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HP Evo N620c (Pentium M 1.4 GHz, 256 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD) (discontinued)

HP Evo N620c (Pentium M 1.4 GHz, 256 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD)

Entered CNET Catalog: 05/14/2003

SKU: DE264A#ABA

Manufacturer: HP

Manufacturer description

Thin and light, the Evo Notebook N620c is the ultimate balance of mobility and technology. A combination of magnesium alloy and reinforced composite material creates a notebook that will withstand the rigorous mobile user environment. The Intel Pentium M Processor and 855PM chipset are the backbone of the Evo Notebook N620c performance. The ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 graphics controller with DDR (double data rate) SDRAM provides high-performance graphics able to handle the most demanding 2D and 3D graphics applications. The MultiPort solution expands the functionality through user-removable MultiPort modules that can provide integrated wireless communications and enhanced security features. The Evo Notebook N620c makes it easy to stay connected with an industry standard integrated 56K (V.92) modem, integrated 10/100/1000 NIC, and optional wireless MultiPort or PC Card devices. The MultiBay accepts a variety of removable media drives such as DVD/CD-RW combo drive, DVD, CD-ROM, as well as a second battery, hard drive, or floppy drive. Lithium-Ion battery technology and advanced power management give the N620c up to 6 hours run-time on the primary battery and up to 10 hours when the optional MultiBay battery is added.

CNET editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 03/06/2003
Companies big and small turn to Hewlett-Packard's Compaq Evo line to equip their workers with notebooks. The N600 series of thin-and-light systems looks bland at first blush, but these notebooks are sturdy, thanks to their magnesium frame, and can stand up to daily abuse. The Evo N620c has two components that make up Intel's new Centrino architecture: the Pentium M (PM) processor and the corresponding Intel 855 mobile chipset. But Compaq opted for a wireless chip from Agere, rather than Intel's version. The Evo N620c is nothing to sneeze at elsewhere; its 1.5GHz PM processor; 40GB, 5,400rpm hard drive; and 512MB of RAM offer serious performance at a price that's noticeably lower than that of other Pentium M notebooks. Make no mistake: this is one serious notebook that's ready for work. Clothed in a basic black, textured-plastic case that covers a superstrong magnesium frame, the Compaq Evo N620c is utterly anonymous, save for a few blue-and-silver accents.

Its tidy, squared-off appearance helps it blend into a boardroom, an airline club, or an office cubicle. At 1.4 by 12 by 9.8 inches and 5.5 pounds, the Evo N620c is trim and portable, too. Its modest power adapter adds just 8 ounces. If you leave the optical drive at the office and use the empty weight-saver module, the Evo N620c can hit the road at a svelte 4.8 pounds; that's within 1 ounce and just fractions of an inch of Toshiba's Tecra M1.



The Evo N620c design leaves beauty to be desired, but it's very businesslike.


The Evo's MultiPort is handy but creates an unsightly bulge.


A bulge on the right side of the N620c conceals the system's MultiPort module, which houses the Evo's wireless-data radio, but alternatively and at an added cost, it can accommodate a Bluetooth short-range communications device. Because Compaq uses Agere wireless hardware rather than Intel's Calexico (an Intel Pro Wireless mini-PCI card), the Evo N620c can't use the Centrino name or logo. That's not a major problem, except that the complete Centrino package should make for slightly better battery life.

The Evo's single-bay design can accommodate a wide variety of devices, from optical drives to a floppy drive, a hard drive, or a second battery. Unfortunately, although the drives are supposedly hot-swappable, in our tests, the optical module didn't quite fit properly. The secondary battery fit like a glove, however, and boasted a convenient five-LED power gauge.




Drives that fit in this bay are hot-swappable, but we wrestled with the optical module.


The keyboard is precise, with a bit too much flex and not enough key depth.


With 19.3mm keys, the N620c's keyboard is precise, quiet, and sharp, but it flexes when the typing gets intense, which can lead to missed keystrokes. Worse, its keys have a scant 2mm of depth, making it hard on the fingers. While the white-on-black lettering doesn't work well in dark environments, the Evo N620c offers both a pointing stick and a touchpad for those who can't decide which they hate more. Whether it was charging, running full blast, or sitting idle, the Evo N620c we tested kept cool with a single, quiet fan on the bottom that ran intermittently.


