HP Pavilion dv6500t

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35 reviews

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HP Pavilion dv6500t
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CNET Editors' Review

The good: Includes HD DVD drive and HDMI port; touch-sensitive media controls; 802.11n Wi-Fi; good component mix for the price.

The bad: Some options (including HD DVD drive) not available yet; disappointing battery life.

The bottom line: HP's attractive Pavilion dv6500t is a well-designed 15-inch multimedia laptop that stands out from the mainstream crowd with touch-sensitive media controls and an HDMI output, but the standard battery could be better.

Review:

With an eye toward multimedia users, HP's family of dv-branded Pavilion laptops have always combined eye-catching design with cool features such as touch-sensitive media controls and dual headphone jacks. We're partial to 17-inch desktop replacements such as the Pavilion dv9500t--we'd happily trade a bit of portability for a larger screen in such an entertainment-oriented machine--but if you're looking for more of a compromise between screen real estate and total travel weight, the 15-inch dv6500t delivers nearly all of the features found on its larger cousin, including Intel's refreshed Centrino Duo mobile platform (formerly known ... Expand full review

With an eye toward multimedia users, HP's family of dv-branded Pavilion laptops have always combined eye-catching design with cool features such as touch-sensitive media controls and dual headphone jacks. We're partial to 17-inch desktop replacements such as the Pavilion dv9500t--we'd happily trade a bit of portability for a larger screen in such an entertainment-oriented machine--but if you're looking for more of a compromise between screen real estate and total travel weight, the 15-inch dv6500t delivers nearly all of the features found on its larger cousin, including Intel's refreshed Centrino Duo mobile platform (formerly known as Santa Rosa). Our somewhat expensive review unit included high-end extras such as an HD DVD drive, but stripped down, the system starts at less than $1,000. Even at its base of $950, the Pavilion dv6500t is hard to beat for a basic multimedia laptop.

Price as reviewed / Starting price $1,769 / $949
Processor 2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500
Chipset Intel 965
Memory 2GB, 667MHz
Hard drive 200GB 4,200rpm
Graphics Nvidia GeForce 8400M GS
Operating system Vista Home Premium
Dimensions (wide x deep x thick) 14.0 x 10.25 x 1.5 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 15.4 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 6.3 / 7.3 pounds
Category Mainstream

Looking like a shrunken version of the larger 17-inch dv9500t, the dv6500t retains HP's signature silver-and-black chassis, with a silver keyboard tray and touchpad and a black keyboard and screen bezel. The lid features one of HP's subtle imprint designs, which breaks up the plain black finish without being distracting or showy.

The dv6500t is about the same size and weight as other recent 15-inch laptops we've tested, such as the Toshiba Satellite A205 or the Gateway E-475M, but the 15-inch mainstream laptop is quickly losing ground to models with 14.1-inch screens (like Gateway's E-265M), trading a little screen real estate for lighter, smaller cases and better design, saving almost a full pound in many cases. But for music and video use, a 15-inch offers a more immersive experience, and this particular system stands out for that purpose thanks to eye-catching design and media-friendly features.

As an entertainment-oriented laptop, the dv6500t features a glossy screen, good for viewing video files and gaming. The 15.4-inch wide-screen LCD display offers a 1,280x800 native resolution, which is standard for a screen this size. The black screen bezel also helps the image pop off the screen.

Besides a fingerprint reader to the right of the touchpad and a Webcam above the screen, the HP Pavilion dv6500t has a row of touch-sensitive media controls above the keyboard. With those you can launch HP's QuickPlay program (a Media-Center-style application), play or pause media files, and control the volume with the brush of a fingertip. While not unique to HP, these capacitive touch controls are a staple of the company's entertainment laptops.

  HP Pavilion dv9500t Average for mainstream category
Video VGA-out, S-video, HDMI VGA-out, S-video
Audio Stereo speakers, two headphone jacks, microphone jack Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks
Data 3 USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, multiformat memory card reader 4 USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, multiformat memory card reader
Expansion ExpressCard PC Card slot
Networking modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g Wi-Fi, optional Bluetooth
Optical drive HD DVD drive DVD burner

The Pavilion dv6500t has a fairly typical collection of ports and connections, with a couple of key extras, including an HDMI output and an HD DVD drive. We also liked the addition of both Bluetooth and a new 802.11n Wi-Fi antenna, which together cost only $45 more than plain old a/b/g Wi-Fi.

The HD DVD drive isn't actually available yet, but it should add around $400 to the system's price when HP finally adds it to the online configurator. Other upgrades that bumped up our review unit's price include a 200GB hard drive ($190 more than the default 80GB drive) and 2GB of RAM, a fairly reasonable and recommended $75 upgrade over the standard 1GB.

We're not particularly bullish on next-gen optical drives in laptops in any case--the discs have yet to reach critical mass, and the differences between SD and HD DVDs on a laptop screen are not as pronounced as they would be on a 50-inch plasma screen--but if you want one right away, currently available options include the Blu-ray-equipped XPS M1710 and Toshiba Qosmio G35-AV660, which is an excellent multimedia laptop with an HD DVD drive.

Our review unit fits the specs for Intel's revamped Centrino Duo platform (previously known as Santa Rosa), by way of its 2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500 processor, Intel 965 chipset, and an Nvidia GeForce Go 8400M GS graphics chip. Both CPU and GPU are a notch up from the highest-end specs currently available on the HP Web site, but should be available shortly.

Compared to other systems from the first round of Santa Rosa laptops, the HP Pavilion dv6500t performed as expected on CNET Labs' Multimedia multitasking, Photoshop CS2, and iTunes encoding tests. It only fell seriously behind the HP Pavilion HDX, which featured Intel's fastest laptop CPU, the 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7700. In real-world use, it ran fine, even when multitasking, but we'd expect nothing less from a modern laptop.

For gamers, the 128MB Nvidia GeForce Go 8400M GS graphics chip means that while the dv6500t won't match a gaming laptop such as the HP Pavilion HDX, you can get some decent gaming scores out of it at lower resolutions. While we could only get a somewhat choppy 23.8 frames per second (fps) out of Quake 4 at 1,024x768, once we turned off high-end features like anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering, the frame rate jumped to a very playable 47.5fps.

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Average User Rating

2.5 stars out of 35 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 11
  • 4 star: 7
  • 3 star: 1
  • 2 star: 8
  • 1 star: 8

My Rating

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Most Helpful User Review

4.5 stars 6 of 6 users found this review helpful

"A must have for every laptop enthusiast" By us97233

Pros Very quiet, great cpu throughtput, nice design, good construction, screen is brilliant, graphic card is not bad either (GF8400M GS), Very quiet HDD

Cons Comes with Vista, BIOS is lacking the options for a true power user, poor driver support for XP, poor battery life (standard 6 cell0

Summary Many people complain about the quietness of this machine: I got to say it runs VERY QUIET. Under medium usage (web browsing and some HDD activity) the fan won't even spin. It will make some noise when you tax the CPU though but nothing that should be unconfortable for ... Expand full review

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