

Opening the laptop up reveals a silver inside finish that attempts to give the impression of metal but fails miserably.

It’s also quite heavy for a non-rugged 11.6in machine, at 1.56kg. First off, the dm1-3200sa is rather bulky, tapering to a thickest point of over 3cm. Unfortunately things deteriorate from here. The lid at first appears to be the kind of glossy affair we love to hate, but as it turns out it’s actually far more resistant to fingerprints and smudges than most of its ilk and its unique pattern is reasonably attractive. When it comes to style, the Pavilion dm1-3200sa seems to be suffering from dissociative identity disorder: on the one hand it wants to display the elegant touches of a classier, premium ultraportable (like curved sides and white LEDs for power and status), while on the other its cheapness becomes obvious the moment you examine it closely. Price hovers between £300 and £400, though the cheapest we could find it at the moment was £375.
#Hp pavilion dm1 windows 7
This is exactly the kind of creature HP’s Pavilion dm1 is.īased on AMD’s Fusion processors, in this case the dual-core E350, backed by up to 4GB of RAM (3GB is standard) and a 320GB hard drive while running Windows 7 Home Premium, specifications will be adequate for the daily needs of the majority of users.

Unlike actual netbooks, little budget laptops like this can handle HD video playback and offer HD Ready screens, usually at 11.6 inches – a little larger than traditional 10in netbook affairs. Straddling the line between laptop and netbook, budget ultraportables like the Lenovo X121e are a great option if you’re looking for something that does the basics and does them well.