If the design of the Evo N620c is unmemorable, its features and configuration are hard to forget. This notebook combines the speed of a thoroughbred with the work ethic of a draft horse. Our test model featured Intel's new, battery-friendly Pentium M processor, running at 1.5GHz; a high-performance 40GB hard drive that spins at 5,400rpm; and 512MB of 266MHz memory chips. If that's not enough, you can configure the N620c with a 1.6GHz processor, a 60GB drive, and up to 2GB of RAM.

The N620c lags only in graphics; its ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 graphics accelerator is a generation out-of-date, and the 32MB of video memory it carries comes up short. Still, we found the Evo's XGA resolution on a 14.1-inch screen to be sharp and crisp. The system can show 2,048x1,536 resolution in full color on an external monitor. One quirk: during our testing, we found that the keyboard brightness-adjustment key had little or no effect on the screen.

The Evo N620c's ports are a handy mix of old and new. You'll find two Type II PC Card slots and a pair of USB 2.0 plugs, as well as the mundane but useful parallel, serial, and PS/2 outlets and an S-Video plug. The system has communications covered, with a V92 modem, a gigabit Ethernet, an Agere 802.11b (Wi-Fi) data radio--as opposed to the Centrino-completing Intel minicard--and an IR port in the front. On the other hand, none of the outlets are covered, and like the Dell Inspiron 600m, the Evo N620c lacks a FireWire port for high-speed data movement.



Note the missing FireWire port, available only with an add-on port replicator.


You can't yet add a DVD drive to the Evo N620c.


Compaq offers the choice of two port replicators for those who shuttle between desk and hotel. Both come with AC adapters. The $150 basic port replicator includes Ethernet, serial, parallel, two PS/2, two USB 2.0, external monitor, DVI, and FireWire ports, as well as audio in and out, S-Video, composite video, and S/PDIF. The $250 advanced port replicator adds two MultiBay slots for extra devices and an extra USB outlet; it can't charge a bay battery, however.

Our test N620c came with a capable and moderately swift 24X/8X combo CD-RW/DVD drive. Currently, Compaq doesn't offer a DVD burner for the Evo N620c.

In the sound category, the Evo N620c packs an optical S/PDIF connector to link it with a set of high-end speakers or a digital amplifier. We found this to be odd for a business notebook; most business users don't need or want beefed-up sound. The system's keyboard-mounted speakers delivered audio that, unfortunately, sounded louder than it should have in our tests and was quite distorted. The N620c also includes a sophisticated Andrea noise-reduction microphone, but we couldn't discern any reduction when recording voice, even with heavy background static.

In keeping with its business audience, the Evo N620c comes with little software other than Windows XP Professional. We particularly appreciated Compaq's wireless utility, which, like XP's built-in option, helps you detect and connect to a wireless network. Compaq's version includes a task-tray icon that puts Microsoft's software to shame; it's much easier to use, with tasks all in one place, and it includes a recorder and a graphic equalizer. The HP Mobile Printing program remembers settings for the last 10 devices used.


Mobile application performance
Compared to most of the thin-and-lights based around the Pentium M architecture, the Compaq Evo N620c demonstrates impressive mobile performance. The 1.5GHz Pentium M-based system beat the Dell Latitude D600 and the IBM ThinkPad T40, both of which include the 100MHz-faster 1.6GHz Pentium M processors. It's also very swift compared to non-Pentium M notebooks. Still, the Compaq Evo N620c comes nowhere near the performance of the Acer TravelMate 803LCi, which had the best mobile performance of any Pentium M we've tested so far.

Mobile application performance  (Longer bars indicate faster performance)
BAPCo MobileMark2002 performance rating  
Acer TravelMate 803LCi
211 
Compaq Evo N620c
178 
Dell Latitude D600
176 
IBM ThinkPad T40
164 
 
SysMark2002 performance
Although the Compaq Evo N620c came in last in maximum performance, it still had an impressive showing: its overall score was only one point lower than those of its two closest competitors, the Dell Latitude D600 and the IBM ThinkPad T40. The Compaq Evo N620c's office-productivity score was actually a few points higher than those of its two closest competitors, thanks to its fast 5,400rpm Hitachi hard drive. The N620c's Internet-content-creation score suffered a bit in comparison, most likely because of its slightly slower 1.5GHz processor. That said, that the Compaq Evo N620c turned out a solid showing.

