasks. Heavy multitaskers and data crunchers might get a slight power boost from the ThinkPad T61 or the LifeBook A6030, but the HP Compaq 6910p will provide plenty of performance oomph for most users.
On our resource-intensive DVD battery drain tests, the HP Compaq 6910p lasted a fairly average two hours, seven minutes, which was five minutes longer than the Fujitsu LifeBook A6030 but 20 minutes shorter than the ThinkPad T61. The Dell Latitude D630's extended-capacity battery outlasted them all, clocking in at four hours, 45 minutes. Our DVD battery drain test is especially gruelling, so you can expect longer life from casual Web surfing and office use. Power-hungry users can get a little more juice from HP's extended-capacity battery, available for AU$195 on the company's site, or an ultra-capacity battery for AU$345.
Note that these results are from a 2.0GHz system -- HP Australia now sells the 6910p in either a 1.8GHz or 2.4GHz configuration, so results may scale accordingly.
|
|
In seconds |
|
|
In seconds |
|
|
In seconds |
|
|
In minutes |
System configurations:
Dell Latitude D630
Windows XP Professional SP2; 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300; 2,048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 384MB Mobile Intel 965GM Express; 120GB Hitachi 5,400rpm
Fujitsu LifeBook A6030
Windows Vista Home Premium; 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300; 2,048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 128MB Mobile Intel 965GM Express; 120GB Fujitsu 5,400rpm
HP Compaq 6910p
Windows Vista Business; 2.0GHz Intel Core Duo T7100; 2,048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 128MB ATI Mobility Radeon X2300; 100GB 7,200rpm
HP Pavilion dv2500t
Windows Vista Home Premium; 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300; 2,048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 64MB Nvidia GeForce 8400M GS; 160GB Western Digital 5,400rpm
Lenovo ThinkPad T61
Windows Vista Business; 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300; 2,048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 128MB Mobile Intel 965GM Express; 100GB Seagate 7,200rpm
| Battery | |
|---|---|
| Battery type included | Lithium-ion |
| Connectivity | |
| Network interface | 10/100/1000 LAN, Bluetooth, 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n |
| Dialup modem | Yes |
| USB ports | 3 |
| Firewire ports | 1 |
| S-Video | Yes |
| VGA | Yes |
| Firewire type | 400 |
| Display | |
| LCD technology | WXGA |
| Natural resolution (max) | 1200 x 800 pixels |
| Diagonal screen size | 14.1 inch |
| Drives | |
| Optical drive | DVD-RW |
| Primary hard drive | 100 GB |
| General | |
| Dimensions (H x W x D) | 29 x 330 x 239 mm |
| Laptop type | Ultraportable, Business |
| Weight | 2.3 kg |
| Graphics | |
| Graphics hardware | ATI Mobility Radeon X2300 |
| Amt of video RAM | 128 MB |
| Memory | |
| Amt of RAM | 2GB |
| RAM type | DDR2-667 |
| Memory card reader | Yes |
| Other | |
| Motherboard chipset | Intel PM965 |
| Processor | |
| Processor type | Intel Core 2 Duo |
| Processor speed | 2 GHz |
| Software | |
| Operating system | Windows Vista Business |
| Other software included | InterVideo WinDVD, HP Help and Support, HP Wireless Assistant, HP Universal Print Driver, Synaptics Touchpad Driver, Roxio Easy Media Creator 9, HP Backup and Recovery Manager, HP Quick Launch Button Software, HP ProtectTools Security Manager, HP OpenView Radia Management Agent, HP Client Manager Software (free download), Norton Internet Security (60 days subscription) |
| Sound | |
| Embedded stereo speakers | Yes |
| Digital audio output | No |
| Expand | |
After the Second World War, the pursuit of pleasure domains the entire world atmosphere, Lancel (Lancel) to adapt rapidly into the demand...
25 minutes ago by PokArrackpask on Spam sees Westnet blocked by BigPondRT @DellEnterprise: Dell Secureworks talks with ZDNet about Android's biggest #security flaws - http://t.co/LSFLQVFq #infosec
31 minutes ago by ostejskal on twitter, retweetNBN users opt for 100Mbps: Customers are picking the top fibre plan that is available on the National Broadband ... http://t.co/sjtFSU3g
1 hour ago by ozspeedtest on twitter, retweet"Customers are picking the top fibre plan that is available on the National Broadband Network (NBN), more than a... http://t.co/M3P24Htn
1 hour ago by redditau on twitter, retweetAnother thing I found so misleading here is the step on how you assume to make the USB bootable . (The NTLDR needs to be renamed to USBNT...
1 hour ago by WindowsAnalyzer on Boot Windows XP from a USB flash driveYou can also use the help of these links, just incase your stuff failed, I probably got Windows build by using the Pebuilder as per the i...
2 hours ago by WindowsAnalyzer on Boot Windows XP from a USB flash driveRT @CorrieB: An iPad for every child: Inevitable or impossible? http://t.co/I7uS8l9s Thx to @timbuckteeth for this; http://t.co/jxkqIRIp
3 hours ago by njdixpin on twitter, retweetRT @MADinMelbourne: roxon "will enable more families to access credit" @MLolderandwiser: Privacy Act amendments http://t.co/Mv4c7PC2 via @zdnetaustralia
4 hours ago by GreenUpOz on twitter, retweetNBN users opt for 100Mbps - ZDNet Australia http://t.co/fLfHMzPn #australia #technews
4 hours ago by tweets4oz on twitter, retweetRT @konradski: Whaddayaknow - turns out Wi-Fi CAN interfere with a plane's navigation systems http://t.co/ospQCU2S
5 hours ago by RooiRobot on twitter, retweetThis story has been voted 5 times in the last 24 hours!
