Similar articles
Reviews section
ADVERTISEMENT
Reviews Disclaimer
Readers are reminded that the opinions expressed, and the results published in connection with reviews and/or laboratory test reports carried out on computing systems and/or related items are confined to, and representative of, only those goods supplied and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase.

Review: HP Pavilion TX-1260ea notebook computer

An uncomfortable mix of tablet and multimedia PC, but it is good value

What is this?
Price: £799
Manufacturer: PC World 0870 2420 444



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Performance rating: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
Rate this product
Verdict

Pros: Excellent speakers; remote control
Cons: Poor battery life; heavy touch screen not easy to use; washed out blacks
Overall: An uncomfortable mix of tablet and multimedia PC, but it is good value


Emil Larsen, Personal Computer World 05 Dec 2007

ADVERTISEMENT

The last time we saw a TX-1000 series tablet, we couldn’t calibrate the screen properly.

Thankfully we didn’t suffer the same problem this time, but you still have to press hard on the TX-1260ea’s display to get a response and you’ll get fingerprints all over it in the process.

Since the pen isn’t an active design, you can’t rest your hand on the display without causing the mouse to move, which makes it less comfortable to use.

The display’s hinge has a solid click to it though, and two hooks click the display in place when folded down.

The keyboard and trackpad offer sturdy and accurate response, with a separate, working scroll function – a rarity in Vista due to a lack of drivers.

The Pavilion stands out as the only notebook to use an AMD processor, namely a TL-50 1.86GHz with 1MB of L2 cache. A generous 2GB of Ram and 160GB hard disk didn’t help performance though, with the Pavilion languishing consistently in the bottom half of our benchmarks.

Pavilion pic

Battery life from this AMD system was poor too, lasting two hours and 25 minutes with the standard battery and just over three and a half hours with the extended battery (both included), so carrying two batteries is a necessity.

With lots of blue-glowing media buttons and a remote control, it’s an ambitious multimedia machine. Altec Lansing-branded speakers sit either side of the screen’s hinge and were the best on test. Two headphone jacks are also included, but DVD playback is spoilt by the screen’s dire, washed-out blacks.

The Geforce Go 6150 integrated graphics are no longer better than Intel’s graphics, scoring a lethargic 435 in 3Dmark05. It’s quite heavy for a 12.1in device and exceptionally bulky, and we can’t help but apply the ‘jack of all trades, master of none’ tag to the TX-1260ea.

<Previous                                           Next>

This article is part of a group test, see also:
1 Introduction
2 The great weight conundrum
3 Acer Travelmate 6292 review
4 Advent 8112 review
5 Fujitsu Siemens Lifebook P7230 review
6 Hi-Grade Notino D2200 review
7 HP Compaq 2710p review
8 HP Pavilion TX-1260ea review
9 Lenovo Thinkpad X61 review
10 MSI PR200-064UK review
11 Panasonic Toughbook CF-W7 review
12 Samsung Q45-A007 review
13 Toshiba Portégé R500-10U review
14 Performance graphs, page 1 of 2
15 Performance graphs, page 2 of 2
16 Replacement battery costs
17 Conclusion and awards


All Notebooks & Tablets PCs
Tags: Notebook Computers

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

R E A D E R   R E V I E W S
M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links