AMD Center Giveaway: HP ENVY Sleekbook, 15.6" quad-core Richland Notebooks
by Anand Lal Shimpi on September 23, 2013 9:00 AM ESTEarlier this month we launched the AMD Center, a portal on AnandTech that aggregates all of our AMD content in one place. As a recap, the AMD Center features all of our independent content just as before but in an AMD sponsored wrapper. Thanks to AMD's sponsorship you'll get a cleaner interface on all AMD articles, as well as reduced advertising on those pages. The portal will also serve as a way for AMD to reach out to you all directly as we're pulling in AMD tweets and have a feed of AMD's own blogs on the right hand side. AMD also wants to hear from you, and we've got some opporuntities to help with that going forward. Finally, the AMD Center serves as a destination for a bunch of pretty awesome AMD giveaways we've got planned. With AMD's support we've got better prizes and more of them to give away.
We kicked off our AMD Center giveaways with three Acer V5s. Today we're continuing with some more powerful notebooks for those of you looking for a little more punch. AMD is supplying three 15.6-inch HP ENVY TouchSmart Sleekbooks for this giveaway.
The ENVY Sleekbook features a touch-enabled 15.6" 1366 x 768 display, 8GB of DDR3 memory (up from 4GB on the V5s we just gave away, and expandable up to 16GB) and has an AMD A10-5745M Richland APU with Radeon HD 8610G graphics. The A10-5745 features four Piledriver cores running at a base clock of 2.1GHz and a max turbo clock of 2.9GHz. This is a 25W part, which is fairly low as far as Richland APUs go. The GPU features 384 Radeon cores (VLIW4) running at up to 626MHz with turbo (533MHz max non-turbo). Just as before, I asked AMD if they would be willing to swap out the hard drives for SSDs and they agreed - so if you win, your Sleekbook will ship with a 128GB Samsung SSD 840 drive.
The Sleekbook is 0.9" thin and weighs 5.6 lbs.
Here's the deal. To enter, simply post a comment below (US residents only, please only make a single post, contest requirements below) explaining your current PC setup and why you want, or need to win a Sleekbook. What I'm looking for here is an understanding of what you currently own in terms of computing devices (PCs, notebooks, tablets, etc...), how you use them and how winning a Sleekbook would change/improve your current setup. Make your entries good as they may come in handy for some other stuff we've got planned in the future. If your entry from last time still applies, feel free to re-use it.
If you win, AMD wants your feedback on the machine after you get it. You'll be asked to provide a short review (a paragraph or two) talking about your experience with the system. Do a good job and your feedback may even be featured on AnandTech.
Good luck!
Congrats to our three winners. Here's their feedback from using the systems for a few weeks.
Francis
The HP ENVY M6 Sleekbook certainly doesn’t feel like a bargain laptop. With a sleek metal exterior and soft touch plastic on the bottom, the Sleekbook feels solid in the hands. The build quality is quite impressive, especially compared to some of the other HP laptops I have come across in the past. The laptop is slim, and deceptively light considering its size. On the exterior, the laptop features a solid port selection highlighted by dedicated HDMI. Open the lid and one sees a well laid out backlit keyboard that is pretty nice to type on. The keyboard does have some mild flex, but the key travel is good. The backlight is of the on/off only variety, while the wi-fi light on the f12 key is always on no matter what you do.
Turning the laptop on, one can appreciate the quickness of Windows 8 on an SSD. The laptop is snappy and responsive for your basic every day tasks and is well suited for multimedia as it handles HD video easily. I had no trouble with light gaming thanks to AMD’s A10 APU. The featured Beats Audio Speakers provide good sound quality at an impressive volume. That said, they are not anything to get too excited about. Where the Sleekbook really falls short is in its display and WI-FI performance. The 15.6 inch 1366x768 display is quite frankly, terrible. The low resolution may be forgivable at this price segment, but the screen’s brightness is just plain disappointing. Having the display at anything less than 100% brightness is not really an option. The Wi-Fi is another area of disappointment. The Sleekbook’s Wi-Fi range is limited compared to other devices I own. With just a quick (and unscientific!) comparison to my Acer netbook, the HP might fail to recognize my router in an area where the Acer would report greater than 50% strength.
