HP Envy 15: A great laptop marred by serious flaws
If HP can address a couple critical problems with the Envy 15, it will have a very desirable laptop on its hands.
PC World - Last year's Envy laptops were a bit of a disappointment. The design that wowed me in 2010 had grown stale by 2011; at that point, the rest of the world had caught up to and surpassed the Envy's design, while HP was content to update only the system's internal components. The new Envy 15 and 17, which HP released right at the end of 2011, finally feature a whole new design. For the most part, it's great, but a few nagging issues keep the system from being an easy recommendation.
First, know that the new Envy laptops come in 15.6-inch and 17-inch sizes, with the 14-inch version transitioning to the new Spectre Ultrabook. Our review concerns the 15.6-inch Envy 15, which is pretty big as all-purpose laptops go. It's 15 inches wide, 9.6 inches deep, and 1.2 inches thick. With a weight of 5.8 pounds, it's not a back-breaker, but it certainly doesn't qualify as "lightweight." The silver-toned aluminum inside deck and edges are reminiscent of a MacBook Pro, but Apple's 15-inch laptop is smaller in every dimension and just a tad lighter.
Our $1,250 review configuration (price as of January 25, 2012) is the base model with a single upgrade (more on that later). It features a Core i5-2430M processor, 6GB of RAM, a Radeon HD 7690M discrete graphics card, and a 500GB hard drive. Bear in mind that although the Radeon HD 7690 may carry 7000-series branding, it doesn't actually use the new architecture, and it isn't a product of the 28nm manufacturing process that AMD is using for the 7000 series of desktop graphics cards. Instead, it's a "rebrand" of the previous 40nm generation, equivalent to the Radeon HD 6730M. Overall, this selection of hardware was enough to power the system to a decent WorldBench 6 score of 119, as well as to reasonable gaming frame rates, though you won't be able to play at the highest resolutions and detail settings.
The aluminum keyboard deck looks and feels all right, but the lid, supposedly also made of aluminum, feels like cheap plastic, and the bottom is plastic. Overall the aesthetic isn't bad, but it pales in comparison to, say, the upcoming Envy 14 Spectre. The full-size backlit keyboard is quite easy to type on, but I'm not as enamored of the touchpad. It is large and smooth, and it tracks movement well. It supports all the common modern multifinger gestures, too. But the bottom quarter or so, where one would click to activate the left or right buttons, is quite stiff. Worse, the palm rejection is horrible: No matter how I tweaked the touchpad settings, I couldn't type more than a couple sentences without seeing the cursor jump around.


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