Typical price: £1,299
What is it: All-in-one desktop PC with touch-sensitive display
What we think: A brave concept with some interesting features, but it's let down slightly by mediocre performance
HP TouchSmart IQ770 Review
Reviewed on: 23 May 2007
The TouchSmart IQ770 is designed to be a family Media Center PC. We first encountered it at CES 2007, where it was touted as the digital alternative to placing sticky notes on a refridgerator, and it's finally made it these shores.
Its touch-sensitive screen is supposed to be the ideal space for scribbling text notes that can be seen by the entire family, and its upright, all-in-one design apparently gives you freedom to position it in rooms where a full desktop PC and monitor aren't appropriate.
Can it replace the humble Post-It note? Is a kitchen-bound Media Center PC a ridiculous concept? Let's investigate.
Design
The TouchSmart IQ770 is an odd-looking thing. Unlike most all-in-one PCs, it has a V-shaped base section that allows the screen to be raised, lowered or angled as desired. It's certainly clever, but its attractiveness is subjective -- some people in our office thought it was attractive; others hated it.
TouchSmart IQ770 doesn't clutter your work area with needless wires. It occupies only as much room as a standard TFT monitor and is self-contained, barring the wireless keyboard and mouse. Even adding a printer needn't add clutter -- the base of the IQ770 contains a dock designed to accept an HP PhotoSmart Touch photo printer.
It's in HP's best interests to limit your reliance on the keyboard and mouse, so it's no surprise to see a stylus slotted at the top left of the screen. There are also shortcut keys for controlling media playback -- these are logically positioned just above the slot-loading DVD drive in the base section. To the right of this you'll find an easy-to-access memory card reader, so it's easy to get files on and off the thing.
Features
The TouchSmart IQ770 ships with Windows Vista Home Premium edition, which includes Media Center. This makes it exceptionally simple to browse your movies, music and images via the touchscreen, mouse or keyboard, or via the bundled infrared remote control. HP supplies a 320GB hard drive, which is big enough to stash a few hundred DivX movies, or to record a similar amount of content from the bundled analogue and Freeview TV tuner card.
Videos and images look great on the IQ770's 19-inch widescreen display. It runs at a native resolution of 1,440x900-pixels, but its biggest selling point is its sensitivity to touch. It uses a passive stylus instead of a digitiser, which means it can also accept inputs from your finger. The screen has a hard coating that can be wiped clean in case of greasy fingerprints.
Getting media on and off the machine is simple enough -- there's a slot-loading DVD rewriter drive at the front of the base section, alongside an 8-in-1 memory card reader that supports most popular formats. The IQ770 packs a gigabit Ethernet port (1,000Mbps) for high-speed LAN connectivity, but if you do intend to use the PC in the kitchen you'll be better off using the integrated Wi-Fi adaptor. This supports 802.11a/b/g networks.
The IQ770's software package is appropriate for its target audience. It includes the Microsoft Works 8.5 office productivity suite, Cyberlink DVD play, Roxio Creator Basic, Muvee autoProducer and a 60-day trial version of Norton Internet Security 2007. HP also includes software that mimics the behaviour of Post-It notes. This lets you leave on-screen notes for your family and is an alternative to putting sticky notes on the fridge, although we couldn't see ourselves using it frequently.
HP offers a one-year pick-up and return warranty covering parts and labour, which isn't particularly generous. Anyone who's prone to kitchen-based accidents or has yet to master the intricacies of the deep fat fryer is advised to get extra cover.
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