Maximum application performance  (Longer bars indicate faster performance)
BAPCo SysMark2002 rating  
SysMark2002 Internet content creation  
SysMark2002 office productivity  
Acer TravelMate 803LCi
186 
199 
174 
Dell Latitude D600
172 
196 
153 
IBM ThinkPad T40
173 
192 
156 
Compaq Evo N620c
172 
186 
159 
 
To measure maximum notebook application performance, CNET Labs uses BAPCo's SysMark2002, 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 performance
As always, the 3D score comes down to the quality of the graphics adapter as well as the speed of the CPU. In the case of the Compaq Evo N620c, its ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 32MB graphics adapter and 1.5GHz Pentium M becomes a double-edged sword. The system's specs just cannot compare to the combination of the ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 32MB and the 1.6GHz Pentium M, which other Pentium M thin-and-lights use. Though it came in last place, the Compaq Evo N620c still offers decent, although below-average, 3D performance compared to its Pentium M brethren.

3D graphics performance  (Longer bars indicate faster performance)
Futuremark's 3DMark2001 SE  
Acer TravelMate 803LCi
6,365 
IBM ThinkPad T40
4,985 
Dell Latitude D600
4,624 
Compaq Evo N620c
3,871 
 
To measure 3D graphics performance, CNET Labs uses Futuremark's 3DMark2001 SE. We use 3DMark to measure desktop-replacement notebook performance with the DirectX 8.1 interface at the 32-bit color setting at a resolution of 1,024x768.

Find out more about how we test notebook systems.


System configurations:

Acer TravelMate 803LCi
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 64MB; Toshiba MK6022GAX 60GB 5,400rpm

Compaq Evo N620c
Windows XP Professional; 1.5GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 32MB; Hitachi DK23EB-40 40GB 5,400rpm

Dell Latitude D600
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 32MB; IBM Travelstar 40GNX 40GB 5,400rpm

IBM ThinkPad T40
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 32MB; IBM Travelstar 80GN 80GB 4,200rpm


All of the Pentium M thin-and-lights that we tested showed impressive battery life--each system lasted at least four hours, which is a lifetime compared to the two-hour average of non-Pentium M thin-and-lights. The Compaq Evo N620c stayed alive for more than four and a half hours, a very impressive score for such a fast system. This is due in part to the system's powerful 14.4V, 4,400mAh battery as well as its slightly slower 1.5GHz processor. Like the other Pentium M systems, the Compaq Evo N620c exemplifies great battery life.

Battery life  (Longer bars indicate longer battery life)
BAPCo MobileMark2002 battery life (in minutes)  
IBM ThinkPad T40
416 
Acer TravelMate 803LCi
289 
Compaq Evo N620c
274 
Dell Latitude D600
242 
 
To measure mobile application performance and battery life, CNET Labs uses BAPCo's MobileMark2002. MobileMark measures both application performance and battery life concurrently using a number of popular applications (Microsoft Word 2002, Microsoft Excel 2002, Microsoft PowerPoint 2002, Microsoft Outlook 2002, Netscape Communicator 6.0, WinZip Computing WinZip 8.0, McAfee VirusScan 5.13, Adobe Photoshop 6.0.1, and Macromedia Flash 5.0).

System configurations:

Acer TravelMate 803LCi
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 64MB; Toshiba MK6022GAX 60GB 5,400rpm

Compaq Evo N620c
Windows XP Professional; 1.5GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 32MB; Hitachi DK23EB-40 40GB 5,400rpm

Dell Latitude D600
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 32MB; IBM Travelstar 40GNX 40GB 5,400rpm

IBM ThinkPad T40
Windows XP Professional; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 32MB; IBM Travelstar 80GN 80GB 4,200rpm


The Compaq Evo N620c comes with a generous, business-friendly, global three-year warranty. The clumsy ones among us can add a $368 policy that covers all types of accidental damage.

While Compaq hadn't yet completed its manual when we looked at the Evo N620c, the company's Web site is an enormous resource with drivers, updates, and patches, as well as a convenient list of authorized service centers. Oddly, the list of notebooks on the technical-support page doesn't include Evo models, but that's likely a long-lived outcome of the merger between Compaq and HP. The well-attended online discussion group has answers to questions that you might not even think to ask, and the HP engineers who staff the site are rated by the users, so you know whose advice to trust more. At any time--day or night--you can e-mail or call in problems, but you'll have to pay for the call (e-mail is free).

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

User Rating: 8/10

The Best Laptop I Ever Had

Pros: This is Very Fast. I use it for Audio and Video Encoding, Decoding, Editing, etc.

Cons: Does not have FireWire (I use a PCMCIA Card) and Wireless (Currently using Linksys USB54GC). Don't have a DVD Burner (I purshased it and have a second drive (Lite-On DX20A4H)).

