HP Pavilion p6610f Desktop PC Review
Highlights of the HP Pavilion p6610f desktop, available at Staples, its quad-core processor and a roomy 750GB (7200 rpm) hard drive. It also offers a case of mistaken his financial status and is used for Wi-Fi out of the box. As with any budget PC, but some victims were taken to achieve its low price. In this case, the system is littered with bloatware, lack an HDMI connector, and relies on integrated graphics. None of its disadvantages deal breaker, we recommend the Pavilion p6610f for its attractive design, powerful performance for the price, and built-in 802.11n Wi-Fi connectivity.
Design
The HP Pavilion p6610f not look like a budget PC. In fact, it uses the same chassis on more expensive models in the series Pavilion P6600 and found a similar design as Elite PCs, such as the HPE-447c-b. The full-tower case is not a cheap, thrown together unit, but with an attractive, uniform design. It features a piano-black finish, rounded corners and front panel covers to hide the optical drive and front-mounted ports. There are two optical drives, one of which is a dual-layer DVD burner filled. Below the optical drives is a slide-down panel that hides a pair of USB 2.0 ports and two audio jacks. At the top of the front panel sits a small, 15-in-1 Media Card Reader.

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Inside, the case offers more room for expansion, free with two free 3.5-inch drive bays for additional hard drives, two of the four DIMM slots for more memory, should be three blank x1 PCI Express slots and an empty x16 PCI Express slot you want to update the PC integrated graphics.
On the back you will find both VGA and DVI ports, a digital audio connection, 5.1 analog audio ports, an Ethernet socket and 4 USB 2.0 ports. It’s a fairly standard collection of ports, although some budget desktops, such as the Pavilion p6627c-b try, through to VGA for their own skate-video connector. Other mainstream models, but feature a HDMI port, which p6610f on the pavilion is missing. In addition to 10/100 Ethernet, the system offers 802.11n Wi-Fi.
Monitor not included!
Features
The pavilion is based on the AMD Athlon p6610f X4 635, clocked a quad-core processor at 2.9 GHz, the HP-related pairs with 4 GB of DDR3 memory. The processor sits in the sweet spot for a budget PC, it offers significantly better performance than similarly priced models that use dual-core Intel or AMD processors. The other core data include 4GB of DDR3 memory, a large 750GB hard drive and integrated ATI Radeon HD 4200 graphics. Although the graphics are integrated, meaning they borrow money from the main system memory, ATI’s latest integrated graphics, they are revised.

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The hard drive provides ample storage space, but there are pre-installed features with more than its fair share of bloatware, including an unnecessary desktop icon for eBay, a collection of Wild Tangent Games (under the banner HP Games) and study for Quickbooks, Quicken, and Norton Internet Security.
The pavilion has a standard p6610f, wired keyboard and mouse. The keyboard has a good feeling with hard keys and a large wrist. The mouse is your basic, right and left handed optical matter. Finally, the system through a standard one-year warranty. Note that similar models at Costco sells a guarantee that takes two years to come.
Performance
With a quad-core Phenom X4 CPU 635, the test p6610f well for themselves in the laboratory, its benchmark results show that the configuration provides a lot of pop for the price. For example, it outpaces dual-core budget PCs such as the Athlon X2 220-based Asus Essentio CM1630-05 and the Intel Pentium Dual Core E5700-based Dell Inspiron I560-2910NBK. The pavilion’s p6610f PCMark Vantage score of 5875 to 30 percent better better than the CM1630 and 14 percent Essentio i560 than the Inspiron. The pavilion p6610f beat the two dual-core PCs with similar margins on our Windows Media Encoder test, but the Inspiron i560 (5 minutes 6 seconds) it was best the pavilion p6610f (5:52) test on our Photoshop CS5.
If we consider a more expensive computer with quad-core AMD Phenom X4 processor, which has HP Pavilion p6616f-b, holds the Athlon X4-based Pavilion p6610f good. The Phenom-based Pavilion p6610f was only the Athlon X4-based Pavilion through the narrowest of margins edge, with the Pavilion p6610f (2:35) faster at the top honor on a final test of the hand brake Benchmark 7 seconds. The only major difference in the chips, the Phenom X4 chip has a third layer of cache (L3 cache), where the cores can quickly to frequently used data, the lack of Athlon X4.

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The ATI Radeon HD 4200 graphics card allows smooth playback of HD video, but you do not do much in the way of 3D gaming. Spring for a dedicated graphics card, you should develop an interest in 3D-shooter.
In the end, turns the HP Pavilion in p6610f respectable performance in budget PCs, in a case whose looks are not offensive and its expansion options mean it will be able to grow with you. It requires that you first TRASH some bloatware, but perhaps that is the price you pay for getting this level of performance at this low price of one.
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