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 Location:  Home » Servers » Laptop Computers » HP Pavilion TX2510US 12.1-inch Laptop (2.10 GHz AMD Turion X2 ZM-80 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 250 GB Hard Drive, DVD Drive, Vista Premium) Black  

HP Pavilion TX2510US 12.1-inch Laptop (2.10 GHz AMD Turion X2 ZM-80 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 250 GB Hard Drive, DVD Drive, Vista Premium) Black

HP Pavilion TX2510US 12.1-inch Laptop (2.10 GHz  AMD Turion X2 ZM-80 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 250 GB Hard Drive, DVD Drive, Vista Premium) Black

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Brand: Hewlett-Packard
Category: Personal Computer

List Price: $1,375.00
Buy New: $964.98
You Save: $410.02 (30%)



New (8) Refurbished (2) from $799.99

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 24 reviews
Sales Rank: 52

Color: Black
Media: Personal Computers
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: Yes
Operating System: Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit
CPU Manufacturer: AMD
CPU Speed: 2.1
CPU Type: AMD Turion 64
Processors: 2
System Memory: 3000
Memory Type: DDR2 SDRAM
Hard Drive Size: 250
Display Size: 12.1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 8.8
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 12.1 x 1.5

MPN: FE912UA
Model: TX2510US
UPC: 884420154266
EAN: 0884420154266
ASIN: B0019HGU0M

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • 12.1-inch (Diagonal) Widescreen Integrated Touch Screen, Convertible Display 1280 x 800, Panel Rotates 180 Degrees and Folds Flat
  • 2.10 GHz AMD Turion X2 ZM-80 Ultra Dual Core Mobile Processor with 2 MB L2 Cache
  • 3072 MB DDR2 System Memory (2 Dimm), 250 GB (5400RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics RS780M with 64 MB DDR2 (Sideport Memory) with up to 1470 MB Total Graphics Memory
  • LightScribe Super Multi 8X DVDR/RW with Double Layer Support, Wireless LAN 802.11a/b/g/n and Bluetooth
  • Windows Vista Home Premium, dims in inches: 8.82 (W) x 12.05 (L) x 1.52 (H) approx., 4.56 lbs.

Accessories:

  • SwissGear Black Rolling Briefcase (Black)
  • SwissGear Black Rolling Computer Briefcase (Black)
  • SwissGear Computer Backpack (Gray/Red)
  • SwissGear Computer Backpack (Dark Gray/Light Gray)
  • SwissGear Computer Backpack (Black/Light Gray)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
For those whose active lives require constant access to high-performance, easy-to-use computing and communication tools, the HP Pavilion TX2510US Entertainment Notebook PC provides the ideal convergence of these features with exceptional entertainment options. And it's light enough to take everywhere! Its 12.1? screen twists 180 for presentations and DVD playback - and folds flat to enable the convenience of capturing hand-written notes and drawings. Interact directly with your system using your finger or stylus. Erasing notes on your screen is just like using a pencil: flip the pen over and erase! Use Windows Journal to take notes as you would on notebook paper. The TX2510US can convert handwriting into typed text and is perfect for a person who's always on the go! Staying in touch has never been easier with the integrated HP Webcam. With AMD Turion X2 dual core mobile technology and the same viewable screen content as a 15.4" system, the TX2510US provides all the power and performance of a mainstream notebook PC without the additional weight. 12.1? diagonal WXGA (1280 x 800) BrightView Widescreen Touch-screen display, Panel rotates 180 degrees and folds flat ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics RS780M with up to 1470 MB Shared Graphics Memory Built-in Webcam and Microphone LightScribe Super Multi 8 x DVD+-R/RW Drive with Double Layer 802.11A/B/G/N Wireless 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN Bluetooth Fingerprint reader 5-in-1 Bridge Media Adapter - MMC, SD, MS, MS Pro, xD ExpressCard 34 Slot 3 x USB 2.0, Headphone out; SPDIF Digital Audio, Microphone-in, VGA, TV-Out (S-Video), RJ-11 (Modem), RJ-45 Approximate Unit Dimensions - 8.82? (L) x 12.05? (W) x 1.52? (H) Approximate Unit Weight - 4.56 pounds (with weight-saver)


