Wednesday, 29 June 2011

HP ProBook 4425s Laptop Review



HP ProBook 4425s Specifications:

AMD Phenom II P920 Quad Core (up to 1.6GHz, 2MB L2 cache)
14.0-inch LED-backlit anti-glare HD display (1366 x 768)
Integrated ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4250
4GB DDR3 1066MHz RAM
500GB 7200RPM HDD
LightScribe DVD+/-RW Optical Drive
Broadcom 4313 802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1, 1Gb LAN
6-Cell 47WHr Battery
Limited 1-year standard parts and labor warranty
Dimensions: 13.23 x 9.15 x 1.07-inches
Weight: 5.05lbs with 6-cell battery

Build and Design

The HP ProBook 4425s has a very neat and professional look with brushed metal covers over a plastic body. The panels on this current generation of ProBook are dark copper or bronze in color and can be found on all sizes, including AMD and Intel models. Compared to the first generation models with only plastic showing on the exterior, the newer design looks great and adds strength to the notebook. The brushed metal finish is used throughout the notebook, including the screen cover, palmrest, and speaker grill. To compliment the finish, the surfaces not covered in metal are glossy black plastic, adding another touch of class to this stylish small business notebook.


Build quality is very good and a step up from the older model. The brushed metal lid gives the 4425s some much needed strength and screen protection that the plastic lid on the previous-generation ProBooks lacked. The palmrest and speaker grill show little to no flex under strong pressure, perhaps feeling stronger than the 15-inch or 17-inch siblings. The keyboard tray has some minor flex under pressure which wouldn't be a problem on the more expensive HP EliteBook models. The chassis looks and feels much nicer than the first revision ProBook series, but is just slightly behind business notebooks that use alloy as a primary component.

Users looking to quickly swap out components will be in for a bit of a shock. To access the processor, hard drive, or even the system memory, you need to fully dismantle the ProBook 4425s. On this small and medium business notebook HP opted for centralized support and maintenance, with very little work being done by the end user. In terms of looks this gives the bottom a clean appearance without any access panels, but in terms of difficultly, it adds a lot of work to swap out components. To open the system, you remove four screws underneath the battery, pop off the speaker bezel, remove four additional screws that hold the keyboard in place, slide the keyboard up. This gives you access to the system memory. To get at the hard drive, you remove three more screws that hold the palmrest in place, slide it carefully to the right to release it from its clips. Once that is removed you simply take out three more screws that hold the hard drive in place, and take it out (with four more screws holding it into its cage). To say upgrades on the ProBook are difficult or confusing is putting it lightly.

Ports and Features

Port selection on the ProBook 4425s is very nice for a small and medium business notebook, featuring three USB 2.0 ports, one eSATA/USB combo port, VGA and HDMI-out, LAN, modem, and headphone/mic jacks. The notebook also features a SDHC-card slot and ExpressCard/34 for future expansion.

Source: Noteebookreview.com


0 comments:

Labels

(Electronics) 2011: 2012: 3.4GHz 400MHz 4x512 AMD's AMD’s ASRock Adapter Alienware Amd processors Analysis Android Angry Announced Announcement Antec Apple Apple's Arctic Arrives Aspire Athlon Audio Battle Benchmarked Biostar Blackberry Blu-ray Bluetooth Bridge Broadband Browser Budget Cache Chromebook Compound Computer Computers) Computex Concept Cooler Corsair Crysis Dell's Design Desktop Desktops Details Devices Diamond Digital Display Download Drive External Extreme Facebook First Fujitsu Fusion Future Galaxy Gaming GeForce Gigabyte HSFPHASECM Honeycomb India Indian Keyboard Keyboards Keypad Kingston LGA1155 LGA1366 LGA775 Laptop Laptops Latitude Leaked Lexmark's Light Llano Logitech M2N-SLI MSI's MSM8660 MacBook Master Medal Media Medion Mini-Review Mobile MotherBoard's Motherboard Motherboards Motorola Mouse Multimedia NC215S NTLDR NVIDIA NVIDIA's National Netbook Netbooks Nexus Nokia Non-ECC Notebooks Offers Optical Optimus Option Overclock Overclocked PC2-5300 PC2-6400 Panda Panel Patriot Pavilion Performance Phone Plans PlayStation Portable Postpaid Power PowerPC Preview Preview: Price Prices ProBook Processor Processors Project Projector Propus Qosmio Quad-Core Qualcomm Quick RadTech Radeon Rates Razer Registry Released Releases Retail Review Review: Reviews Rupees Rupess SDRAM SODIMM Samsung SandForce Sandy Satellite Seagate Select Sensitive Series Series™ Server Shuttle Silent Silicon Silver Single Small Smartphone Smartphones Socket Solar Solid Speakers Specifications Specs Speed Store Super Tablets Tariff Technology Tegra Testing Thermal ThinkPad Thunderbolt Toshiba TouchPad TouchSmart Touchscreen Tower Troubleshooting Tutorial: Ultimate Ultra Update Verizon Vertex ViewSonic Viliv Vista Vodafone Voodoo Western Wi-Drive Wi-Fi WiMax Windows Wireless Workstations: World Writer Xperia Zotac acpi_call all-in-one announces business camera feature features flash iPad iPhone latest launched launches mobiles module nFORCE notebook omnia overview panasonic player release shutdown special tablet takes touch toughbook unveils webOS white www.phoronix.com

About This Blog

Blog Archive

  © Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP