by Kevin O'Brien
The HP Compaq 2230s is an ultra-portable consumer notebook that is targeted towards small businesses similar to the Dell Vostro or Lenovo SL series line of machines. This notebook gives consumers a less expensive option than the HP EliteBook series, with a starting price of $999 instead of $1,679. How well does the 2230s hold up against business-grade notebooks? Should you purchase one of these or consider a similarly-priced consumer notebook? Let's take a closer look and find out.
Our review unit of the HP Compaq 2230s came with the following options:
- Windows XP Professional
- Intel Core 2 Duo Processor P8400 (2.26GHz)
- 2GB 800MHz DDR2 SDRAM (maximum capacity 8GB)
- 160GB Toshiba HDD (5400rpm)
- 12.1" diagonal widescreen glossy TFT LCD display at 1280x 800 (WXGA, glossy)
- Intel 4500MHD Integrated Graphics
- 8x DVD (+/-R double layer) drive
- Intel Wireless WiFi Link 5100AGN (802.11a/g/n)
- Bluetooth 2.0
- Dimensions: 13.3 x 9.7 x 1.21”
- Weight: 3lbs 14.6oz, 4lbs 11.4oz with AC adapter
- 65W 100-240V AC adapter
- 4-cell (37Wh) Lithium Ion battery
- Price as tested: $1,249 (starting price: $999)
Build and Design
The design of the HP Compaq 2230s is somewhat like a black Apple MacBook, with a clean all-black plastic exterior. As far as business notebooks go, it is HP’s attempt to compete with the Dell Vostro line, offering a more consumer look and feel to a business notebook. The all-black color scheme continues into the interior of the notebook, with the palmrest, touchpad, keyboard, and trim all covered in matching black. An interesting design change over a consumer notebook is the touch sensitive controls above the keyboard which normally activate media functions. On the HP 2230s, these control system functions such as external displays, wireless on/off, and volume.
The build quality turned out to be very unappealing and unlike what we've come to expect from a business or even small business grade notebook. The moment you pick up the 2230s you'll notice a great deal of flex in the screen cover from very thin unsupported plastic. Opening up the notebook you find the same thing around the main chassis, with weak plastic surrounding the keyboard. The palmrest has plenty of flex on either side, with the side above the optical drive being the worse of the two. On the optical drive side you have flex on the palmrest as well as the bottom shell when gripping the notebook from the side. The notebook feels more like a budget consumer notebook than a small business notebook with a starting price of $999. The only real advantage of the thin plastic material used is the total notebook weight is kept at a minimum. Unfortunately, the thin plastics don't give this notebook a feeling of durability.
Display
The glossy WXGA display on the HP Compaq 2230s is pretty nice, with vibrant colors and high contrast. Black levels are average with some grey apparent in dark settings depending on the angle you are viewing the panel. Vertical viewing angles are adequate for regular day-to-day use, but colors invert when outside of the 10-15 degree up or down sweet spot. Horizontal viewing angles are better, keeping colors true even to the very edge of being able to still see the screen from the side of the notebook. Brightness levels are above average, enough to comfortably view the screen in a bright office setting. Using the notebook outside would be limited with the glossy display because of reflections, but should be fine as long as you are under shade.
Keyboard and TouchpadThe keyboard could be considered one of the redeeming factors of this notebook, offering a very comfortable typing surface with very solid support. Unlike the screen cover, palmrest, or case, the keyboard exhibits no flex at all ... even under strong pressure. Individual key action is smooth with a muted click when fully pressed. Key spacing and size is excellent even with the small 12” form factor. The only part I feel could be improved is the size of the function keys, which are almost 1/3 the overall size of a standard key.
The touchpad is a Synaptics model, with a smooth matte texture surface that is seamless with the palmrest. The size is great without feeling cramped, offering plenty of space even with the scroll bar section. The touchpad buttons have a long throw offering soft feedback with no audible clicks.
Performance and Benchmarks
System performance with the Intel P8400 processor and 2GB of memory with Windows XP was great. The notebook had excellent boot and shutdown times, and showed no signs of lag throughout day-to-day applications. Graphics performance was limited with the Intel 4500MHD integrated chipset, but the advantage of the integrated chipset is greater battery life. If you were looking to spice up your day at work with a game or two, older games such as Half-Life would run very well on the slower graphics found inside this notebook.
Another potentially performance-related feature worth mentioning is that HP provides a Windows Vista license and offers business customers the option of keeping Vista installed on the notebook or having a "custom install" of Windows XP direct from the factory. For those businesses that still prefer to run their office network with Windows XP machines, this is an important feature you won't find on consumer notebooks.
wPrime is a program that forces the processor to do recursive mathematical calculations, the advantage of this program is that it is multi-threaded and can use both processor cores at once, thereby giving more accurate benchmarking measurements than Super Pi.
