HP's ProBooks are non-extravagant business-orientated machines with additional diagnostic tools built in for the benefit of system administrators. This 4310s model is a perfectly serviceable machine for almost all everyday tasks; however, it will struggle to run 3D games or do any heavy-duty media creation work.
The machine runs a Core 2 Duo T6570, which contains two CPU cores running at 2.1GHz each. Complementing this is 2GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive, wireless N networking, gigabit Ethernet, Bluetooth, VGA and HDMI outputs, ExpressCard 34 and audio ports, SD card reader and a modem of questionable utility.
This laptop is not hugely expandable. There is no FireWire connector, no port replicator or docking port and no PCMCIA slot. All this is fine, provided you're the kind of user who won't miss the extra external connectivity.
The upshot of its modest configuration is good battery life. Even with the screen brightness at maximum, it took over three and a half hours to drain the battery from full while decoding MPEG-2 video. We repeated the test in HD using the vastly more computationally intensive VC-1 codec, and saw the battery life drop to a very respectable hour and 50 minutes.
The 1366x768 display has reasonable horizontal visibility, but the image washed out faster than you'd expect when you tilt the monitor off-axis. This isn't so much a problem with text, but images and video will appear washed out and inverted when you look at the screen from steep angles. Despite the LCD having quite a bit of flex, the notebook's construction is solid.
At the top right of the keyboard are a series of touch-sensitive hotkeys for volume controls, wireless and a HP launcher. We found the volume up and down buttons unresponsive, and occasionally the wireless would turn itself off without us touching it.
On the software side, a subtly HP branded copy of the 32-bit version of Windows XP Professional comes preloaded. Many of the recent patches to keep it stable, however, do not. XP Service Pack 3 had not been installed. IT managers will like the diagnostic tools built into the hardware that are accessible by interrupting the boot sequence.
A 60-day trial of Microsoft Office is included, as is a 60-day trial of Mcafee Total Protection Service. It's an antivirus suite with extra programs that notify you of phishing attacks in Internet Explorer. This continued to function when we upgraded Internet Explorer from version 6 to 8; however, the software added itself as a space hogging toolbar. It functions with minimal extra effort under Firefox, but does not work at all under Google's Chrome browser.
There are HP branded software helpers scattered throughout the operating system, many of which are unnecessary. After installing our benchmarking applications and several Adobe products to test real-world usage, we found the machine could not finish its restart cycle, although this problem disappeared after several Windows updates. During our battery life tests, we hit a blue screen.
If you find that the price is right and you are only planning on doing menial tasks, you could do a lot worse than the HP ProBook.



4%
4%







The Australia 'model' of the 4310s is serverely limited in expansion when compared to the model HP released for the American market.
Check the specifications and spec modifications you can make to the 4310s at HP USA's website and you'll see what I'm saying.
I was really looking forward to this model in Australia but HP AU has hamstrung the specification so much, its a pointless purchase for Australian businesses.