Review: This is Very Fast (At least for me). I'm using Linux now and it is performing excellent. It also works perfectly on Video Editing and it is fast on video Encodings. I'm currently using a Western Digital 2.5 250GB HDD and I have a transfer rate of up to 25MB/s. I Would Recommend this for everyone to do simple tasks and for encodings.

User Rating: 8/10

A very solid notebook, built to last.

Pros: Great keyboard, good screen resolution. Cheap Pentium M option. Simple but striking looks.

Cons: External Multiport wifi, needs better gpu,

Review: This is a solid utility laptop which can still hold it's own despite being equipped with yesterday's technology. It is a testament to how revolutionary the Pentium M processor is, where even the older Banias cores still run many contemporary without problem. The bottleneck of this machine is obviously the gpu. While the Radeon 7500 is respectable, it is still inferior to many machines equipped with more robust video cards such as the radeon 9xxx series that come with dell latitudes at a similar price range. Still, this is a great first or second hand laptop and will serve well in a you well in several tasks.

The keyboard is a joy to type on, and the screen resolution is surprisingly high for it's size, with some models equipped to be comfortably viewed at 1440x1050.

Wifi does not come standard, however, and the unit does run a little hot.

User Rating: 4/10

thin and light but gets too hot

Pros: thin, light, good software

Cons: very hot, low battery life (for centrino)

Review: its a convenient size and has a good resolution of 1400*900, for sharp images.
BUT... The notebook gets too hot so it is impossible to work with it on your lap. my audio in jack stopped working. My hard drive failed after 1 year and had it replaced (for free). Battery life was about 3 hours, and after 1 year of mediocre battery use, computer now shuts down after 10 mins...
I switched to an ibook, also because i beleive in the power of MAC OS X!

User Rating: 3/10

hard disk slow and unsuitable to such pricy unit

Pros: Thin

Cons: Hard disk very slow, defragmentation when half full takes 24 hours at least.

Review:

User Rating: 8/10

Great All Around Notebook

Pros: The Evo notebook is a great buy, many great features. But no DVD/RW option. The one I have right now is 1.6 Ghz Processor, 512MB , 60 GB hard drive with DVD-CD/RW and works great so far. Battery life is about 4-4.5 hours depending on applications used. Th

Cons: No firewire, no 802.11 b/g, older video card on most models.

Review:

User Rating: 6/10

After 2 weeks of use

Pros: this machine rocks. I still wish it had firewire and an sd card slot...and a better video chipset. But i also wish i had range rover too! Performance - outstanding Battery - outstanding features - see above Durability - Evo line is bulletproof Warranty

Cons: Compaq/HP merger may screw up support and service. Getting info form the joint hp/compaq is like pulling teeth.

Review:

User Rating: 8/10

Good solid quick - recommended

Pros: Very fast, Battery life checked-4.5 hours. Light. Has a seril port! This is very important! Great support.

Cons: When unplugged from AC sourse Laptop is very sloooow. Would like to see all ports on the side of laptop not on the back. Ir port is inconviniently in the front.

Review:

User Rating: 6/10

Sturdy and Dependable

Pros: I have bought from this line of Compaq gear for years and they have proven themselves sturdy and dependable. They can take a pounding and still continue to deliver.

Cons: It looks like the merger of compaq and hp has brought innovation to a stand still with this product line :( Where's the dvd burner? SD memory? Firewire? DVI-I output? 802.11a/g capability? Why are they using 3 year old video chipsets? We've start to ev

Review:

Tips on HP Evo N620c (Pentium M 1.4 GHz, 256 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD)

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HP Evo N620c (Pentium M 1.4 GHz, 256 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD) specifications

