The new laptop and other products come shortly after the company decided not to sell its PC business
Hewlett-Packard introduced Wednesday its first business "ultrabook," offering nine hours of battery life, a solid-state drive, and a security chip that protects data in email and information on the hard drive.
The roll out by HP comes less than a month after the company said that its Personal Systems Group (PSG), which deals in PCs, smartphones and tablets, will stay with the company. HP had earlier talked about evaluating options for this business.
The company also expanded Wednesday its ultraportable consumer notebook PC line with the HP Pavilion dm4, including a Beats Edition. Beats Audio technology was developed by HP in collaboration with artist and producer Dr. Dre, and chairman of Interscope Geffen A&M Records and Beats co-founder Jimmy Iovine, the company said.
HP also introduced Envy 15, Envy 17, and Envy 17 3D notebooks, which will be available in the U.S. on Dec. 7, besides two wireless accessories.
The new "ultrabook" laptop, called the HP Folio, will also go on sale Dec. 7 at a starting price of $900.
It has a 13.3-inch (33.8 centimeters) diagonal high-definition display, weighs 3.3 pounds (1.5 kilograms) and is 0.7 inches (1.8 centimeters) thick.
HP said the Folio is powered by the latest Intel Core processors without providing details, and can be configured with a range of Microsoft Windows 7 operating systems, including Windows 7 Professional. It also includes a solid-state drive (SSD) with 128 gigabytes (GB) of storage.
HP is attempting to position the ultrabook as bridging the "gap between professional and personal life" as it combines industrial design found on consumer products with the security and usability that business users demand. The Folio model with TPM (Trusted Platform Module) Embedded Security chip is planned to be available in January. TPM is a specification for embedded security in chips, which is implemented in a chip on the motherboard.
The company has focused on reducing the number of accessories like power adapters that business users will have to carry while traveling. A wide array of ports, including Ethernet, eliminates the need to carry dongles, it said.
HP is scheduled to report its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings on Nov. 21.
And just like that, HP joined the Ultrabook party. After announcing the Folio in Australia yesterday, the company went and made it official here in the states too. And man, do we get the feeling the outfit's been watching the competition very closely: this guy starts at $900 and comes standard with a 128GB mSATA SSD and a backlit keyboard. Provided it comes close to matching its promise of nine hours of battery life, it could give the identically priced Toshiba Portege Z830 a run for its money. Not to mention, it undercuts the MacBook Air ($1,299 and up), along with the ASUS Zenbook UX31 and Lenovo IdeaPad U300s, both of which start at $1,100 with a 128GB SSD and no backlit keyboard. Good on ya, HP.
What's that, you say? You want more specs? Rounding out the list, the Folio has a 13.3-inch (1366 x 768) display, optional TPM circuitry and comes standard with a Core i5-2467M processor, 4GB of RAM, a six-cell battery and HP's CoolSense technology. Additionally, it offers a fairly robust selection of ports, including HDMI, Ethernet, USB 2.0 and 3.0, a memory card reader and a combined headphone / mic socket. The trade-off, though, is a slightly thicker chassis than what other Ultrabooks are offering: 3.3 pounds and 18mm (0.7 inches) thick. It'll be available in the US starting December 7th, but we've already managed to snag a few minutes with it, which means we've got photos, video and impressions for you to peek now. So what are you waiting for? Meet us after the break for our hands-on preview.
What's that, you say? You want more specs? Rounding out the list, the Folio has a 13.3-inch (1366 x 768) display, optional TPM circuitry and comes standard with a Core i5-2467M processor, 4GB of RAM, a six-cell battery and HP's CoolSense technology. Additionally, it offers a fairly robust selection of ports, including HDMI, Ethernet, USB 2.0 and 3.0, a memory card reader and a combined headphone / mic socket. The trade-off, though, is a slightly thicker chassis than what other Ultrabooks are offering: 3.3 pounds and 18mm (0.7 inches) thick. It'll be available in the US starting December 7th, but we've already managed to snag a few minutes with it, which means we've got photos, video and impressions for you to peek now. So what are you waiting for? Meet us after the break for our hands-on preview.
