Conclusion: Mixing the Bag

Expectations are strange things. As reviewers we try to be unbiased, but we aren't really immune to being excited about or nervous about a product coming in for review. Consequently, a promising product that turns out to be nearly everything you hoped for can get a fairly glowing review, but a promising product that falls short of expectations can quickly turn into a diplomatic exercise. The surprisingly decent Acer Aspire V5-171 and the HP EliteBook 2170p are two notebooks in the same form factor and performance profile, but they're addressing two very different markets. One of these is better equipped to compromise than the other.

Where HP's EliteBook 2170p generally excels is in durability and flexibility. HP includes all the ports you could really need in an ultraportable, and they back it up with a reasonably solid chassis. It's not quite as firm as the other notebooks in their EliteBook lineup, but that owes to the smaller form factor and generally lighter body. The keyboard is pleasant to use, and though the surface space is limited, the touchpad at least has a comfortable feel to it. I'll almost never turn down a matte finish on a display, either.

Unfortunately, things go awry when you get down to brass tacks. While HP's support page is actually excellent, featuring a single executable that houses all the drivers for the notebook, performance in practice is less pleasant due to the sluggish mechanical hard drive and lack of at least an SSD cache. Battery life is also stunningly poor with the 4-cell battery. And while I like the aesthetic HP is using for their enterprise notebooks right now, it's utterly ill-suited to an ultraportable like this. This is an ultrabook that's had the fat trimmed off the sides and reattached to the bottom. I'm not talking about weight, either, but actual bulk. The 2170p could and should have been thinner.

I don't think the price tag on the 2170p is that terrible provided the 25% off eCoupon is in place, but I have a hard time really recommending this notebook regardless. That's rough, because HP isn't presently offering a solid alternative to it. The Folio 13 was a pretty solid ultrabook when it was available, but their new Folio is a 14" model and half a pound heavier. What we end up with is the only 11.6" business class notebook that showed up to the party, so if you need something small for business, you're really looking at either the 2170p or going a bit bigger for Dell's XPS 13. The 2170p isn't a bad notebook and the price is reasonable, but a hungry competitor could very easily come in and snatch this market out from under HP if they're not careful.

Display, Battery, Noise, and Heat
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  • ACSK - Saturday, December 1, 2012 - link

    Yup - same thing for wireless cards.
  • Penti - Saturday, December 1, 2012 - link

    mSATA uses SATA so it should accept everything it does accept on any other SATA-port shouldn't it?
  • Penti - Saturday, December 1, 2012 - link

    I.e. whats really preventing any one is that the WWAN slot isn't an mSATA slot and has no SATA-connection at all. You have to get by using a 2.5" SSD.
  • SunLord - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    Whats the black circle thing in between the g, h, and b keys?
  • Voldenuit - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    That's the nub mouse (also known as a Trackpoint, although that term is technicalluy trademarked by IBM/lenovo).

    When done well (like on thinkpads), it's one of the best pointing devices on a laptop. When done poorly (dell latitudes, hp, some toshibas, a few vaios), it can be horribly infuriating.
  • bji - Monday, December 3, 2012 - link

    Even on thinkpads they are annoying. It's a legacy pointing device sitting in the middle of the keyboard looking ugly and tripping your fingers. The world has moved on to multi-touch pads, and they are much, much, MUCH better than the nubs of yesterday.
  • Tchamber - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    That should be a mouse joy stick, we don't see this much at all these days, but once you get used to it it's very efficient.
  • Subyman - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    Wow, $2000+ for no SSD and 4GB of ram? I've heard of the Apple tax, but never the HP tax.
  • Voldenuit - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    This is known as the Autonomy Accounting writeoff tax.

    Olympus wrote off $2Bn for accounting fraud, and has been charging customers up to $100 for lens hoods, so maybe hp needs to inflate their margins too?
  • r3loaded - Friday, November 30, 2012 - link

    My steps for reaching the comments were as follows:

    1) Click on article in Google Reader because it had "EliteBook" in the title.
    2) Jump to the Display section of the review, scan the first paragraph and glance at the graphs.
    3) Go straight to the comments to describe the facepalm I'm currently doing while typing this comment out.

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