The Sleekbook has a lot going for it in terms of build quality and performance. However, it gets hung up by the two huge flaws of display quality and Wi-Fi performance. That said, the AMD platform shows promise here and I look forward to seeing it offered in more devices.
Jamy
The 15" HP Sleekbook comes in an attractive brushed metal package and is clad with a black island style keyboard. It feels higher up market than its price would suggest. AnandTech has said, AMD processors in notebooks allow OEMs to trade some of the silicon cost for higher quality components elsewhere. I can see some of that here with this Sleekbook. It has the best trackpad of any windows notebook Iíve ever used. Itís large, responsive, and handles gestures easily. Itís getting really close to a Macbook in trackpad quality. The screen is bright and looks good, but with the usual 1366x768 caveat. It came with Dragon Naturally Speaking, Box cloud drive space, and a nice temperature utility that uses sensors to keep the Sleekbook cool when it detects it is on your lap. My biggest complaint is, even beyond the wish for more pixels, it came with 600 MHz RAM. I almost couldnít believe it considering how dependent AMD chips are on being fed with fast memory. The A10 feels fast in most cases, but there are definitely times when you miss memory speed. I play quite a bit of Kerbal Space Program on this laptop, which it handles really well at native resolution. Yes, it does borrow some design, and cut some corners in some places I wouldnít have. However, this Sleekbook is aimed at people who are looking for value in a notebook form factor, and it delivers.
Jarrod
The HP ENVY TouchSmart Sleekbook has been my first experience using Windows 8 on a touch screen device. I was able to familiarize myself with navigating the operating system using the built in help menus and minimal internet searching. I primarily use the Sleekbook for web browsing, messaging, and light gaming. I am impressed by the almost instant boot time. The touch screen was calibrated well (for touch) from the factory and accurately responds to my input. I find the track pad difficult to use since it is a one-piece surface that incorporates the left and right buttons. Trying to click on anything without moving the cursor off of what you're trying to click is difficult without a light and deliberate touch. I am satisfied primarily using the touch screen. The keyboard layout is a bit spread out and works well for my larger hands although it may be less than optimal for someone with smaller hands.The AMD APU is powerful enough to handle casual games as well as some less demanding modern PC games. The sound quality is among the best I've experienced from laptop speakers. The Wi-Fi reception is the only aspect of the laptop I find substantially disappointing. This is the only device of several I use throughout my small house that must be in the same room as the wireless router to maintain a connection. Overall I am pleased with the construction and performance of the Sleekbook and would suggest it as a viable option for anyone looking to use Windows 8 on a touch screen device.
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squishyTurtle - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
The computers I have... Let's see.The ones that I use on a regular basis are a home built Core i5 box in my office for work, and a lenovo T430 that I adore. The little media box isn't used for much more than streaming movies to the projector.
However, I do have several special purpose computers that I cobble together and use for certain things; I volunteer at the local high school as the technical director, and since I've done that, we've stopped using CDs and the analog light board to run shows. However, the computers that I use for this are an old iMac bought at a surplus sale that has a tendency to overheat and my old Macbook Pro that has a broken screen. Replacing the need to use one of those (probably the iMac that has a tendency to lock up when it gets too hot) would save me a great deal of worry when I'm running around making sure that the high schoolers don't kill themselves on the set fixing things as they fall down, etc.
On top of that, as a graduate student, I am doing research in the field of qualitative spatial reasoning, and a large aspect of that research involves creating a GUI that sits on top of the QSR system we're designing. One of the platforms we'd like to investigate is tablets: manipulating 3D objects seems like a touch screen interface would be beneficial.
Scarier - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
Since I didn't win the lottery, I'll settle for a free laptop thanks.Jeff Lee - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
Thank you Anandtech for providing an outlet for direct feedback for AMD and potentially others to come. It is certainly refreshing for a community to hear that our voices are heard.Currently my gaming setup is a hand build desktop that is 1 year old. It has a Core I7-2600k, 16 GB of ram, an old school Sapphire Vapor-X 5870, 256 GB SSD from Kingston, all in an awesome antec eleven hundred. That 5870 still rocks games as far as I'm concerned.
