A year ago HP delivered the Pavilion tx1000 Entertainment PC, a hybrid between a notebook and a Tablet PC. It was a great machine, and we here at HardwareGeeks.com awarded it our Editors Choice Award for the month of April 2007 and also our Top choice Award for the year of 2007.

The tx1000 was and still is a fantastic piece of machinery. 9 out of 10 reviews on the web praised it. However, at the same time each review noted some dislikes about the machine such as a lack of an active stylus and a keyboard that had a left shift key that was rather small.

Tx2000 ImageSo, HP read those reviews, took that feedback, and created the tx2000.

They took the good with the bad; they kept the good and improved on the bad, and I am here to tell all who read this review that HP has created the perfect notebook PC. Wait, scratch that, HP has created the perfect Tablet PC. Actually, it is my opinion that HP has created the best all around portable computer, perfect for consumers and business users alike. Perfect for students and doctors, great for the soccer mom and the Pro Football coach. The tx2000 is the perfect fit for everyone.

I have been blown away by the tx2000 so much so that I do not know where to start.

I am blown away because I kind of feel like I had something to do with the creation of the tx2000. After all, HP took my feedback along with the feedback from users on our forum and on other sites to improve on the tx1000 and create the tx2000.

On January 3rd when they first announced the tx2000, I felt a sense of pride. I know that’s a bit corny, but it’s how I felt. When I first saw the machine back in November, I was taken aback when I realized they actually used all the feedback they had gotten. I mean some billion dollar company listened to me and you and everyone else that gave them feedback. When does that ever happen?

OK, OK let me get off my little emotional trip and get on with the review.

The Pavilion tx2000 Entertainment PCis powered by an AMD Turion64 dual core processor (2.1 or 2.2 Ghz), 2 GB of memory upgradable to 4 GB, and NVIDIA GeForce 6150. Also included on the tx2000 is Bluetooth support, Wireless a/b/g/n support as an option (default wireless b/g/), 160 GB HDD with support up to 250 GB, SuperMulti DVD writer with lightscribe support, Fingerprint reader, 5 in 1 memory card reader, webcam, and a 12.1 inch widescreen high definition touch-screen monitor.

The first thing you’ll notice about the tx2000 is the look. It has a shiny finish with a cool pattern design and a shiny outer shell that makes the machine very attractive, and when you open it up, the design continues around the keyboard and touch pad.

The first boot up of the machine was painless. Vista Home Premium loaded quickly, and I was a bit surprised to see that HP had cut back on the amount of pre-installed software I think not 100% sure on this one but it didn’t seem to have as much pre-installed software as some HP Desktops I have booted up recently. Sure there still were the WildTangent games and Norton was pre-installed and a trial of Microsoft Office, but that’s all I noticed, didn’t feel the need to reformat and reinstall the OS like I typically do with a new machine. So I am happy to report that there was nothing hogging the systems resources on the first boot.

Needless to say the system is speedy and very responsive. Even QuickPlay loaded quickly. Not saying that it doesn’t load fast on other HP machines, it just surprised me that it seemed almost instant on the tx2000. QuickPlay is software that ships with every HP consumer notebook and allows you to play DVDs, watch TV (provided you have a TV tuner), view photos, and listen to music quickly. I guess that is why they call it QuickPlay.

It didn’t just load QuickPlay quickly, but every program I tried out, from Microsoft Word and Excel to your typical Messenger programs such as AIM and Live Messenger.

I even installed the Sims and Crysis on the tx2000 and handled both games well.

But the tx2000 isn’t just any notebook, it has a touch screen, and now, unlike the tx1000, it comes with an active stylus.

The lack of an active stylus was probably the biggest complaint about the tx1000, so everyone who followed HP and the progress of the tx1000 was excited when it was announced that the tx2000 had an active stylus.

Having both an active stylus and a touch screen can cause problems, because if you are writing with the stylus and your arm or the palm of your hand touches something it may override what the stylus is doing. To prevent this, HP has made it so that when the stylus point is within an inch of the screen, the touch screen portion is disabled.

Writing with the stylus is also easy, a lot easier than it was on the tx1000. Because there was no active stylus on the tx1000, you had to press down a bit hard when writing. This caused a little cramp in your hand after a while, but with the tx2000 since the stylus is active, writing is way easier and more comfortable.

Because of the active stylus doing things in tablet mode is a lot easier.

HP has also strategically placed hotkeys around the screen so you can easily control your music when in tablet mode. So if you are jotting a note and listening to music at the same time, you can skip to the next track or stop playback all together by just tapping one of the media keys located on the side of the monitor.

Even the finger print reader is located around the monitor so that you can have access to it in regular notebook mode or tablet mode.

QUICK TIP: When using a tx1000 or tx2000, register both your thumbs with the finger print reader. This way no matter if you are in notebook or tablet mode, you can easily swipe your finger to login to your machine or website and or access a protected folder (Thanks to Kevin Wentzel technical marketing manager for notebooks at HP for the tip).

Now you know that you can easily use the tx2000 as a traditional notebook and tablet PC, but the HP Pavilion tx2000 is also an entertainment PC. It is built to satisfy our cravings for Movies and Music. But what separates the tx2000 from other entertainment notebooks on the market is a screen that swivelz 180 degrees.

Let’s say you fly a lot and you didn’t take JetBlue or Delta, and you are on one of those airlines with a tiny TV screen 3 to 6 seats ahead of you showing some movie you have probably seen a dozen times. If you had a notebook, you’d lower the tray table down and pop in one of your DVDs or some video stored on your hard drive. While that’s fine you may be a bit uncomfy because your notebook overlaps the tray and if you’re a big guy or gal, you have to suck in your gut a bit, making the experience not as good as it could be. Also if the person in front of you has their seat reclined you may not be able to have your monitor at an angel to allow you to view a movie correctly.

With the tx2000 that problem is solved because you can turn the monitor around and use it in, what I believe is call “Airplane mode” I believe I got this term from Kevin Wentzel at HP. The keyboard is now behind the monitor, and you have a nice view of nothing but the high def screen. Speaking of “Airport mode”, let’s not forget to mention the switch on the front of the tx2000 that allows you to easily shut off both the Bluetooth and wi-fi instantly.

Because of the hi-def screen on the tx2000, watching movies is a delight; I only wish that it came with a blu-ray or hd-dvd drive, so you could take full advantage of the screen.

I am sure you are now wondering about the battery life. I was only able to test the 8 cell battery, which gave me about 5 and a half hours of battery life during normal use. I got 4 hours and 3 minutes exactly when I watched the movie Face Off on DVD movie.

What is cool about the 8 cell battery is that HP even improved on that for the tx2000. It now fits perfectly into the palm of your hand so you can hold onto it or if you put it into your shoulder it isn’t as uncomfortable as the previous battery.

There are a few more cool features on the tx2000 that I would like to mention. The touchpad toggle switch is one. If you have a mouse connected to it, you can turn off the touch pad and not worry about rubbing a finger against it and moving the mouse pointer. Another feature I’d like to mention is the 2 headphone jacks and mic jack on the front of the machine and the mini remote control. All of these were also present on the tx1000 and were loved by everyone so HP kept them, and I am glad they did.

Do I have any complaints about the tx2000 or request for the tx3000? I do.

  • There needs to be at least 1 more USB port. Get rid of the 56k Modem and give me 1 more USB port. (HP says some retailers want the 56k Modem and won’t carry the line if it didn’t have one, and some countries require that there be a 56k modem.)
  • At least one headphone jack should be in the back, so that when I have the tx2000 in “Airplane mode” I don’t have to reach around to plug in the headphones. Sometimes the cable gets in the way of the screen.
  • Sticking with the headphone jacks, it be nice if there were some software, well maybe hardware is needed I am not sure, that will allow me to use the 2 headphone jacks for 2 separate sound sources. That way when I am on a flight with Indi, I can watch Alvin and the Chipmunks, and she can listen to her music.
  • The new 8 Cell battery is great, but what would make it perfect is if it maybe had some rubber grips to add a bit of traction, which in my opinion, would give those of us with sweaty palms a better grip on the machine.

  • Overall the tx2000 is everything you’d want and more, and with a $1300 USD price tag, you get it all without burning a deep hole in your pocket. We here at HardwareGeeks.com award our very first Editors Choice Gold Award.

    For more information about the tx2000 visit http://shopping.hp.com.

    Before I end this review, I want to thank HP for listening to us and creating the tx2000. I would like to thank Kevin Wentzel, Tom Augenthaler, Dana Harrold, Scott Ballantyne, and everyone else who made the tx2000 possible. I would also like to thank everyone who gave feedback to HP! After all, it was all of our feedback that created this machine.

    Pictures of the tx2000 credit to HP, I was so excited testing the machine out that I forgot to take pictures before I shipped it back. But my friend Terri Stranton took some pictures of it when she had it so check those out here.

    The tx2000 is available in Europe as the tx2050. In the US the tx2000 will be labled tx2000, tx2100 and tx2120us.

    This is a Reprint of an original review.

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    Post Tags: review  hp  notebooks  tablet pc  tx2000  tx1000 

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    Comments: (259)
    Meelis on Tue, Jul 29th, 2008 at 05:28 AM

    It is a shame it gets so hot. I have owned the tx2000 for 3 months half of which it spent in the service. Its probably a coolest looking and most multifunctional notebooks out there but the actual performance is below my worst hopes. And i suggest buying the extended service plan. It is cheaper then buying a new motherboard every 6 months.


    Robert on Thu, Jul 31st, 2008 at 01:48 PM

    I purchased the 2025 last week. My unit has the HG sticker on it, and it came with the Radeon 3200 video card, as opposed to the nVidia 6150. I have yet to install any games on it. I hope I am not disappointed.


    Michael on Thu, Jul 31st, 2008 at 05:27 PM

    Hope you like it Robert


    Robert on Fri, Aug 01st, 2008 at 01:12 AM

    Thanks, Michael. So far, so good… I also have the 1215nr, but the wireless card recently failed on it. It must be a hardware failure, because the laptop does not see the card anymore. The wireless indicator light stays orange no matter what, and the device is not seen in Windows. I’ve done a complete system restore with no luck…


    Meelis on Sat, Aug 02nd, 2008 at 08:39 AM

    I do wonder if buying 4gb total RAM would boost the machine enough to play World of Warcraft on external monitor? Going to give it a shot.


    Michael on Sat, Aug 02nd, 2008 at 12:51 PM

    @Robert contact HP about that problem, I recently had 2 have that problem and they fixed it quickly took them a week to get it back.

    #meelis it should be enough but what you would be doing would be more on the vid card than the monitor.


    Meelis on Sun, Aug 03rd, 2008 at 03:17 AM

    Yes, but the integrated video controller uses the RAM to operate, so even if the FPS doesnt improve atleast it should fix the frame freezes or not?
    It currently has DDRII PC2500 667mhz memory chip installed. Can i upgrade it to 2x 2GB DDR II PC6400/800mhz?


    Michael on Sun, Aug 03rd, 2008 at 03:19 PM

    Sorry got confused by what you said

    Intergrated shares memory with the system but the card although (intergrated on the tx2000) has it’s own memory. I haven’t seen a tx2000 with shared memory. But there maybe some out there so if they do share memory increasing it will help you will just haev to go into the bios and tell it how much to use..


    Meelis on Sun, Aug 03rd, 2008 at 04:27 PM

    GeForce GO6150 with integrated RAMDAC, arent all tx20xx series equiped with the same cheese?
    Strange enough the manual HP provides promises up to 512 video memory on machines with 2gb or more RAM but in BIOS i can set only maximum of 128mb. Did i miss something?


    Michael on Sun, Aug 03rd, 2008 at 08:44 PM

    Sounds like the graphics are decicated and not intergrated


    seven leong on Mon, Aug 04th, 2008 at 05:47 AM

    i am wonder that is the touch screen can use to edit when i using adobe photoshop and illustrator?
    because i am a disigner, that was wonderful if i can use it.


    seven leong on Mon, Aug 04th, 2008 at 05:50 AM

    i wanna know that is the tablet funtions work for 3rd party softwear like photo shop or illustrator?


    Meelis on Mon, Aug 04th, 2008 at 07:24 AM

    seven leong: Yes you can draw, paint, and it recognizes how hard you press on the screen with stylus.
    Michael, i am completely confused now :O


    Michael on Mon, Aug 04th, 2008 at 01:50 PM

    Seven, Adobe products installed good on my tx2000 but I just had trials. I am unsure if you can draw into adobe however I do recall seeing people drawing via MSPaint at various demos before the product launched.

    And meelis, the whole intergrated and dedicated has me confused as well.


    sunreep on Tue, Aug 05th, 2008 at 05:38 PM

    i have this latop it is a very good laptop i can play some realy good ganes like halo 2 crysis devil may cry 4 and there just one problem the stylus is a luttle hard to use cause there is a button on the stylus you constantly have to press for left clickinstead of a tap does any one know how to fix this there is probably a setting but i cant find it if you know how please email me at plz and thank you


    Meelis on Tue, Aug 05th, 2008 at 07:00 PM

    sunreep: I envy you then.
    I am having trouble getting the handwriting recognition to work. Anyone got this working with MSN messenger for example?


    harpreet on Wed, Aug 06th, 2008 at 11:16 PM

    mine is tx2108 and after using it for 3 hours and installing softwares i need,i found out its ot showing any wifi sign and when i checked it was nowhere in device manager list and i restarted and hell, it doesnt restarted but uts dead, dosnt even boot.
    hp says its hardware issue and sent for repairing, rest i ll tell after i get it back


    Michael on Thu, Aug 07th, 2008 at 12:13 PM

    bad wifi card sucks :(

    you will probably get it back next week, did they send you the box yet they typically send it next day


    Frank Oliver on Fri, Aug 15th, 2008 at 07:17 PM

    Anyone ever have a problem with the audio card in this model?

    When I go to control panel>sounds>recording tab, only the internal mic shows up.

    Re-installed the realtek hd audio drivers, no change.
    Re-installed the os (vista home premium, 32bit), still no luck.

    Sent to HP for repiar, got it back yesterday, still didn’t work.

    Guess my question is, was this computer designed to only record audio from the internal mic and or the mic in jack in the front of the system?

    Installed adobe audition 3, also tried other audio programs and under audio hardware setup, the programs tell me there are no devices that can be utilized with the program.  I mean, what if I wanted to play a video on ‘youtube’ and record the audio? Apparently the audio card on this machine does not allow you to record intrnally.  Anyone else having this issue?

    Please help!
    Frank Oliver


    ALan on Sat, Aug 16th, 2008 at 12:36 PM

    Hey guys I have one and I’m wondering can it play COD 4 online? I downloaded the Demo and it was fine on low settings. It might be in over its head for the online challenge. Any comments Appreciated


    Michael on Sat, Aug 16th, 2008 at 12:48 PM

    If it is fine at low settings it should handle the game online a well.


    Alan on Sat, Aug 16th, 2008 at 06:24 PM

    Thanks a lot Michael


    Jack on Wed, Aug 20th, 2008 at 03:58 AM

    Hi, the NVIDIA® GeForce™ Go 6150 use shared memory and only up to 128 Mb.


    Wrestler8526 on Sat, Aug 23rd, 2008 at 04:25 PM

    Guys i just bought the laptop cheap!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    I got for $700 with 3gbs of ram and 64bit windows vista.

    Also I got a free printer.

    Total came out to 750 with tax.

    Go to hp .com and buy its 900. http://www.anrdoezrs.net/click-1717484-10426028 (use this link)

    at check out add this coupon NB9970 for $200 off</a>


    Michael on Sat, Aug 23rd, 2008 at 04:47 PM
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