HP Pavilion Media Center M1050y Photosmart (Pentium 4 3.2 GHz, 1 GB RAM, 250 GB HDD)
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CNET Editors' Review
The good: Removable, hot-swappable hard drive; good overall performance; nine-in-one memory-card reader.
The bad: Expensive with the top-of-the-line Pentium 4 560 processor; working inside the case will prove difficult.
The bottom line: The HP Media Center m1050y Photosmart PC offers a cool hard drive feature, but the system is too pricey with its top-of-the-line Pentium 4. Dial back the processor a notch or two, and the system is one we'd recommend wholeheartedly.
| BAPCo SysMark 2004 rating | SysMark 2004 Internet-content-creation rating | SysMark 2004 office-productivity rating |
To measure application performance, CNET Labs uses BAPCo's SysMark 2004, an industry-standard benchmark. Using off-the-shelf applications, SysMark measures a desktop's performance using office-productivity applications (such as Microsoft Office and McAfee VirusScan) and Internet-content-creation applications (such as Adobe Photoshop and Macromedia Dreamweaver).
3D graphics and gaming performance
With ATI's midrange Radeon X600 Pro graphics card, which uses the new PCI Express interface, the HP Media Center m1050y Photosmart PC has the graphics horsepower to handle the Media Center chores of watching and recording TV, editing photos and displaying slide shows, and even working on some light video editing. The X600 Pro provides mainstream gamers with acceptable frame rates at lower resolutions, but a high-end graphics card is a requisite if you're looking for a Media Center PC that can moonlight as a serious gaming machine. For example, the Dell Dimension 8400 uses the high-end Radeon X800 XT Platinum Edition card, and it turned in much higher scores on our Unreal Tournament 2003 test than the m1050y did.
| Unreal Tournament 2003 Flyby-Antalus 1,024x768 | Unreal Tournament 2003 Flyby-Antalus 1,600x1,200 4XAA 8XAF |
To measure 3D gaming performance, CNET Labs uses Epic Games' Unreal Tournament 2003, widely used as an industry-standard benchmark. We use Unreal to measure a desktop's performance with the DirectX 8.0 (DX8) interface at a 32-bit color depth and at resolutions of 1,024x768 and 1,600x1,200. Antialiasing and anisotropic filtering are disabled during our 1,024x768 tests and are set to 4X and 8X, respectively, during our 1,600x1,200 tests. At this color depth and these resolutions, Unreal is an excellent means of comparing the performance of low-end to high-end graphics subsystems. We report the results of Unreal's Flyby-Antalus test in frames per second (fps).
Performance analysis written by CNET Labs technician David Gussman.
Find out more about how we test desktop systems.
System configurations:
Dell Dimension 8400
Windows XP Home; 3.6GHz Intel P4 560; Intel 925X chipset; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 256MB ATI Radeon X800XT PE (PCIe); two Seagate ST3160023AS 160GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA; integrated Intel 82801FR SATA RAID controller
HP Media Center m1050y Photosmart PC
Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004; 3.6GHz Intel P4 560; Intel 915G chipset; 1,024MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 256MB ATI Radeon X600 Pro (PCIe); Maxtor 7Y250M0 250GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA
Polywell Poly 939VF-FX53
Windows XP Professional; 2.4GHz AMD Athlon 64 FX-53; Via K8T800 Pro chipset; 1,024MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 256MB Nvidia GeForce FX 5900XT (AGP); two WDC WD740GD-00FLX0 74GB 10,000rpm Serial ATA; integrated WinXP Promise FastTrak 579 controller
Shuttle XPC G2 7500M
Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004; 3.4GHz Intel P4; Intel 875P chipset; 1,024MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 256MB ATI Radeon 9800XT (AGP); WDC WD2000JB-00FUA0 200GB 7,200rpm
Sony VAIO VGC-RA810G
Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004; 3.4GHz Intel P4 550; Intel 915G chipset; 1,024MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB ATI Radeon X600XT (PCIe); Maxtor 7Y250M0 250GB 7,200rpm Serial ATAWhether you choose to customize the HP Media Center m1050y Photosmart PC using HP's Web site or you prefer one of the three ready-to-ship models, you'll get a system backed by a standard one-year parts-and-labor warranty that you can upgrade to two ($84.99) or three years ($99.99). You can also opt for additional accidental damage protection, which covers you in case of physical accident or damage due to a power surge. Or you can just go whole hog and buy the three-year Total One Solution, which gives you additional coverage on peripherals, automatic priority call routing, and direct-to-your-doorstep pickup and delivery.
HP offers 24/7, toll-free tech support in English and Spanish for the life of the system, or you can e-mail tech support. HP's online support is fairly robust, offering self-help tools, FAQs and manuals, how-to tutorials, and driver downloads organized by product. Simply type in Media Center m1050y, and you'll be directed to a support area tailored to your new system. There is, however, no live support chat like that provided by a few major direct vendors. Hide Review
User Reviews
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stars 3 of 3 users found this review helpful
"Problems increasing - support terrible" By
Pros Nice idea. Seemed like a good package with plenty of features for business work and multimedia - MIDI, audio, video.
Cons Not as well integrated as it might seem. The first unit arrived dead. The replacement at least booted up. Then I discovered they left off the game port so I had to buy a new USB midi adapter instead of using my exisintg game port model. Support seeme
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