Customer Reviews:   Read 19 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Powerful lil beast!   December 1, 2008
This is my third tablet PC and my second HP Tablet PC. I LOVE this smaller tablet PC! It's smaller than the Toshiba tablet PC I previously owned. I replaced my HP tx1000 generation HP Tablet PC since this tablet PC is WACOM Pen enabled, is faster, has a larger hard drive and... well... my husband swiped my other HP tablet PC (the tx1000 version)! ;-)

I travel extensively for work and am taking a number of college courses (online) for my degree. When I'm home I'm often waiting for many hours with a parent undergoing regular chemo treatments. This laptop is PERFECT in nearly every way - it's so versatile I can use it nearly anywhere.

Pros:
This tablet is pen enabled, need I say more? When frustrated or needing a break from school I can whip the tablet around and play Mahong Tiles using the touch screen. The battery serves as a great "handle" when using the laptop in this mode such as when waiting at the airport or for my parent in chemo. It's also great for web surfing or reading long articles in this mode - as I find is often required in my coursework. Putting the tablet in this mode is also very useful for watching movies - which can be conveniently stored on the large capacity hard drive. Whatever you heard about Vista - toss those thoughts out the door. I've not had one issue with Vista. It does have a learning curve, but there are so many added features and STABILITY that I really have come to enjoy this OS. Additionally, despite it's smaller size, this laptop has GREAT video quality and the keyboard is easy to use despite being smaller than traditional laptop keyboards.

Cons:
I wasn't able to get the fingerprint reader to work on either of my HP tablets. I also heard this frustration repeated from employees at Circuit City one day browsing laptops for a friend. Others have told me their fingerprint reader has never given them any issue at all. I suspect it's simply my technique - since this feature isn't important to me so I haven't pursued this further.

All in all, this is a great laptop that I would recommend to anyone who travels extensively or otherwise needs a smaller, lightweight but powerful laptop all in a convenient package with more bells n whistles than a traditional laptop. In fact, I would recommend this tablet PC to ANYONE seeking a traditional laptop PC. The price is reasonable for all the included features and convenience.




1 out of 5 stars BEWARE - DO NOT BUY!!!   November 27, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

I have the better version of this product (2.2GHz CPU) and its been a week now!! I don't know whom should I blame?! HP? AMD for the useless CPU? or Microsoft for their useless VISTA?? Internet explorer always freeezes, and/or laptop suddenly restarts, CPU always overheats and I mean it gets REAAAAAALLLY HOT (I thought the screen will melt) - overall performace is very poor and slow. You can not multi task (can't play music while brwosing the net for example - browser will freeze more often) you can not even open 2 - 3 internet explorer pages simultaneously. Just trust me and avoid disappointment - DO NOT BUY THIS ITEM (I wish I could return it back, I would even accept to loose $300 and get the rest of my money back). One other general comment, if you use your laptop more than 45minutes at a time, do not buy a laptop with touch screen - they hurt your eyes.


4 out of 5 stars HP PAVILION TX 2510US   November 27, 2008
I purchased the Tablet PC about a month back and am getting to
know the various features.It is of course light especially when compared to my previous 17 inch HP pavilion dv8213cl .The handwriting recognition is very good and i believe it is supposed to get better with time.The display especially when viewing photos is not as crisp as with my bigger laptop.The battery life leaves a little to be desired and i might have to go with the six or eight cell battery to improve usage time.Other than that i have no complaints so far.It is reasonably priced and I would definitely recommend it to anyone.


HP Pavilion TX2510US 12.1-inch Laptop (2.10 GHz AMD Turion X2 ZM-80 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 250 GB Hard Drive, DVD Drive, Vista Premium) Black



4 out of 5 stars Good Value   November 26, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I bought this laptop to have a portable but full featured complement to my 17" laptop and am generally quite satisfied with it.