Having a desktop is very nice, if I am at home. I just got a new job and will probably be traveling more and having something to work on that is a bit faster than the old work computer would be a blessing no doubt. There's also the minor detail of being able to game and relax and take my mind off the fact I'm not home with my wife. Yes, I miss my wife when I'm gone.
Thank you all for the hard work you up in to your reviews and thanks for reading.
Jeff
zorgon - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
My wife and I currently share a computer that I built. But, she teaches some online college courses and has to do online activities and chats with her students. We also have 2 children ages 3 and 4 1/2, so Mommy cannot get any alone or quite time to work with her students. With a laptop then she could "retreat" to our bedroom and do her classwork in peace. :)franklyc - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
I currently own a desktop PC running Windows 7 which consists of an Intel i5 2500k CPU, AMD 6950 GPU, 8 GB of RAM, various HDD's, etc. I use this mainly for gaming, photo / video editing and recording / editing music. I also own a Lenovo IdeaPad Y550 (15.6 Screen, Intel T6500, 4 GB RAM, GT 130M) which I use for web browsing, Word / Excel, PDF creation / editing, streaming video / music and for a mobile computer while traveling. I'm planning on giving this to my father so I'm in the market for a new laptop / notebook. The Envy would be perfect replacement / upgrade for the Lenovo.Not only would the Envy be a welcome and much needed addition to my current device stable, it would also be providing a much needed computer to my father as well. Thanks!
menestrel - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
[Sorry bad English] When I was finally going to replace an AMD notebook by another AMD, gain by gift one "economic" profile and notebook CPU brand competitor [read Intel], which lags with 4 tabs opened in a browser? This dilemma experienced three years ago is the reason for the gamer had turned an ordinary user, but with an insane desire to get back to the glory days with friends asking for compassion (a little bit of exaggeration) ... This is the main reason why I should win this giveaway!Aganazer - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
I am a software developer in the medical field. My job responsibilities have me traveling about 25% of the time. Until recently I was using a Samsung ATIV Clovertrail hybrid while on the road. Some recent life changes (separation from wife) has left me without a portable computer. I need a replacement computer for both personal and business use. The HP ENVY Sleekbook would be perfect for this.I am an old school gamer and would like to see how well it can perform with games over the years. My old Clovertrail tablet could only handle games up to about 2005 and I am sure that the HP would be much better.
NXTwoThou - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
Currently have a desktop from 2007 connected to my television that I've updated to all the latest MS OSs on. It's also my Blu-ray player. I've pretty much given up on playing games on it and really use it when I'm watching videos(I canceled my cable television right about a year ago). I also own a notebook circa 2009 that has a dead bluray drive in it, horrific display panel, heavy, horrific trackpad, and battery life of a little over an hour. I put an SSD at the beginning of 2012 to breath new life in it, but primarily its become my facebook computer and my watch videos while laying in the tub computer.Having something with more graphical umph would allow me to reexplore some light gaming. Having something lighter would make me feel less tied down, having better battery life would make me less tied down. If I'm in the kitchen cooking, I'll just cart it in there(without needing a plug). If I'm in the bedroom, I'd be less likely to use my phone and would cart it in and watch a video or chat online(again, without needing a plug). It'd become my new traveling companion. I gave up on my regular notebook due to size/weight/power requirements. I've learned to live with my phone, but that's far from optimal.
gentlearc - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
The past 5 years have been a mobile life, moving with only what fits in airport luggage, I've relied on access to the world has been through an early i7-720qm notIeook with a gts250m discreet (acting as phone,internet,word processing, school software), which isn't portable (just movable). I'm attending university and while the ol' notebook suffices as a desktop replacement, portability as well as integration into daily life is non-existent. I believe an AMD Envy would enable me to take better advantage of cutting edge benefits of portable technology with an integrated solution that has the battery life to support my efforts.bdub951 - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link
I currently own a 6 year old AMD based laptop along with a gaming desktop based on Intel. I also own a Kindle Fire. I use the gaming PC for games (obviously) and for my normal day-to-day computing needs. The laptop is for travel and business and it's a pretty painfully slow experience. I would benefit greatly from the performance of the 4 Richland cores as well as the integrated GPU power of the APU. It's been a long time since I've played any game on my laptop. Hopefully this post changes that!