HP Envy 15 Beats edition featured in Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance”

HP Envy 15 Beats edition featured in Lady Gagas Bad Romance

HP Envy 15 Beats Edition in Lady Gaga's music video

So I had meant to post this ages ago but due to a combination of Christmas, lots of HP notebook rumors this month and other things that take precedence in terms of priority, I’m only posting this now. Four HP Envy 15 Beats edition notebooks were recently featured in Lady Gaga’s Bad Romance single video.

HP Envy 15 Beats edition featured in Lady Gagas Bad Romance

Camera zooms into two Envy's at 2:45

The Core i7 Mobile packing, ATI Mobility Radeon 4830 blazing luxury/premium notebooks had about three seconds (2:44 to 2:46) of screen time. The Beats by Dr Dre headphones also made its appearance, draped on the third Envy 15 Beats notebook in the video at 2:44. This same pair of headphones is part of the “limited edition” HP Envy 15 Beats package.

HP Envy 15 Beats edition featured in Lady Gagas Bad Romance

Another better view of the HP Envy 15 Beats in the Bad Romance video

Compared to the “regular” HP Envy 15, the Envy 15 Beats Edition is essentially the same notebook inside with “Beats” branding, black casing design (regular Envy is silver/beige-ish) and includes the mentioned Beats by Dr Dre headphones and Traktor DJ software for… well, DJ’s to do their thing with music tracks.

HP Envy 15 Beats edition featured in Lady Gagas Bad Romance

HP Envy 15 Beats Edition product picture

Oh, before you rush out there to place your order for one “just because Lady Gaga has four”, the Envy 15 Beats Edition also gets a $500 price premium slapped on top of the price of a regular Envy. Food for thought. Okay, given not everyone’s a fan of Lady Gaga, at least you can relate to playing games like Left4Dead on full HD/max everything at 60 FPS on HP’s slimmest Core i7 notebook. Right? Have a great New Year’s eve folks!

HP Zeen and HP Airlife: New handheld device (tablet/reader?) and App Store?

The New York Times has recently published an article about HP filing trademarks for the names “Zeen” and “Airlife” with the US Trademark/Patents Office, describing the Zeen as a handheld device while Airlife seems to appear to be a one-stop item covering things from handheld devices to computers to mobile phones, which leads me to believe the latter is an application store (better known nowadays as App Store) of sorts or at least a portal which covers accessories and/or software for the mentioned devices. No specifications, no further details, nothing, just two mysterious to-be-trademarked names. And the question is, will these two product/service names ever see the light of day? What will HP use them for? Two things are for sure: HP will still be using the iPAQ name for their mobile phones (confirmed by a reliable source) and we’ll keep you informed about the latest and greatest HP news all year round in 2010!

HP Mini 210 selling anyway

HP Mini 210 selling anyway

Well, HP didn’t make any announcement or press release of the HP Mini 210 consumer netbook but it’s almost everywhere on the net already, even some online stores are taking orders. What’s funny is HP also has had a support page for the Mini 210 for a few days now. I wonder what’s up. Anyhow, here are the specifictions of HP’s Atom N450 running, buttonless trackpad sporting netbook for 2010:

  • Intel Atom N450 AKA Pine Trail processor (Single core running at 1.66 GHz)
  • Built in graphics (Integrated)
  • 10.1 inch display
  • 1 DDR2 RAM slot for either 1 GB or 2 GB sticks; model variations supporting DDR3 RAM unconfirmed
  • 2.5 inch notebook hard disk with capacities up to 250 GB
  • Chiclet keyboard first seen on the HP Mini 5101 business netbook; now with super-sized arrow keys
  • Built-in front-facing stereo speakers
  • Button-less trackpad ala HP Envy 13/Envy 15 and Apple’s Macbooks

The HP Mini 210 also has a variety of ports you’ll commonly find on netbooks: including a VGA port, 3 USB 2.0 ports (no powered USB like the Mini 5101 though), audio out port for your headphones/speakers, SD slot and LAN port.

Alert: HP Envy 17, Envy 14, Elitebook 2540p and 2740p in the pipeline

Alert: HP Envy 17, Envy 14, Elitebook 2540p and 2740p in the pipeline

Screenshot from search results: Elitebook 2540p and 2740p, etc listed on HP's website

Spotlight: One of our readers, Dana, has tipped us off about Elitebook 2540p and Elitebook 2740p in the works after spotting a new 9-cell battery available for a “2540p” model on a HP Korea website (Update: I can’t seem to access the page Dana posted, but HP has updated thier list of “notebooks supporting Windows 7″ to include the new Elitebook 2540p and 2740p models).

