HP Pavillion Desk Top PC Overall Description

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Overall Description of HP Desktop, Notebook and Netbooks

HP has a Pavilion laptop which is part of the tx2050ea series. This
series follows in the intrepid footsteps of the tx1000 series,
which combined all the benefits of a standard laptop with those of
a tablet PC which is great. The HP Pavilion DV6000 is a really,
really nice. It is a solid notebook computer and you really can’t
go wrong with this unit plus the price tag makes it very affordable.

The Windows Vista operating system can also allocate up to 623 MB
of total graphics memory from the system memory. This computer
features NVidia’s PureVideo technology which provides great
picture clarity, smooth video, accurate color, and precise image scaling
for video content and full support for Microsoft DirectX 9.0 for
stunningly realistic cinematic effects for all DirectX-compatible
applications.

The Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit edition with Service Pack
1 lets you take full advantage of the 64-bit processor and
expanded system memory to fit this computer.

The SuperMulti DVD burner of this operating systems lets you
create music mixes, video discs, and digital photo albums on your own
DVDs and CDs, and LightScribe technology lets you etch custom,
silkscreen-quality labels and artwork directly onto LightScribe-
enabled discs.

Most Notebook computers are commodities in the end and it's hard
to differentiate between HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba, and the
other vendors, because they all run Windows, they all have the same
general processing capabilities and battery life. The Notebook of
all these computers operating system may fail due to result from
components unrelated to the issue with graphics cards, but a
trend among posted complaints points to laptops with Nvidia parts,
said Matthew Hilsenrad, an HP notebook owner.

Netbooks computers are not meant to run Vista. They cannot
handle high-resolution video that Vista requires. Netbooks get away
with low level performance and a sparse feature set due to their
size, but the DV2 seems to have fewer excuses. Yet,
obviously compromises need to be made to make ultra thins and cheap
small notebooks, but we'd happily pay a little more for decent,
workable computers.

If You need additional info, just go to: http://hppaviliondesktoppc.info

Sue Ruso
Houston, Texas