Here's a summary of the pros and cons:

Pro's

Small form factor

Although the touch screen support makes the lid somewhat bulky and heavy for a device of this size, the overall small footprint still makes it ideal for carrying around unless you have an absolute aversion to weight.

Touch Screen

Unlike previous models, this one supports both active and passive touch meaning that for simple things like pushing buttons you can use your fingers but for fine drawing you can use the included stylus (which fits into a handy slot in the laptop). I have used both options and especially like the ability to bring up a program like Photoshop and rather than having to touch up photos using the mouse, be able to directly do it on the screen with high precision. I would love to see more applications designed to be driven completely by fingers as well.

Fit and Finish

Overall the screen is very bright and has good resolution. The cover is susceptible to fingerprints but otherwise looks very nice. The silver keyboard is nice (but note caveat below). The function keys are too small but probably to be expected given the form factor. The ability to flip the screen around is great but it would be nice if you could turn it in either direction as the viewing angle is small so I finding myself rotating the whole unit to the left to allow someone on my left to see the screen.

Fingerprint Reader

I've grown to like this feature. It does often take more than one swipe but it works and it's definitely more convenient than having to type in a password.

SD Card Slot

Speaks for itself

Other Components

I have no complaints about the DVD drive or Wireless b/g/n/bluetooth adaptor. They all appear to do their job well.

Speed

While not extremely speedy,it's not bad. I think Vista is to blame for most of it's issues. Once an application is fully launched and loaded in RAM, I've found it adequate for all but very demanding work (e.g. video editing). I would not buy a unit like this for editing AVHCD. Just not fast enough. But for everyday use including graphics it's fine.

Cons

Heat Generation

I was hoping that in the seven years since I bought my last laptop that the chip manufacturers would have figured out how to significantly reduce heat generation but such is not the case. The back right corner of this unit can definitely run hot. Furthermore, half of the vent is on the side of the unit, making it more awkward to keep unobstructed when holding it on your lap

Keyboard/Touch pad finish

The silver finish on the keyboard and touch screen is nice but it's just a finish. Already it has worn off of one of the touch pad buttons and I can imagine in a few years time the keyboard will start to look bad. Perhaps I will be able to by replacement key caps when that occurs

Music Skips

I have so far been unable to use this machine for listening to iTunes. It skips and chatters on a regular basis, even if I just sit there and don't run anything else or touch the keyboard. I tried downloading the latest sound drivers and Quicktime/iTune versions to no avail. HP help is a joke. After explaining and re-explaining several times, the person finally recommended I restore my system to factory configuration. Besides meaning dozen's of hours of re-installing software and setting up Vista the way I like it, this also wouldn't accomplish anything that I can see.

Battery Life

The battery life is not terrible (around 3 hours for my normal use which doesn't include playing DVD's). It's just disappointing that after all these years there appears to have been no significant improvement in battery life. It would be great if manufacturers provided a simple charging stand like I have for my power tools so that when one battery gets low you could just switch to another and put the first one to recharge. This would allow virtually continuous use with any cables.

Vista

I've made peace with Vista but would not be inclined to recommend it. Start Up is very slow -- a definite step backward from my XP based 17" laptop. You will spend a lot of time telling it it's OK to make some change. In some ways this is comforting but in others simply annoying.
Microsoft has an annoying practice of experimenting with the UI with no apparent regard for whether users actually consider it an improvement. I end up reverting most everything to the classic set up. Another annoyance is it's default shut down mode of "Sleep". It uses up battery time while not appreciably reducing start up time. I have to continually change this to shutdown.




1 out of 5 stars Slow Laptop with Major Annoyances   November 17, 2008
 4 out of 9 found this review helpful

In a nutshell, this was my first ever AMD-based PC. But I can guarantee that it will be the last. It will also likely be my last HP laptop.