16:9 displays on Elitebooks: It is currently known that HP’s smaller Elitebook models: the ultra-portable 12 inch Elitebook 2540p, 12 inch tablet PC Elitebook 2740p and medium-sized 14 inch Elitebook 8440p/8440w, will all sport 16:9 widescreen displays which may put a little crinkle on foreheads of people hoping for 16:10 displays. However, thank goodness it seems that HP will maintain 16:10 displays for their larger Elitebooks. If you think of it this way, 16:9 displays with a resolution of 1366 x 768 is slightly wider than current 16:10, 1280 x 800 displays, while sacrificing a mere 32 pixels of vertical reading space. For people frequently opening two programs side by side, this is great news. For those fretting about “scrolling and reading” web pages and documents, well, I can’t change HP’s minds. But you can always look for the “Go fullscreen” option in your browser or program (F11 for Firefox).

Elitebook 8740w news: We have also received confirmation that the HP Elitebook 8740w (17 inch Mobile Workstation) will sport a 16:10 LCD display just like its predecessor, the current 8730w. This comes after Dana found a 16:10 privacy filter (but 15.4 inch? Probably a typo by someone there) with product number AJ358AA for a certain 8740w model. Joy to the world! Looks like potential desktop replacement/mobile workstation buyers WILL get their 1680 x 1050 and 1920 x 1200 extra large displays after all (what did I tell you?! Told you HP won’t do away with 16:10 displays on their 8740w, not when they’ve spent so much effort developing the 17 inch DreamColor panel for 2008′s 8730w).

Alert: HP Envy 17, Envy 14, Elitebook 2540p and 2740p in the pipeline

Envy 14 and Envy 17 listed in document found on HP Korea

Envy 14 and Envy 17: If you liked the Envy 15 notebook but crave for a bigger display, more graphics power and bigger everything, then good news, this document located on HP Korea’s website (don’t worry, the title is Korean but oddly, the text and content of the Excel file is in English; scroll to the very right side to view the new models) reveals that they’re planning for an Envy 14 and Envy 17. Not much is known about the two models now other than their screen sizes: 14 inches and 17 inches respectively. I can, however, make an intelligent/educated guess that the Envy 17 will have a 1080p full HD 1920 x 1080 display while the Envy 14 is likely to “recycle” and share the Elitebook 8440w’s 1600 x 900 panel.

HP Compaq CQ42, CQ62, G42 and G62; Mini 210: The same document listing the Envy 14 and Envy 17 above also show that HP has new stuff for those with smaller wallets and lower budgets for their next notebook. Introducing the new Compaq Presario CQ42/G42 and CQ62/G62 models. As far as I know, the two different names (G and CQ) are just used in different regions/parts of the world, but the notebooks themselves *should* be the same. The HP Mini 210 also makes its appearance in the document, confirming the info posted before Christmas about the Mini 200 series debut from a trusted source.

Probook 6440b and Probook 6540b: Here’s something that most people would overlook. Don’t assume these are the same as the existing Probook 6445b and Probook 6545b on HP’s Probook page. They’re not! I been observing HP’s naming conventions with their notebooks and the last digit indicates the processor used in their business notebooks. “0 (Zero)” used as the last digit equates to an Intel processor, while “5″ points to AMD processor.  The 6440b and 6540b are likely to be the same as their “6x45b” siblings except they will sport Intel’s processors, most likely Core i3.

Improving HP in 2010 (Part 1: Notebooks)

We’ve seen things go up and down, things being said, things being done (and not done) in 2009. And by the end of it all, I have some thoughts to share about how HP should change/improve/maintain in 2010.

HP Mini

Starting with the most basic of portable computers, the netbook, HP’s been doing a good job equipping the Mini netbooks with spacious keyboards and matte screens. In a world of virtually “cloned” specifications sheets in the netbook world, I think the use of matte screens is a good way of  differentiation. After all, not everyone (or, no one?) enjoys the headaches and frustration of looking at a glossy display with a bright light source behind them, yes? The matte display is something HP should definitely maintain or, if they’re ever so tempted to reintroduce glossy displays, leave as an option.

