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60 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Multi-Tasking Powerhouse
Impressive Value! ... Though the 2.6 GHz Athlon II 620 Quad-Core with 2.6 GHz, 2MB L2 Cache may not be the fastest Processor one can buy at this price level, a second look at the rest of the components this desktop sports will justify the purchase and the enterprise.

With this configuration, You can tell that I am neither a gamer nor a professional film...
Published on November 9, 2009 by M. Swaissy

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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Beware before buying
I bought this computer in October with the release of windows 7. The video card cannot not support itself. The image on the screen has always jumped when switching from one program to another. Sometimes it just goes to blue screen of death. Do not buy this if you have an Ipod. It does not let you connect a usb mounted storage device without crashing. You will get...
Published on November 24, 2009 by Javan Carson


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60 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Multi-Tasking Powerhouse, November 9, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
Impressive Value! ... Though the 2.6 GHz Athlon II 620 Quad-Core with 2.6 GHz, 2MB L2 Cache may not be the fastest Processor one can buy at this price level, a second look at the rest of the components this desktop sports will justify the purchase and the enterprise.

With this configuration, You can tell that I am neither a gamer nor a professional film editor; hence a lightning fast firing processor was not what I was after. But my typical work session would include sending and receiving email, uploading, editing and processing photos in Photoshop, downloading movies and watching them, and occasionally using Skype while surfing the net, and at the same time, cleaning and defragmenting the hard disk in the background all at the same breath!

Such seemingly mundane tasks, while appearing innocuous enough, exact a heavy toll on the processing core of the chip; so a lightning fast dual only core would behave like a clueless cheerleader with two left feet; on the turf, she is cute and nimble because she memorizes her routine well, but on the dance floor, she is a klutz who can't chew gum and synchronize her dance movements with her dance partner at the same time!

Enter Quad Core processing power 2.6 GHz; though not the extreme speed that you might want if you were a gamer, it has a superb capability for multi-tasking with ease and agility; and that is where this powerhouse comes in handy; enough speed for most if not almost all applications, and enough multi-tasking processing power for four fraught applications simultaneously with ease and without klutzy performance or staggered inter-lapping allocation of processing power.

The 2 MB level2 cache proved readily and immediately, upon initial use, that it is crucial for the smooth procession of processed data throughout 4 cores, thereby augmenting the capabilities of the processor.

And the 6 GB of memory are the beauty behind this simple yet elegant power-capable configuration, while the fact that the motherboard is capable of handling 16 GB memory expansion put my mind at ease against design obsolescence when faced with Microsoft's unpredictable quirks for memory hungry OS development.

The NVIDIA GeForce 9100 Graphics Card, though integrated as is the custom in this price range, is another extra component that adds to the performance by freeing the processor from the burden of handling power-hungry graphics. An independent graphics card rather than integrated would probably have added about one point to the overall performance rating at about $50.00 added to the price, but then if you had no need for it, it would be an unnecessary expense. I am of the opinion that if your primary use includes a lot of photo and video editing it may be of benefit to you to spend about $50.00 for a powerful graphics card and install it yourself; it is a 5-minute simple job, otherwise the machine as configured is plenty powerful.

All in all, unless you are a gamer, my initial use has convinced me that this machine is very well designed, capable and indeed far superior for the typical workstation user than almost anything else out there within $100 price range, give or take, and bang for the buck, it is a hard act to follow.
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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome pc for high-definition HD video editing, November 13, 2009
By 
Happy r/c (Scottsdale, AZ) - See all my reviews
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
PROS: My 6 year old Pentium 4 pc at 2.5Ghz and 2 Gigs RAM was too slow to edit my new HD video footage (in 720P AVCHD Lite format) so I upgraded to this new HP quad processor and the HD footage is now smooth and I have no problem multitasking by surfing the web, burning a dvd, and editing an HD home video. The pc never used more than 2gigs RAM even though it has 6gigs RAM. I love the standby button that Compaq and HP pcs have always had so it's always a quick 1-second to turn on and 1 second to turn off.

The keyboard lights up when the pc's awake and turns off when the pc's on standby.

Windows 7 is awesome. When you have multiple windows open on the menubar at the bottom of the screen, hovering your mouse over a window makes it zoom-in to show you what you're about to click on so you don't have to guess if you're clicking on the right window anymore.

This pc has the AMD quad chip instead of the Pentium chip (which would cost about $50-$60 more) but because it can render HD video with ease, I can spend the $50 savings toward a nice dinner or a wireless keyboard/mouse.

This AMD chip also supports hardware virtualization so you can run a copy of Windows XP (with Virtual PC software from Microsoft) for those programs that won't work with the newer Windows 7. However, this pc comes with Windows 7 Home Premium and virtualization requires Windows 7 Professional (which I upgraded very easily for $100 through Microsoft). This is cheaper than having to upgrade a bunch of my old softwares to work with Windows 7. The plentiful 6gigs of RAM comes in very handy for virtualization. In contrast, the first Intel 6300 Quad core processors couldn't do hardware virtualization (Intel started adding virtualization end of 2009).

