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A business-oriented Ultrabook, the HP EliteBook 850 provides solid performance, usability and connectivity in a well-built package with a lofty price tag.
HP caters to the exclusive market for premium thin-and-light business notebooks with its new EliteBook 850. Its key features include a 1080p anti-glare display, good keyboard and touchpad, Windows 7 availability and support, solid build quality and enterprise-level features like Intel vPro, a Smartcard reader, a docking station port and user-serviceable internal components.
The EliteBook 850 with battery such as HP ZBook 14 Battery, HP EliteBook 850 Battery, HP ZBook 15u Battery, HP CM03XL Battery, HP HSTNN-DB4Q Battery, HP HSTNN-IB4R Battery, HP HSTNN-LB4R Battery, HP 717376-001 Battery, HP 716724-1C1 Battery, HP HSTNN-YB4D Battery, HP EliteBook 750 Battery, HP VK04 Battery has a professional-looking black and silver aluminum exterior. The chassis is exceptionally thin at 0.8-inch and the whole notebook weighs just over four pounds; this would have been unheard of for a 15.6-inch notebook several years back.
The base of the notebook is impressively rigid, barely flexing at all when I tried to twist it by its corners. All surfaces on this notebook are flex-free even under abnormal pressure. The EliteBook 850’s lid is strong and resists twisting motions. The display panel itself is well-protected – I failed to get ripples to appear on the screen by applying pressure to the back of the lid. This notebook was clearly designed with durability in mind.
The HP EliteBook 850 sets the benchmark for business Ultrabooks; it manages to incorporate state-of-the-art technology in a well-designed chassis that has respectable battery life and performance. Continuing our long list of likes for this model are its good backlit keyboard, excellent touchpad and high-end business features such as a Smartcard reader, Intel vPro technology, dedicated docking station connector, built-in mobile broadband and exceptional access to internal components via its tool-less bottom panel. Our major gripe with the EliteBook 850 is its lackluster display; it needs a contrast and saturation boost.
The EliteBook 850 is expensive; our custom configured review model loaded with options topped $2,292, over double its starting price. HP’s custom configurations are noticeably more expensive than the pre-configured models; we recommend choosing one of the latter if possible. The EliteBook 850’s competitors are few and far between and unable to match its extensive feature set step-for-step. Is the EliteBook 850 worth its asking price? It’s fairly priced unless you can stomach a thicker notebook, in which case there are numerous options that carry a significantly smaller premium and deliver an equivalent feature set.
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