HP Pavilion (Consumer notebooks)

The ultra-portable end of the Pavilion range (consumer notebooks) has been pretty much the main focus, it seems, this year while I feel HP is neglecting their larger Pavilion offerings (14 inch notebooks and up). Seems that HP is “waiting” for Intel to come up with their new Core i3 Mobile and Core i5 Mobile processors before replacing the higher end “Pavilion dv” series with “Pavilion dm” monikers, which is fine. But processors aren’t everything, and people would like to see more improvements. A friend of mine who was recently shopping for a new notebook to replace her aging Dell initially considered HP but finally went with Asus, because the Pavilion dv4 had “only” a Nvidia G105M (while the Asus she bought at the same price had a higher end GT200-series card). Not the first time I heard of such a situation, and I bet it ain’t the last if the situation doesn’t change.

The Nvidia GT230M graphics card in the dv6/dv7/dv8 notebooks are ‘average’ at best and I’ve seen much better in the similarly sized notebooks from competitors. Oh, and before I forget, HP has too much Nvidia love here. They should give buyers a choice of Nvidia OR ATI graphics. And what a better time to offer ATI graphics options when ATI itself is rising up (above Nvidia, yes, in some aspects) with their new 4XXX and 5XXX series graphics cards.

Other features that “would be nice” for consumers to have include options for backlit keyboards (plenty of manufacturers have ‘em), more shiney, glossy “touch” controls above the keyboard (this isn’t something I love, but I think is a must in a world of consumers being attracted to bling and everything touch related). From here out, notebooks are just gonna get thinner, just like how the skinny Kate Moss and “ultra-thin” runway models were once a fad. I think HP might incorporate a slot-loading optical drive into the Pavilion dm4 (if it has an optical drive, that is) to make it slimmer when it comes out to succeed the current Pavilion dv4. Not too sure about the durability/reliability of slot-loading drivers, however, as they can be a pain (both in terms of cost and effort in opening up the entire machine) to replace if they should fail.

On the gloomier side, HP’s consumer notebooks have almost never had good touchpads – slippery, not really precise and occasionally unresponsive. Being an ex-HP business notebook user and currently an owner of a HP consumer notebook, plus having tried all sorts of notebooks (HP or not) from friends and such, I’d take a “plain Jane” single touch, non-glossy/glassy touchpad anytime. And with the advent of gimmicks such as multitouch trackpads (a gimmick IMO, see why), I bet we’re gonna see the touchpad experience on consumer notebooks get even worse. I’m not a big fan of using my dv4 outside my room thanks to its glossy screen (which is why I have my netbook for going out). I can’t see this changing though (see my statement above about bling and gimmicks), and I think we’ll continue to see glossy-screen equipped consumer-level notebooks (Regardless of brand) for quite a while until consumers themselves become self-aware (of why only their television sets had shiney displays initially, and not notebooks).

HP Pavilion HDX and HP Envy (Premium consumer notebooks)

By the looks of it now, the HP Pavilion HDX line is unofficially dead, or dormant, depending on how you look at things. Despite the Envy notebooks taking over as HP’s “luxury” AKA upper-tier consumer notebook series, I think HP could offer the “HDX” moniker as a separate line or upgrade to existing Pavilion notebooks. Of course, the Pavilion HDX series would have to be seated below the Envy line, but who said the changes had to be drastic? The Pavilion HDX series could simply be souped-up versions of their Pavilion counterparts. Kinda like how BMW-Mini offers both standard Mini Coopers and “S” variants (Mini Cooper S) to those who want more than the standard model, but aren’t willing to step up to, say BMW’s 3 series or 5 series sedans, or a fictional Rolls-Royce Mini perhaps. See where this is going? HP could create Pavilion HDX notebooks that look a whole lot like their traditional Pavilion counterparts (maybe with a different lid/keyboard deck design for class differentiation purposes), but with “HD” related upgrades – say a full HD 1080p display, built-in TV tuner and media remote, more dedicated media controls on the notebook itself and even a “HD” webcam isn’t out of the question. So these Pavilion HDX notebooks would satisfy the needs of consumers who ‘want more’, while not bringing adverse effects or cannibalization of the Envy line.