Notebook / CPU wPrime 32M time HP Compaq 2230s (Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 @ 2.26GHz) 35.484 Lenovo T400 (Intel Core 2 Duo T9600 @ 2.8GHz) 27.410s Lenovo T500 (Intel Core 2 Duo T9600 @ 2.8GHz) 27.471s Lenovo T61 (Intel Core 2 Duo T7300 @ 2.0GHz) 42.025s Dell Vostro 1500 (Intel Core 2 Duo T5470 @ 1.6GHz) 53.827s HP Pavilion dv6500z (AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60 @ 2.0GHz) 40.759s Systemax Assault Ruggedized (Core 2 Duo T7200 @2.0GHz) 41.982s Toshiba Tecra M9 (Core 2 Duo T7500 @2.2GHz) 37.299s HP Compaq 6910p (Core 2 Duo T7300 @ 2GHz) 40.965s Sony VAIO TZ (Core 2 Duo U7600 @ 1.20GHz) 76.240s Zepto 6024W (Core 2 Duo T7300 @ 2GHz) 42.385s Lenovo T61 (Core 2 Duo T7500 @ 2.2GHz) 37.705s Alienware M5750 (Core 2 Duo T7600 @ 2.33GHz) 38.327s Hewlett Packard DV6000z (Turion X2 TL-60 @ 2.0GHz) 38.720s
PCMark05 comparison results:
Notebook PCMark05 Score HP Compaq 2230s (2.26GHz Intel P8400, Intel 4500MHD) 3,945 PCMarks Lenovo T400 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, ATI Radeon 3470 256MB GDDR3) 6,589 PCMarks Lenovo T400 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, Intel X4500) N/A Lenovo T500 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, ATI Radeon 3650 256MB GDDR3) 7,050 PCMarks Lenovo T500 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, Intel X4500) 5,689 PCMarks Lenovo T61 Standard Screen (2.0GHz Intel T7300, NVIDIA NVS 140M 256MB) 4,839 PCMarks Dell Vostro 1500 (1.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5470, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 3,585 PCMarks Dell Inspiron 1420 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 4,925 PCMarks Sony VAIO FZ (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 3,377 PCMarks Dell XPS M1330 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 4,591 PCMarks Lenovo ThinkPad X61 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 4,153 PCMarks Lenovo 3000 V200 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 3,987 PCMarks Lenovo T60 Widescreen (2.0GHz Intel T7200, ATI X1400 128MB) 4,189 PCMarks HP dv6000t (2.16GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400) 4,234 PCMarks Sony VAIO SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400) 3,637 PCMarks
3DMark06 comparison results:
Notebook 3DMark06 Score HP Compaq 2230s (2.26GHz Intel P8400, Intel 4500MHD) 712 3DMarks Lenovo T400 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, ATI Radeon 3470 256MB GDDR3) 2,575 3DMarks Lenovo T400 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, Intel X4500) 809 3DMarks Lenovo T500 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, ATI Radeon 3650 256MB GDDR3) 4,371 3DMarks Lenovo T500 (2.80GHz Intel T9600, Intel X4500) 809 3DMarks Lenovo T61 Standard Screen (2.0GHz Intel T7300, NVIDIA NVS 140M 256MB) 1,441 3DMarks Dell Vostro 1500 (1.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5470, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS) 1,269 3DMarks Dell Inspiron 1420 (2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7500, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS 128MB) 1,329 3DMarks Sony VAIO FZ (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 532 3DMarks Dell XPS M1330 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS 128MB) 1,408 3DMarks Samsung Q70 (2.0GHz Core 2 Duo T7300 and nVidia 8400M G GPU) 1,069 3DMarks Asus F3sv-A1 (Core 2 Duo T7300 2.0GHz, Nvidia 8600M GS 256MB) 2,344 3DMarks Alienware Area 51 m5550 (2.33GHz Core 2 Duo, nVidia GeForce Go 7600 256MB 2,183 3DMarks Fujitsu Siemens Amilo Xi 1526 (1.66 Core Duo, nVidia 7600Go 256 MB) 2,144 3DMarks Samsung X60plus (2.0GHz Core 2 Duo T7200, ATI X1700 256MB) 1,831 3DMarks Asus A6J (1.83GHz Core Duo, ATI X1600 128MB) 1,819 3DMarks HP dv6000t (2.16 GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400) 827 3DMarks Sony VAIO SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400) 794 3DMarks HDTune storage drive performance test:
Speakers and Audio
Speaker performance was limited, with poor bass and midrange, and low peak volume levels. For watching the occasional streaming news clip or YouTube video they would work just fine, but for movies and music your best bet is a nice pair of headphones.
Audio output quality was great with my Sennheiser HD80 headphones connected. Peak volume levels were well above anything I would want to listen to.
Ports and Features
The HP Compaq 2230s offers an impressive amount of features for a notebook with integrated Intel graphics. It offers three USB ports, HDMI and VGA out, ExpressCard/34 and multi-card reader, an optical drive, and modem and network connections. Being the small business notebook that it is, the 2230s also has a touch-sensitive panel to quickly access monitor out features, the HP Info Center, wireless on/off, and volume controls.
Left: AC Power, LAN, Modem, one USB, Optical drive
Right: ExpressCard/34, Mutli-Card Reader, HDMI, two USB, VGA, Kensington Lock SlotHeat and Noise
The cooling system on this notebook worked very well, keeping the system cool to the touch even while it was under a stressful load. Under battery power the system fan remained off the majority of the time, only spinning up if you were doing something processor intensive. The moment you plug the machine into AC power the fan turns on at low speed, which could best be described as a quiet drone. While benchmarking the system the fan noise increased quite a bit, but it kept system temperatures in check.
