Conclusion: Good Start, But Needs Refinement

HP's TouchSmart 610 is the first all-in-one I've personally reviewed, so bear with me here. The form factor makes this an unusual type of product that may force an individual to seriously think about how they use their computers. My frame of reference? My grandmother has an all-in-one (on my recommendation, actually), and my mother actually loves touch interfaces on her computers. It's not for me, but it's definitely for certain users, and I suspect they're people who just want a simple system they can set up and enjoy.

So how does the TouchSmart 610 fare in that regard? Simplicity is key and unfortunately it's a spectacular failure on HP's site in that regard. The configuration options on the hard drive are actually counterintuitive (why not just a 1.5TB or 2TB 7200-RPM hard drive?), and the graphics options are eye-crossingly convoluted. Offering last generation parts really doesn't help, in fact the only current generation parts are the Radeon HD 6450A and 6550A, the latter of which at least almost makes a case for rebranding since at least you have some idea of where it stands in relation to its peers.

Thankfully, all-in-ones are very simple to set up and use, but again I can see this hard drive just murdering the user experience and I'm beginning to seriously believe that for a touch interface to work and feel truly responsive in Windows 7, an SSD is that much more vital--SSD caching at the very least would be a great addition. There's space inside the TouchSmart 610 for an mSATA SSD, and at $1,399 that space really should be employed. Ignoring my gripes with touchscreen technology in general, I feel like HP's TouchSmart is a good start but again marred by both the storage bottleneck and by Microsoft's lackadaisical touch implementation. However you feel about Metro in Windows 8, touchscreen all-in-ones desperately need it.

For the asking price, the 610 feels unbalanced. I think in an enterprise market or deployed commercially, especially with that kiosk style slide, the price makes more sense (and you do get a two-year warranty standard as opposed to the usual one) and the 610 becomes compelling almost entirely by virtue of being the only touchscreen all-in-one that really does that. It doesn't exactly feel cheap physically, either, and it runs cool enough. Under those circumstances, I can definitely see someone picking it up.

On the other hand, John Q. Public is probably going to be better served somewhere south of the TouchSmart 610 in HP's line. The TouchSmart 520xt loses the cute hinge and a bit of CPU horsepower, but offers cleaner graphics options and better hard drive choices. Starting at $999 it may be a superior choice, but we don't know anything about the screen quality. If a good screen is important to you, there's the 610xt, which sports the hinge and thus likely the screen while being cheaper than the 610 Quad Edition we reviewed here (as it also starts at $999), but you have to field the confusing configuration options in the process.

I do sincerely think there's a future for all-in-ones, and the HP TouchSmart 610 is certainly a good one with some innovative thinking behind it. If that's the sort of thing you or someone you love is looking for, and you know the trade-offs, the 610 could be a good choice.

User Experience, Heat, and Power Consumption
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  • ABR - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    That's all I have to say.
  • GotThumbs - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    Whats the point of including an i7 and 8 gigs of ram when your running the OS off a drive with turtle speed? At least include a decent WD Black/Blue drive or better yet.....Run the OS off a separate SSD and use the Turtle drive for media storage.

    I still prefer building/upgrading my own systems, but this would be a decent unit for the kitchen. I'd be even more interested if they offered this with an AMD APU at a much lower cost. I just don't see the value in offering this product at such a high price.

    Good review though.
  • shin0bi272 - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    While I was working on an iMac in 1999 I noticed that it didnt have a floppy drive. forward thinking sure but all the boot disks that we had for that version of the mac os were on floppy and cd burners were really expensive. So while it was forward thinking it also screwed its customers and the techs trying to repair one hit by lightning.
  • Roland00Address - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    When you use a TN panel with a touchscreen, and you actually touch the panel the image distorts where you touch it.

    IPS does not have this limitation, this is why many touchscreen phones use IPS panels over the cheaper TN, furthermore IPS have better viewing angles.

    PLS is a variant of IPS that Samsung has come out with.
  • Death666Angel - Thursday, November 3, 2011 - link

    I don't really understand you. Any touch screen of course needs a layer of glass or something else that is between the panel/pixels and the finger, because if you touch any open LCD, the image distorts.
  • shashank7040 - Thursday, November 3, 2011 - link

    Great.....

    Asus Eee Pad is the first Android tablet with slide out QWERTY.....................http://goo.gl/B4rJU
  • Samus - Thursday, November 3, 2011 - link

    Really HP? REALLY!?

    Why didn't you just put a 7200RPM 2.5" in there if you were concerned about heat/power!? This is just stupid. Why bother pairing the fastest CPU on the market up with the slowest hard drive?
  • Snotling - Thursday, November 3, 2011 - link

    they wanted to save a dollar on each system sold.

    Really, the difference in heat and power draw nowadays is close to non-existent and of course, at least on 2.5 HD... which I hope is what they used right?

    What... They didn't??? those stinking bastards!
  • Snotling - Thursday, November 3, 2011 - link

    "The HDMI input is great,"

    not so great if you consider that you have two of them (or so it seems) and no VGA, HDMI or otherwise method of plugging in a second display, projector or whatever...

    please... laptops half this size have had it for decades.

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