Find a Review



Airport Code
or
Address
City
Zip Code
Country
State
Proximity (Miles)


HP Pavilion dv6000t
With the Intel Core 2 Duo inside, the HP dv6000t gets a performance boost.

    Price as Reviewed: $1,570.00
Review Contents:  
Share Print
Pros
Cons
Quick Specs Full Specs

Price as Reviewed: $1,570


Reader Comments
Read All Comments

HP Pavilion dv6000t
By muttman
the hp dv 6000 is junk I have a dv6040us and this is the third trade I have had and the place I got it traded because they could not fix them and this one is junk nothing works dvd, photo card reader, hard drive just went , I have had it just over a year the people at hp told me tuff it's not covered any more I have talked at least 30 poeple into buying something other then an hp, like the think pad, it has never gave me any trouble in five years so poeple out there don't buy an hp unless you like to be stressed all the time amd throw your money away

Post Your Comments
by Jamie Bsales on August 30, 2006

We’re happy to see that while there’s a new chip on the inside, HP didn’t alter the design of the slick Pavilion dv6000t. The glossy piano-black finish and gray pinstriping outside (with that color scheme reversed inside) looks stunning. Even better, the dv6000 t has the features and performance to complement its good looks.
 
This six-pound notebook features a 15.4-inch widescreen LCD with a comfortable 1280 x 800-pixel native resolution. DVDs looked great on this display, and we love HP’s QuickPlay feature for launching and controlling multimedia files without booting up Windows. Viewing-angle performance was typical for this class of panel: good from side to side, but images looked washed-out when viewed from above.
 
The full-sized keyboard has an excellent feel, and we appreciate the touch-sensitive multimedia control buttons above the Function keys. Our only gripe: The glossy touchpad creates a lot of friction on your fingertip, making precise cursor control difficult.
 
Features abound, including 802.11a/b/g Wi-Fi, a 5-in-1 media card reader, two headphone jacks (ideal for sharing a DVD movie), and a built-in 1.3-megapixel webcam. In addition to the 2.16-GHz Core 2 Duo T7400 processor (the star attraction), our test configuration included 1GB of RAM, a 100GB hard drive, and a DVD-ROM/CD-RW combo drive.
 
The real draw, of course, is the performance. The Core 2 Duo processor helped the dv6000t deliver the best MobileMark 2005 score we’ve ever seen from a mainstream portable (279)--a full 50 points better than the identical machine configured with the older Core Duo CPU. Battery life was a respectable 3 hours and 39 minutes.
 
So for consumers and business users looking for a fast laptop, the HP Pavilion dv6000t fits the bill. 
If you like this notebook, don’t miss the popular review of the HP Pavilion dv9000z. 
 
Read our Intel Core 2 Duo Test Drive article for more on Intel's new mobile chip.
 
 
Suggested Stories:
A slick and fast desktop replacement that offers high-definition DVD playback.
 
Extraordinary styling and a complete feature set make the HP Pavilion dv2000t stand out among affordable widescreen notebooks.
 
Everyone's abuzz about the power of dual-core processors and the slick new features of Windows Vista. And these six notebooks prove you can get both for less than a grand.

Next Page: Specs
 

Share Print Reprints

Market Place

Featured Sponsors

Subscribe! 

Subscribe Now
to LAPTOP Magazine
for less than$1 per issue

Order Now!

Lenovo Laptops

Check out the hottest systems from Lenovo.
Learn more »

Slingbox

Watch TV on your laptop anywhere.
Learn more »