When I was on the lookout for a tablet PC, the HP TX-1000 stood out like a Christmas tree in terms of the price. It was less than half of any other tablet PC on the market. So even though HP has absolutely no pedigree in creating tablets (and I'll tell you why shortly) the price alone made for a compelling reason to consider it. The more I looked at it, the more attracted I got to it. Add to that situation the fact that I had very recently acquired an HP desktop, which had totally blown me away with its presentation (especially over Dell). It was so much better (in every possible way) than Dell - at a cheaper price that I started thinking that it was possible that sometimes you did get more than you paid for. I thought HP had once again finally arrived as a serious player in the PC arena.

And then came this HP laptop, very rudely yanking me into the realm of reality. Boy, was I ever mistaken about the company. Did I ever jump the gun on passing a judgment. Was I ever wrong about getting more than you pay for. At the risk of sounding repetitive, this HP laptop jolted me into an extremely rude awakening. I can't say enough about what a HUGE disappointment it was to me.

Speed. First of all, the laptop was just plain slow. It's the slowest computer I have ever used. Ever. It's relatively even slower than the iMac I had some ten years ago (back then, the iMac was - relatively speaking -- the slowest computer I had ever owned, and was annoying enough that I returned it after two weeks of slow running, crashing, and not finding any software that ran on it). For something that claims to be a using a 64-bit processor and 2 GB of RAM, this laptop crawls slower than a sick turtle. After a few weeks of tweaking around, I found the reason for that - the AMD Turion and HP's sorry excuse of a motherboard. My venerable Dell m700 (with Celeron and 1 GB of RAM) easily outperformed this manifestation of lethargy in any number of performance tests and I/O benchmarks that I had created (from real-life scenarios in which I was using both the laptops). So then, I came to the conclusion that the only reason HP was selling AMD was so that it could sell a tablet PC for half the price of its competitors.

Wireless. The second reason for relentless vexation was the wireless card. It would just randomly stop working every now and then, and would never work again until I rebooted the laptop. I called HP and had the card replaced. That solved the problem enough so that it doesn't happen quite as often, but it still happens once in a while. However, I was to later learn (as recently as a few weeks ago) that I was one of the lucky few who actually got it working (even if it was not a complete cure) with a replacement card. The issue seems to run much deeper than the card itself. In fact, if you go to HP forums, you will hear constant noise about how the wireless problem breeds from a sinister defect in the motherboard, and how every laptop they've ever released in this series actually will eventually stop working (usually a couple of months after the warranty expires). I am now starting to see other signs that indicate that mine's only a few weeks (if not days) from that fate (see the "spooky turning on" a few paragraphs down). Another reason this laptop is so cheap - HP compromised on the motherboard, as well as the wireless card.

BIOS. I have had laptops going back to my old Quantex (dating back to 10 years ago), that used to have BIOSes smart enough to tell when the battery was about to run out of juice. They would then warn if you tried to start your laptop on low battery. On the flip side, they WOULDN'T warn if your battery was charged a 100%. This brilliant offering from HP, on the other hand, keeps warning you even if you just replaced your depleted battery with a fully charged battery. I am so used to this basic functionality in all my other laptops that when I replace my battery on the train, turn it back on and go back to my phone to check messages, I come back a minute or two later and expect that I am at the log on screen. But to my utter exasperation, I find each time that I am still stuck at the annoying BIOS message that warns me of a LOW BATTERY!!! So the laptop simply won't go ahead and boot unless I hit the Enter key. I can't imagine how much time I have wasted due to this. (Moreover, I probably lost a couple of years of my life due to the rise in blood pressure, and my already precarious spot in a good place in the afterlife due the choice curse words I have uttered each time.)

But if that's an annoyance, what it does when the battery is low is downright scary. When the battery is 25% or lower, and you start the laptop not knowing how much battery is remaining, it starts up without warning you at all. But that's not the problem - in fact, it's a good thing. The problem is, it just dies when the battery reaches critical mass, without EVER attempting to hibernate (as my laptop is configured to). It just goes poof - and SHUTS DOWN! Just like that! That means all my unsaved work up until that point is completely lost. It happened to me twice before I realized what insidious bug was causing the problem. I have now started keeping track of the battery levels when I hibernate the laptop, never turning it back on if the level was below the 25% level at the time of hibernation.

