HP has been cutting something of a dash with its laptops for quite a while now, and the 13.3-inch Pavilion dv3-2055ea certainly continues the trend. As you might expect for an £800 laptop, the case consists of nothing more exotic than plastic, but a smoothly rounded shape and the choice of two low-key imprint designs help the laptop to look rather classy.
Design
The dv3-2055ea's 13.3-inch chassis means there's room for a full-sized keyboard, and HP has sensibly stuck with a standard layout. The half-sized function keys are the only ones to suffer from the shrink ray, but these are no great loss and the large return and backspace keys, plus a full-sized cursor-key cluster, are much more useful. The broad, flat keys are well-sprung and comfortable to use, but they also rattle. Simply brushing your fingers across the key tops is enough to make it sound like you're typing at 150 words per minute.
Rampant narcissists will appreciate the large mirrored trackpad, while everyone else will be happy that its shiny finish lets a fingertip slide around with ease. The two wide buttons (also mirrored) have a satisfyingly positive click. We're not quite sure why HP felt the need to include a tiny button that disables the trackpad, but we suppose it's handy if you're using an external mouse and don't want to fiddle with the Synaptics driver settings.

The dv3-2055ea stayed surprisingly cool during our demanding benchmark tests, with only the top right-hand corner of its base becoming warm to the touch. This is good. But there's an air intake at this spot and the whole underside of the laptop has similar slotted vents. This makes it ill-suited for use on a lap or other soft surface that can cause those vents to be blocked. That's particularly bad for a laptop that's small and light enough to be used away from a desktop.
Fan noise is also a minor issue. Although the dv3-2055ea hardly makes a racket, its cooling fan is always on and the constant whoosh of warm air from its right-side exhaust vent can be a distraction if you're working in a quiet room.
Features
Although billed as an entertainment laptop, the dv3-2055ea's glossy screen is slightly too small to deliver anything approaching a cinematic experience, although its LED backlight at least ensures a bright, vibrant image. Movie buffs will also appreciate the screen's 16:9 aspect ratio, and DVD movies are very well presented.
We did have a small issue with the screen on our review model. With transparency enabled in Windows Vista's Aero interface, small parts of both the desktop wallpaper and open windows appeared solarised. Installing the latest graphics driver from HP didn't fix the problem, but disabling Aero transparency did, which leads us to think that this is a software issue, rather than evidence of any underlying hardware fault. HP hadn't heard of the problem before, so we'll treat it as a one-off and keep you posted if we hear anything else about it.
Though hardly window-rattling, the Altec Lansing speakers with SRS Premium Sound technology do a good job with music and movie soundtracks, and deliver a surprising amount of bass for their small size. A remote control the size of a credit card rounds off the entertainment side of this package.
The 2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T6400 processor should provide enough oomph for most multimedia tasks. It's a 64-bit chip too, and, although the installed 32-bit edition of Windows Vista Home Premium can't fully exploit the supplied 4GB of RAM, the ability to fit up to 8GB in the dv3-2055ea will be appreciated by anyone eyeing up the 64-bit edition of Windows 7. HP's included a 500GB hard drive too, plus an eSATA port for connecting blisteringly quick external drives.

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indranil2u 26 April 2010
Good: How it looks
Bad: Everything else
Comment: i can't use my laptop more than 30 mins since it was 5 months old due to overheating. HP's technical support is incompetent with bad communication skills but once they come to know after all the troubleshooting that it is a dv3-2055ea they book you promptly for a repair. Everytime it comes back from the repair centre it runs fine for a month and then the overheating problem resurfaces. This is my third time with the repair centre and they have replaced everything inside the laptop except the motherboard. This laptop is fundamentally flawed and nothing can fix it. My advice to everyone planning to buy this - don't even think about it. Spend a few more quids and buy a macbook or a sony viao.
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