  • General
  • Recommended Use Corporate business , Small business
  • Built-in Devices Stereo speakers
  • Width 12.1 in
  • Depth 9.8 in
  • Height 1.2 in
  • Weight 4.9 lbs
  • Color Black
  • Localization English / United States
  • Processor
  • Processor Intel Pentium M 1.4 GHz
  • Data bus speed 400.0 MHz
  • Processor features Enhanced SpeedStep technology
  • Chipset type Intel 855PM
  • Cache Memory
  • Type L2 cache
  • Cache size 1.0 MB
  • RAM
  • Installed Size 256.0 MB / 2.0 GB (max)
  • Technology DDR SDRAM - 266.0 MHz
  • Memory specification compliance DDR266/PC2100
  • Environmental Parameters
  • Min Operating Temperature 50.0 °F
  • Max Operating Temperature 95.0 °F
  • Humidity Range Operating 10 - 90%
  • Shock Tolerance 10.0 g @ 11ms half-sine pulse (operating) / 60.0 g @ 11ms half-sine pulse (non-operating)
  • Vibration Tolerance 0.5 g @ 10-500 Hz (operating) / 1.0 g @ 10-500 Hz (non-operating)
  • Max Altitude Operating 9840.0 ft
  • Storage Controller
  • Storage controller type IDE
  • Storage
  • Floppy Drive None
  • Hard Drive 40.0 GB - 5400.0 rpm
  • Storage Removable None - None
  • Hard drive type Portable
  • Optical Storage
  • Type DVD-ROM - Plug-in module
  • CD / DVD read speed 24x (CD) / 8x (DVD)
  • CD / DVD write speed 24x
  • CD / DVD rewrite speed 8x
  • Optical Storage (2nd)
  • 2nd optical storage type None
  • Display
  • Display Type 14.1 in TFT active matrix
  • Max Resolution 1024 x 768 ( XGA )
  • Widescreen Display No
  • Color Support 24-bit (16.7 million colors)
  • Video
  • Graphics Processor / Vendor ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 AGP 4x
  • Video Memory DDR SDRAM - 32.0 MB
  • Audio
  • Audio output type Sound card
  • Audio Input Microphone
  • Input Device(s)
  • Input device type Touchpad , Pointing stick , Keyboard
  • Telecom
  • Modem Fax / modem - Mini PCI
  • Max transfer rate 56.0 Kbps
  • Protocols & Specifications Bell 212A , ITU V.32 , ITU V.22 , ITU V.21 , ITU V.92 , ITU T.30 , ITU V.8bis , ITU V.29 , ITU V.34 , ITU V.32bis , ITU T.4 , ITU V.251 , ITU V.250 , ITU V.22bis , ITU V.17 , ITU V.27ter , Bell 103J , ITU V.90
  • Fax Compatibility G3
  • Networking
  • Networking Network adapter
  • Data link protocol Gigabit Ethernet , Ethernet , Fast Ethernet
  • Remote management protocol SNMP
  • Networking standards IEEE 801.1p , IEEE 802.3u , IEEE 802.3i , IEEE 802.3ab
  • Expansion / Connectivity
  • Expansion Bays 1.0 x Front accessible
  • Expansion Slots Total (Free) 1.0 ( 1.0 ) x CardBus - Type III (2 x type I / II) , 2.0 ( 1.0 ) x MultiPort , 1.0 ( 1.0 ) x Memory
  • Interfaces 1.0 x Serial - S-video output - RJ-45 , 1.0 x Display / video - VGA - 15 pin HD D-Sub (HD-15) , 1.0 x Keyboard / mouse - Ethernet 10Base-T/100Base-TX/1000Base-TX - RJ-11 , 1.0 x Display / video - IEEE 1284 (EPP/ECP) - 4 pin USB Type A , 1.0 x Audio - Generic - Mini-phone mono 3.5 mm , 1.0 x Network - Line-out/headphones - Mini-phone stereo 3.5 mm , 1.0 x Infrared - RS-232C - IrDA , 2.0 x Audio - Line-in/microphone - 4 pin mini-DIN , 1.0 x Parallel - Phone line - 6 pin mini-DIN (PS/2 style) , 1.0 x Docking / port replicator - 25 pin D-Sub (DB-25) , 1.0 x Hi-Speed USB - 9 pin D-Sub (DB-9) , 1.0 x Modem
  • Miscellaneous
  • Features Memory change alert , Ownership tag , Power-on password , DriveLock , Security lock slot (cable lock sold separately) , Administrator password
  • Compliant Standards ACPI , APM 1.2
  • Power
  • Power device form factor External
  • Voltage Required AC 120/230 V
  • Power provided 65.0 Watt
  • Battery
  • Technology Lithium ion
  • Installed Qty 1.0 / 2.0 (max)
  • Battery capacity 4400.0 mAh
  • Mfr estimated battery life 6.0 hour(s)
  • Recharge time 2.0 hour(s)
  • Operating System / Software
  • OS Provided Microsoft Windows XP Professional
  • Software Drivers & Utilities , InterVideo WinDVD , Altiris eXpress , Compaq Diagnostics , Adobe Acrobat Reader , QuickRestore , Compaq Easy Acces Buttons Software
  • Manufacturer Warranty
  • Service & Support 3 years warranty
  • Service & Support Details Limited warranty - Parts and labor - 3 years
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