Another annoying thing about the BIOS is that over the past two weeks, it just randomly turns on! I don't recall doing anything to it. Randomly, in the middle of the night, the laptop just turns on! It could be some weird wake-on-LAN setting that got tweaked, or maybe my laptop is about to die (like the other ten thousand or so owners), or it's possessed by evil spirits. But it just turns on and wakes me up almost every night! Of course, when it happens in the middle of the night, I'm too sleepy to resolve the issue. When I'm wide awake, I forget to investigate. As a result, the problem has continued for the past two weeks.

Track Pad. The track pad in its initial setting was unusable. Even after month of tweaking, the base of my thumb would keep touching the pad and make the cursor jump to another part of the document. It was small enough a problem, but annoying enough that at one point, I wanted to return the laptop. I finally hit the sensitivity setting that resolved this issue.

Active/Passive Pen & the Display. One of the biggest disappointments was the fact that the TX-1000 does not use an active pen to do its tablet work. That was another way HP managed to cut costs and make the tablet seem like a no-brainer over the other vendors, at least in terms of the price. The fact is, the passive pen is absolutely useless, and the touch screen very insensitive. In fact, at times, I have had to press so hard that I'm almost afraid that I might end up breaking the screen! An active pen is a thing of beauty, and a joy to behold. It comes with features such as mouse moving with a hover, the ability to erase text with the opposite side of the pen (as with a regular pencil on paper), and the pleasure of writing effortlessly on the screen. You get none of that with HP's TX-1000.

In any case, the "passive" pen technology has been around for ages in all the Pocket PC's, which work impeccably with a stylus (I've owned the renowned (and my favorite HP hardware) HP Jornada 548, The Dell Axim, Samsung i730, and most recently the AT&T Tilt - which BTW also work pretty well with just your thumb). On top of that, every one of the pocket PC's have had a crisper, brighter display. And none of them ever showed the underlying touch grid on the screen. I could barely see it on the Samsung, and that too, only if I stared hard in broad daylight. But it was never a distraction. On this laptop, the display is terrible. It's faded, low contrast, and shows the underlying grid even in moderate lighting (such as on a train), which turns out to be a major distraction. In broad daylight, working with this laptop is not recommended. I have since gotten used to this and have swallowed it like a bitter pill.

So if those things aren't bad enough already, consider the regular litany of annoying HP software/crapware that arrogantly starts up with Windows (msconfig.exe has become my best friend ever since I started buying off-the-shelf PC's). HP is arguably the worst software producer of all. HP software is only mildly benign than a virus. What makes it more dangerous than all the other free garbage out there is the sanctimonious attitude with which they add it in there. "Oh, you probably don't know what you're doing. Therefore, here's our offering to protect you from yourself." When in fact 90% of all problems are caused by the software starting up on Startup. It's ironic that when I was speaking with an HP tech for resolving my wireless issue, the first thing he made me do was turn off all the "crap" that loads up at Windows Startup. WITHOUT EXCEPTION, every one of the apps/utilities we turned off were from HP.

So why did I even bother to give it one star? Several reasons:
1.I couldn't rate it any lower ;-).
2.The full-size keyboard is decent.
3.Contrary to what I had expected, the swiveling hinge which connects the screen to the rest of the laptop is pretty solid and doesn't rattle on the train, as some of my skeptical friends had predicted.
4.I upgraded it to Vista Ultimate, and everything worked smoothly. In fact, after the upgrade (and applying SP1), the laptop has been slightly more stable.
5.I just like Vista better than XP in most respects (but that has absolutely nothing to do with the laptop).
6.Unlike the ten thousand or so poor devils out there who own the TX series, my wireless issues almost got resolved, and my laptop is still breathing.

So the one thing I did learn was, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Then there was this other little gem that reinforced itself - you get what you pay for.



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