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Room with a view: CNET Labs tests the first Vista systems

Matthew Elliott
Matthew Elliott, February 21, 2007

You'll still have to wait a few more days before you see them in stores or for sale online, but we've been lucky enough to sit down with a handful of Vista systems ahead of Microsoft's January 30 consumer release date. While most vendors are still putting the finishing touches on their refreshes and introductions, HP and Toshiba are the first two manufacturers to get us working units for review. And Shuttle just got us its latest home theater PC. HP served up a Pavilion tablet and a totally unique all-in-one desktop, while Toshiba's first Vista laptop is a beautifully crafted convertible tablet.

The HP and Toshiba models show off the new features you'll see from Vista-based systems. Both of HP's units, the Pavilion tx1000 and the TouchSmart PC IQ770, feature a touch screen that doesn't require an active stylus; any old ballpoint pen, or more simply your finger, will do. Toshiba's Portege R400 features a couple bits of unique laptop technology: an OLED status panel along the system's front edge (the Asus W5Fe on display at CES puts Vista's SideShow feature to even better use) and an LED-backlit LCD screen, which produces a bright screen and what we thought would be long battery life. (Sony's VAIO TX line also uses an LED-backlit LCD, and it proudly holds the CNET Labs record for longest-running laptop on a single charge.)

For its part, the Shuttle XPC X200M earns points for it attractive and slim chassis, an important consideration for a system bound for the living room. It also proves that a system of average specs--including a laptop processor, 1GB of memory, and integrated Intel graphics--can run Vista Home Premium with Aero and Flip 3D turned on. We wouldn't call it a dynamo from the scores it posted in the labs, but it'll run Vista with all the bells and whistles you'll want to show off to the person sitting next to you on the couch.

It's too early to make broad generalizations about Vista's effect on overall performance and, in the case of laptops, battery life, but we can say we expected the Toshiba Portege R400 to run longer and faster than it did. The HP systems fared a bit better in the Labs, but neither did much more than meet expectations. Once the floodgates open on January 30 and we begin to test more Vista-based systems, we'll begin to form an opinion on just how resource-intensive Vista is. What's more exciting than benchmark results, however, are the new forms that we'll see desktops and laptops take, not to mention new applications we'll see that will let you take advantage of all of Vista's new features. Stay tuned.

Product name
HP Pavilion tx1000
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HP Pavilion tx1000

Toshiba Portege R400-S4931 (Core Duo 1.2GHz, 2GB RAM, 80GB HDD)
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Toshiba Portege R400-S4931 (Core Duo 1.2GHz, 2GB RAM, 80GB HDD)

Price Check Prices Check Prices Check Prices $1,549.99
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Review date January 07, 2007 January 22, 2007 January 07, 2007 January 08, 2007
The Bottom Line HP's new TouchSmart PC IQ770 is not as fast as Apple's iMac, nor does it have the same clean-lined elegance. It makes up for those problems with intuitive touch screen software you'll actually use and a comprehensive lineup of features. If you're looking for a home PC to organize your family's schedule, or serve up media in a kitchen or another small room, we know of no other system suited so well for the task. Shuttle's updated supersmall home theater PC introduces a few new features to bring it inline with similar diminutive living room PCs. It also came to us with Windows Vista Home Premium. If you're in it for the looks (and you don't want HD video), you'll find a system to like here, but we think you'll be able to find more capable PCs on the market soon. HP's first Vista-based laptop, the Pavilion tx1000us, is an unusual but largely successful hybrid, combining a tablet design with an entertainment-focused laptop. If money is no object for you, the Toshiba Portege R400 is an eye-catching, Windows Vista conversation piece, but the rest of us will want more performance from a system this expensive.
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Features
Optical Storage DVD?RW (?R DL) / DVD-RAM with LightScribe Technology
DVD?RW (+R DL)
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Optical Storage (2nd) None
None
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Cache Per Processor 1 MB ( 2 x 512 KB )
2 MB
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Localization English / United States
Info unavailable Info unavailable Info unavailable
RAM 2 GB (installed) / 4 GB (max) - DDR2 SDRAM - PC2-4200
1 GB (installed) / 2 GB (max) - DDR2 SDRAM - 667 MHz - PC2-5300
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Dimensions (WxDxH) Info unavailable Info unavailable 12 in x 8.8 in x 1.5 in
12 in x 9.4 in x 1.3 in
Cache Memory 1 MB L2 cache
2 MB L2 cache
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Printer None
None
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Hard Drive (2nd) - None
- None
Info unavailable Info unavailable
Dimensions (WxDxH) 21.8 in x 11.4 in x 18.9 in
11.7 in x 8.3 in x 2.2 in
Info unavailable Info unavailable
OS Provided Info unavailable Info unavailable Microsoft Windows Vista
Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium