Introduction and design
Sitting in the ‘Performance Home’ category on HP’s website is the HP Envy 15. We tested the 15-ae001na model, which comes with a 15.6-inch widescreen as its name suggests. The screen size means the base can fit a traditional number pad on the right-hand side which reduces its portability.
The HP Envy 15 sits halfway between a cheap student workhorse, a very low-end gaming laptop and an office laptop. It’s suitable for families who need a jack-of-all-trades machine that can take a bit of a beating; it can do a spot of gaming, watch DVDs and surf the web too. It would equally suit students who mainly sit in libraries or at home churning through research papers.
While this is not touchscreen, it’s comparable with Levono’s latest office workhorse Thinkpad Yoga 15. However HP’s inclusion of four USB 3.0 ports, a DVD burner and an ethernet port could sway some users but could equally put others off who prefer simplicity and regard their inclusion as surplus to requirements. The Dell Inspiron 13 7000 is smaller, cheaper and features a touchscreen, and we think students would be best looking at this model.
<img src="http://mos.futurenet.com/techradar/art/laptops/HP/Envy%2015%20(2015)/Review/HP%20Envy%20Design%201-420-100.jpg" alt="HP Envy 15-ae001na DVD burner" width="420" …read more
Source:: techradar.com – PC and Mac