The Envy line, on the other hand, has already quickly defined itself as HP’s “Elite” consumer notebook (or if you’re some Apple freak, HP’s Macbook Pro wannabe). I think the Envy line is an interesting concept as it brings the design and price of the “PC” to points where only “Mac” computers were associated with in the past, while offering better value (note that price and value are two really different things) than their Mac cousins – as seen with the HP Envy 15 which beats any current Macbook Pro to the punch with its full HD display, option for dual SSD drives, Core i7 Mobile processor and a whopping (by portable standards) four DDR3 RAM slots.

The Envy line could only get broader with the intro of a premium ultra-portable Envy 11 and super-sized Envy 17 that you can still actually carry along because of its thin profile (because I’ve seen people carry around their 17 inch Macbook Pro to Starbucks before!). Same concept and styling as the existing Envy 13/15, different sizes. It just works. However, having heard news of an Envy 14 in the works for five months now, I can’t help but question the viability of introducing a 14 inch model. 11 and 17 inches, sure, but a 14 inch model? With the existing Envy 13 and Envy 15 notebooks around and a very small price gap between the two, I wonder how HP is going to position the Envy 14, price and feature wise. It’s likely the Envy 14 will be a mashup of the two existing models – giving people the power of Core i7 and above average ATI graphics in a slightly smaller form factor, 1600 x 900 display and no irritating left-hand-side shortcut keys on the keyboard. Or it could be something completely different. Either way, HP still has a lot of thinking to do in terms of how to price the Envy 14 (with most situations I’ve thought of leading to slashing the current Envy 13′s price tag)

Voodoo PC (Dedicated gaming notebooks)

I have a big fat feeling that 2010 is going to be an interesting year for PC gaming. Not because I recently fell in love with Metal Gear Solid 4 that I played on a friend’s Playstation 3 and I now want to see a PC version, and Konami is bringing their next installment, Metal Gear Solid: Rising to PC. Okay, fine, that’s one of the reasons to be excited for PC gaming (many more titles that were originally “console only” have sequels that are being brought to PC, HURRAH FOR THE WORLD!!). But in terms of the hardware side of PC gaming, a recent blog post by HP’s CTO of Gaming, Rahul Sood, has given me even more reason to believe (read the last line in his 2nd paragraph, that’s a big hint Rahul is dropping) that Voodoo PC will make a comeback in 2010 with a spankin’ new bunch/pair of dedicated gaming notebooks.

While I’m sure desktop gaming isn’t going anywhere, with the introduction of big n’ powerful ATI graphics cards, the impending announcement of Intel’s six-core Core i9 processor, liquid-cooling, upgradeability and such, the mobile gaming market is a fast growing sector. No, I don’t mean PSP Go and iPOD Touch “mobile gaming”… I mean mobile gaming using notebook computers. Not everyone can afford a top-of-the-line, Core i7 packing, Tri-SLI wielding, 10,000 RPM hard disk burning gaming rig. And even if they could, there are some people who just don’t want to drag their massive, expensive rig in the back of their truck every time a friend organizes a LAN party.

I could turn this section alone into an article of its own (which I will, once I recharge my writing and idea juice jar after writing this piece)… but to put it in simple terms for now, gaming notebooks – there’s a market for them. Granted that the Envy 15 is a powerful notebook and that I have friends who indulge in what I call “business notebook gaming” (using business notebooks for gaming, shocking!), there’s no better replacement or alternative to a REAL gaming notebook than… well, a gaming notebook. Look at what Alienware is doing, what Asus is planing (a rumor about their next high end consumer notebook recently cropped up online) and how even Toshiba is marketing their Qosmio notebooks. There’s something going on out there, and it’s very apparent HP wants to be part of it and they have the perfect, established brand under their belt to do it – the Voodoo PC gaming division.

Little is known at the moment about the comeback of Voodoo gaming computers. But whatever they plan to bring next year to the table, I have a gut feeling it’s gonna be exciting. And hopefully they would have figured out a plan to produce and sell such machines to the world by then (remember the time Voodoo’s products were “North America only”?)

Final word

Big things happening as CES 2010 is around the corner. Who knows what we’ll see then? I’ve always seen great potential in HP and have had a good experience with their notebooks (no major issues so far, having tried and tested plenty of their models via various channels). Now all they need to do is convert ideas into actual products and get execution of their plans right (please?!)