We'll get this out of the way early: at 3.3 pounds and 18mm thick, the Folio is "chunky" for an Ultrabook, to the extent that such a laptop can really be unwieldy. Perhaps if we held this in one hand and the 2.9-pound UX31 in the other, we'd feel the difference. But if you're handling the Folio on its own, what you've got, quite simply, is a lightweight laptop. Period. What's more, it's particularly easy to grip in one hand, given that the bottom side is coated in a pleasant soft-touch material. As for its shape, this feels most similar to the Aspire S3 in that it has rounded corners and doesn't taper down to a razer-thin sliver.
Even HP will tell you the Folio could have been skinnier and lighter, but that might have meant skimping on ports. It's worth repeating that this has a fuller assortment of sockets than pretty much anything else on the market. For comparison's sake, the Air has two USB 2.0 ports, Thunderbolt and an SD slot (on the 13-inch model only). The UX31 has USB 3.0 and 2.0 ports, along with mini-HDMI and mini-VGA ports (it comes with VGA and Ethernet adapters). The U300s has USB 3.0 and HDMI. So far, the Portege Z830 is the only other model with USB 3.0, HDMI and Ethernet and -- unfortunately for HP -- it weighs a scant 2.5 pounds.
Particularly once you lift the lid, it's clear that HP cut some corners to hit that $900 price point, which is pretty much the same thing we had to say about the identically priced S3. Mainly, we're talking about the fact that HP opted for plain, plastic keys instead of an all-metal 'board like the one ASUS used in its Zenbooks. Still, if we're pitting one $899 Ultrabook against the other in a beauty contest, the Folio handily trumps the S3 (not to mention, the dated-looking Z830). Whereas the S3 has a split personality (metal on the outside, plastic under the lid), the Folio has a brushed metal lid with a matching palm rest and keyboard deck. In fact, it's almost entirely made of metal, save for the bottom. What's more, the Folio's deck is almost entirely devoid of buttons and branding, which gives it a tasteful, if somewhat spartan look.
In our brief hands-on, the keys exhibited some bounce while we typed, and so far we're cautiously optimistic that they won't be as shallow as the Aspire S3 and UX31's keyboards. At least the panel seems sturdy, though we'll of course be curious to see how it holds up through hours of furious typing. Moving on, the Folio has a buttonless touchpad with left and right click zones clearly demarcated with a thin line. In general, we prefer to wait until our full review to cast judgment on such things, and in this case we were playing with a pre-production (read: not final) model. So who knows what kind of fine-tuning HP do between now and December 7th? However much it needs to make this thing flawless, we hope.
Display
One of the first things we noticed about the Folio is that the bezels are relatively narrow, at least compared to what you'll usually see paired with such a common 1366 x 768 display. At first glance, before HP shared any of the specs, we even wondered if we were looking at an LG Shuriken panel, which allows a 14-inch panel to fit in a chassis meant for a 13-inch display. As we got closer to the machine (and got confirmation from HP), we realized it's not a Shuriken display, but that doesn't dampen our appreciation for the bezels one bit. As for the viewing angles, well, look at some of our hands-on photos and decide for yourself. Our early take is that they're on par with what you'd get from other TN displays, which is to say, they're not great (but not necessarily terrible either).
Outlook
Incredibly, HP is careful to say the Folio 13 mainly for business customers. It's almost as if the company is afraid of being pitted against a certain other skinny, aluminum-clad laptop. But if the Folio is as exemplary in practice as it is on paper, then HP might be thinking too small. Based on its design, specs and price alone, it has enormous potential. At this price, we can see it being a hit not just among suits, but the Best Buy-shopping masses.
Still, its performance and ergonomics have the potential to make or break it. For instance, how close does it come to living up to that nine-hour battery life claim? What's it like typing 5,000 words on that keyboard? How precise will the final trackpad be? And how fast is its SSD compared to the UX31's SATA III? All questions we'll just have to tackle in our full review.
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