5 hours ago, NBN's Tassie upgrade to cost $1.3 millionSorry no deal Cinders, I'd rather send my money to someone and watch them desperately try to stop the NBN as this has much better enterta...
5 hours ago by Hubert Cumberdale on NBN users opt for 100MbpsWhat else can you expect from a Dodo customer?
5 hours ago by Hubert Cumberdale on NBN users opt for 100MbpsNBN users opt for 100Mbps - Communications - News - ZDNet Australia: NBN users opt for 100Mbps - Communications ... http://t.co/btB9gKWg
6 hours ago by tomlaing on twitter, retweetNBN users opt for 100Mbps http://t.co/xKqEb4bE via @zdnetaustralia
6 hours ago by tomlaing on twitter, retweetBiometric bugs too dangerous for public? http://t.co/8JLz5tdF via @zdnetaustralia
7 hours ago by thrunobulax on twitter, retweetOh please dont be unkind, I gotta have some fan's. btw I agree I dont set the standard, but who does I wonder?
8 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsYou agree but give him thumbs down... I think you'd better take the medication before one of your alter ego's Fred/Frank/Frergers appear...
8 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps+1
8 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100MbpsWar talk dominates #AusCERT 2012 - http://t.co/SlBpMj0c - #security #cyber
8 hours ago by Secure_View on twitter, retweetSo we agree it was a stupid idea and even stupider comment then ;-)
8 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100MbpsNot you obviously ;-)
And stop giving yourself thumbs up FFS.
Ok Beta, understand now, just one point who sets the standard?
8 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsOh no Beta you misunderstand me. I like my waterfront home and deep water jetty, it's those "other" people who can move to Willunga.
8 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsI agree with you Magnus, but really most people like living on the coastal fringe.
8 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsTravel Tech Q&A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/vYexrDwu #ipad
8 hours ago by MikeGari147 on twitter, retweetExploring: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia ... http://t.co/bNLCyobv #ICTChallenge
8 hours ago by Valdy on twitter, retweetExploring: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia ... http://t.co/HEPuJgyt #ICTChallenge
8 hours ago by dewacorp on twitter, retweet#NewSouthWales ditches registration stickers 4 light #vehicles in favour of #technology http://t.co/xX5N0Rp9
8 hours ago by cyberactivsvces on twitter, retweetAnother use is city based top surgeons using 8K resolution monitors to provide real-time assistance to country surgeons and doctors to op...
8 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100MbpsIn terms of capacity, fibre is basically future proof. Never mind 100Mbps or even 1Gbps. Computer scientists have already achieved 100 gi...
9 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100MbpsWhat I like about Mike Quigley is that he is making it happen, despite all the bull**t barriers being put in front of him by Coalition po...
9 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100MbpsAnonymous hacks Reliance's Internet filtering server - ZDNet (blog) http://t.co/uObU1HBP http://t.co/0UBXxwX4
9 hours ago by whitelabelsec on twitter, retweetWhich Windows will make for a better tablet? http://t.co/4mAHg850
10 hours ago by Wippy0012 on twitter, retweetGonna be crowded when TA switches of the inter webby thingy and everyone moves there, just as you suggested though.
10 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100MbpsYes "without secure internet identification methods" I cannot see a future for online voting be it a referendum or selecting a Gov (at ...
11 hours ago by Taskmanager on A farewell to democracy: KasperskyOh of course you would would want something in return. hmmm I see, well maybe my best wishes for and your family. btw, Western Union is ...
11 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsWell Willunga looks like a nice place to live, close to wine growing areas, a golf club. Houses are probably reasonably priced. Very nice...
11 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100MbpsListening to @stilgherrian cover AusCERT and cyberwar, http://t.co/6lGUEz8H
11 hours ago by sylmobile on twitter, retweetTravel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/VN5tGJzC
11 hours ago by iPad_Cable on twitter, retweet#Westpac Board goes paperless with #Ipads with #Tabula #App http://t.co/duxuj2fd #Cybersecurity #Bank
11 hours ago by cyberactivsvces on twitter, retweetMicrosoft is serious about open source??? http://t.co/mqQGgta7
12 hours ago by ragavj on twitter, retweet@joedamato just try varying caps randomly. Maybe they do this http://t.co/1FN5FwYv
12 hours ago by nzkoz on twitter, retweetNSW outlines datacentre migration plans - Hardware - News - ZDNet Australia http://t.co/OQfUl0D1
12 hours ago by martinscerri on twitter, retweet"on the new fast Internets everyone wants the fast plan" #orly #nareally #yarly http://t.co/kvfCa84A
12 hours ago by stirlo on twitter, retweetChrome overtakes IE: does it matter? http://t.co/e4SILk8a
13 hours ago by misscecille on twitter, retweetA ZDNet study showed that British Facebook users are drunk in 76 percent of their photos.
13 hours ago by rolandirwin on twitter, retweetThe HDMI cable ripoff and why retail is really dying http://t.co/eFT7zEW7
13 hours ago by rensits on twitter, retweetTravel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/IUysbyKf
14 hours ago by ForshawFlip on twitter, retweetTravel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/V7vL5QB9
14 hours ago by JamesVickery on twitter, retweetZDNet reports Microsoft launches its own social service http://t.co/VJS5BkwF
14 hours ago by FoiExpertNSW on twitter, retweetby http://t.co/vmlLt4bh: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia P... http://t.co/4bfDRXo4
14 hours ago by InternetTechSec on twitter, retweetTravel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/CtNlVWN7
14 hours ago by Cloud9Truths on twitter, retweetTravel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia Pacific, shares some of h... http://t.co/ZxjpmqiM
14 hours ago by oztechguy on twitter, retweetThis story has been voted 12000 times in the last 24 hours!
2 days ago, Is Bill Gates a great leader?