Battery
Battery performance was good considering the stock battery in the HP Compaq 2230s is only a 4-cell 37Wh model. This is probably the smallest battery found in a business notebook, and has no upgrade path to a larger battery. In our testing the average power draw from the notebook settled around 9 watts under a standard load. With the screen brightness set to 60 percent, wireless enabled and active, and the power profile set to "Portable/Laptop" the HP Compaq 2230s managed 3 hours and 30 minutes before it shutdown at 5 percent remaining. For a business notebook of this size we would normally expect a larger battery and battery life exceeding five hours.
ConclusionThe HP Compaq 2230s is a conservative-looking notebook with some features targeted towards small business users. Unlike most business or small business notebooks, this notebook doesn’t offer the rugged feel, only a rugged look. The plastic used throughout the design is weak even when compared to the HP Pavilion lineup. While the keyboard is impressive, it doesn’t outweigh the lackluster build quality. For small businesses my best recommendation would be to look at notebooks such as the HP Pavilion tx2500z or stepping up to the HP EliteBook series.
Pros:
- Solid keyboard
- Nice touchpad and soft touch buttons
- VGA and HDMI output with Intel 4500MHD integrated graphics
- Excellent cooling system
- Availabile with Windows XP for customers who still want it
Cons:
- Flexible chassis
- High price considering configuration and durability
- 4-cell battery option only
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dietcokefiend DietGreenTeaFiend
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Needmore4less Notebook aficionado
Hmmmm...
Horrible and expensive laptop,.
Thanks for the review Kevin. -
nice looking cheap feeling yuck
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Thanks for the review, especially the 3dmark. I had hoped the 4500MHD would hold its weight, but it's looking no.
I was super curious about this laptop when I first heard about it: low cost, ultraportable size and built in optical.
But thanks to notebookreview I know the shortcomings of this little machine. Thanks again. -
it looks very cheap
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It strangely reminds me of my Vostro 1400.
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Nice review on a not-too-hot laptop. Just out of curiosity, should we choose our own standard for what is ultra-portable instead of just using whatever the manufacturers slap on it to make it more appealing? 3lb 15 oz, despite the 12.1" screen, is not exactly ultra-portable nowadays. For 3 oz more, you can easily get a cheap 13.3" powerhouse like Sony SR and HP dv3500t...
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Ahbeyvuhgehduh Lost in contemplation....
Well ... maybe if there were better battery options such a thing could begin to be considered ... but ... as is?
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Good review! It's actually kind of nice to see a review that's isn't overly positive sometimes.
I'm quite surprised that the build quality is lacking, considering it's an HP. I guess $999 for a 12.1" notebook is just too good to be true. It certainly is the case with the 2230s. The sad thing is, they almost got this notebook right! All they had to do was step up the build quality several notches and provide higher-capacity battery options. Then it could have been a real winner! -
Charles P. Jefferies Lead Moderator Super Moderator
Nice review - it's a rarity to see a computer running XP these days.
I always thought HP had too many notebooks in their business lineup, so if it wasn't for the review I would not even know about this machine.
If I was going to buy a small notebook, I'd be looking at an ASUS N10. -
I absolutely hate hate hate the touchpad buttons. They don't make any noise, but they also don't depress like a normal button. The top part stays and the bottom moves, so your finger wants to bend 90 degrees the wrong way every time you press them. Hate it. I liked the design, loved the keyboard. Too bad about the flex eh?
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Even though the build quality and performance is not that great, I might still be interested in this notebook. The low power dissipation implies it has the potential to be fairly quiet and this is a priority for me. Apparently this is realized under battery operation but if I understand the review, the fan is always running when plugged in. This is unacceptable. Is there any way to prevent this, possibly a bios option or by setting the notebook to run in a low power mode in the power options? Is there anything you could add to your review in terms of noise level for this notebook?
Good review, thanks! -
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very nice review thank you
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Thanks....was interested in this notebook until you mentioned the build quality issues. Sure it looks good in the store, but once I checked for the flex, I was turned off.
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"Glossy" display???
I saw this exact model in the store the other day, and was pleasantly surprised that the screen was MATTE.
Makes wanna doubt the reviewer actually seen the machine in person, let alone tested it. -
FatMangosLAWL Notebook Evangelist
It just looks like a matted, smaller, duller, Compaq CQ50. Here: http://www.swamilaptops.in/images/Compaq Presario CQ50-107AU.jpg
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Chrixx. You're right. They actually do have 2 options for the screen.
Kudos to HP on that. It's a rare thing these days. -
dietcokefiend DietGreenTeaFiend
I think plenty of people know me well enough here that they realize I tear into notebooks and am as far from a "review by specs" person as possible. -
thanks for the review but I am trying to find of the noise of this laptop is loud?
Thanks for your help
F
HP Compaq 2230s Review
Discussion in 'Notebook News and Reviews' started by dietcokefiend, Oct 24, 2008.