The HP Pavilion dv5t is replacing the ever-popular dv6000 series notebooks. This is a complete redesign that includes many new features. The dv5t se basa in the latest Intel chips "Montevina" 2 Centrino mobile technology and is available with powerful dedicated graphics.The design of the HP Pavilion dv5t is simply beautiful. It is elegant and sophisticated, tasteful accents. The entire notebook is streamlined, and no matter what angle you look, you see very well. This notebook has a "soft" with the design from all corners rounded. Looking at the side of the laptop, the rear is a semicircle, and the front and curves up the bow of a ship. When the screen is closed, the back of the notebook has a raked to see what is attractive. The screen only has a great hinge, which adds to its elegant appearance. The chassis is relatively thin at 1.37 to 1.65 inches thick.
The notebook itself is highly resistant plastic and feels solid. There is absolutely no flex in the palmrests or surrounding areas, and the base of portable resist bending as a period of two to four. No part of this notebook is little or material of dubious quality. The plastic is fairly thick, especially around the palmrests, which is welcome.
With the introduction of the HP Pavilion series dv5 notebooks, HP is finally offering high-resolution displays. The dv5t currently offered with one or WXGA resolution SXGA +. The screen WXGA (1280 x 800 resolution) is what most 15.4-inch notebooks in the stores are, and the most common resolution 15.4-inch laptops. The screen WSXGA + (1680 x 1050 resolution) is what my laptop has. It has a 42% more space you can see the screen WXGA, which is why we chose him. Higher resolution screens let you see more and move less. For example, if I see a great website, I could see a 42% increase in the content WSXGA + show that in the WXGA display. Another example-while viewing a high resolution picture, I see 42% more detail on the screen WSXGA + in the WXGA. WSXGA + makes it possible to use larger windows side by side, it would be hard-pressed to see two virtually spreadsheets side by side with a WXGA display, but with the high-resolution SXGA +, is only possible (that could done without diminishing the windows too).
HP offers 32 - and 64-bit versions of Vista in dv5t. Home Premium is standard, while Ultimate is available as an upgrade. He Home Premium 32-bit on my machine. I went with 32-bit because some of the devices I use does not have 64-bit drivers.
HP unfortunately pre-load a lot of bloatware in the factory image of the hard disk. Upon receiving the notebook, he immediately erased the drive and made a clean installation of Vista orev excellent using the Clean Install Guide in the forums. This enabled me to begin with a new installation of the operating system and drivers.
The notebook itself is highly resistant plastic and feels solid. There is absolutely no flex in the palmrests or surrounding areas, and the base of portable resist bending as a period of two to four. No part of this notebook is little or material of dubious quality. The plastic is fairly thick, especially around the palmrests, which is welcome.
With the introduction of the HP Pavilion series dv5 notebooks, HP is finally offering high-resolution displays. The dv5t currently offered with one or WXGA resolution SXGA +. The screen WXGA (1280 x 800 resolution) is what most 15.4-inch notebooks in the stores are, and the most common resolution 15.4-inch laptops. The screen WSXGA + (1680 x 1050 resolution) is what my laptop has. It has a 42% more space you can see the screen WXGA, which is why we chose him. Higher resolution screens let you see more and move less. For example, if I see a great website, I could see a 42% increase in the content WSXGA + show that in the WXGA display. Another example-while viewing a high resolution picture, I see 42% more detail on the screen WSXGA + in the WXGA. WSXGA + makes it possible to use larger windows side by side, it would be hard-pressed to see two virtually spreadsheets side by side with a WXGA display, but with the high-resolution SXGA +, is only possible (that could done without diminishing the windows too).
HP offers 32 - and 64-bit versions of Vista in dv5t. Home Premium is standard, while Ultimate is available as an upgrade. He Home Premium 32-bit on my machine. I went with 32-bit because some of the devices I use does not have 64-bit drivers.
HP unfortunately pre-load a lot of bloatware in the factory image of the hard disk. Upon receiving the notebook, he immediately erased the drive and made a clean installation of Vista orev excellent using the Clean Install Guide in the forums. This enabled me to begin with a new installation of the operating system and drivers.
HP Pavilion dv5t notebook has the following specifications:
- Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 processor (2.26GHz/ 1066MHz FSB/ 3MB L2)
- 15.4-inch WSXGA+ Infinity display
- Nvidia GeForce 9600M-GT w/ 512MB DDR2 dedicated video card
- 2GB DDR2-800 RAM (2x 1GB)
- 160GB 5400RPM hard drive (Fujitsu)
- Broadcom 802.11b/g wireless + Bluetooth
- Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit
- High-capacity 6-cell Li-ion battery

1 comments:
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