CONS: I wish the standby button was a separate button instead of having to hold down a FUNCTION key and the F2 key at the same time. Because the included Windows 7 is 64-bit instead of 32-bit, I had to download the 64-bit drivers for my HP Laserjet 3030 and Laserjet 2600n printers.

No old format PCI expansion slot so if you want to make it wireless, you're better off buying a $30 USB wifi adapter. Also, no old serial or parallel ports but there are 6 USB ports and a firewire port and a bunch of memory card slots (but no SDHC slot).
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply awesome given the price, very happy, November 13, 2009
By 
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
I am a serious software developer and bought this machine for home office (there was a deal on Staples with is $450). It is the cheapest quad-core desktop you can find anywwhere with decent, no-bs configuration (good on-board nvidia video card with DVI, enough memory and hard-drive).

Surprisingly it is quite more powerful than I expected (I use a Intel Q9300 quad-core in the office). This machine is just simply awesome. Now I got Windows 7 and Ubuntu 9.10 dual boot and is happily hacking on my code (I mostly use Ubuntu). Also, this CPU has full VM support so I can run 64-bit virtual machines (watch out some cheap Intel Q8300 quad-core does NOT support VT commands).

By the way, it is also super super quiet. I am very picky on computer fan noises, this one I can't even hear anything. Overall I am super happy with the purchase and would recommend it to everybody.
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hey, not too shabby, November 19, 2009
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
I bought this PC with high hopes, but low expectations. I needed a replacement for my old Pentium 4 rig, but didn't have a bunch of money to shell out at the moment. Typically I build my own machines, but even the parts I had picked out were more than I wanted to spend. Staples had this PC on sale for around $460 and after doing a lot of research on the AMD CPU and reading reviews I decided to give it a shot. I'm glad I did.

I work with very demanding graphic, 3D animation, and video editing software including Premiere, After Effects, 3D Studio MAX, etc. I also tend to work in two or three applications at a time. In my spare time I also enjoy playing video games. I bought GTA IV when it first came out and my old 3Ghz P4 couldn't even begin to play it, even with a good video card, so I was hoping this machine would be capable of running that.

I knew before buying that the integrated graphics on this machine would never be capable of my demands, so I ordered a mid priced video card at the same time XFX PV-T98G-YDLU GF 9800GT 600M 512MB DDR3 DUAL DVI TV PCI Express Card, hoping a.) that it would fit in the tight confines of the case, and b.) that the stock 300 watt power supply would be enough to run everything and would have the necessary connectors.

I am happy to report that the video card fit fine, didn't require an additional power connection, and ran fine with the stock power supply. The computer itself is extremely quiet, very fast, and a pleasure to work with. It runs all of my applications flawlessly and with very impressive speed, and GTA IV runs with very high settings. For the combined $570 or so spent, this is an extremely decent system.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Beware before buying, November 24, 2009
By 
Javan Carson "jscorpio" (Littleton, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
I bought this computer in October with the release of windows 7. The video card cannot not support itself. The image on the screen has always jumped when switching from one program to another. Sometimes it just goes to blue screen of death. Do not buy this if you have an Ipod. It does not let you connect a usb mounted storage device without crashing. You will get the BSOD and the error code 0x00000116. HP has no clue how to fix it. I have spent hours with their customer service only to go in circles.

Spend a little time and Google HP pavilion 6210f and see for yourself.

I have spent plenty of time working on this problem before I posted such a bad review but enough was enough.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Recomendation: DO NOT BUY! - MAJOR DEFECT!, January 2, 2010
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
Read the other negative reviews on this site. For the HP p6210f there is a major problem using the USB ports to copy or backup files/data off the PC and onto a portable USB device - the computer freezes with a blue screen and you have to power off and on to get it to reboot. That kind of crash is bad for the long-term life of your data and operating system.

The nvlddmkm.sys driver is where the computer blue screen stop/halt says it froze. The message says: "Attempt to reset the display driver and recover from the timeout failed". I tried updating the Nvidia driver software using the Microsoft update and there was no improvement. Then I downloaded Nvidia drivers directly from the Nvidia website - replaced the drivers three times - it still crashed every time I tried to copy or backup files and data to the external drive from Windows 7 either by using Windows Explorer to copy or Windows Backup to do a backup. It failed on USB thumb drives and USB hard drives, consistently.

If you expect to be able to transfer significant files to a USB external drive (who doesn't?) then this is NOT the PC for you.
If you ever expect to be able to back up the system, partitions, and files to an a USB external drive (who doesn't?) then this is NOT the PC for you.

I bought this as a first computer for my brother, spent hours and days, setting it up and configuring it. When it came time to back it up, it crashed consistently every time.
Called HP support and they had no immediate solution. HP support wanted to start a "bench repair" cycle with the computer (meaning that a repairman comes to the house or I take it in to an approved shop). When you start letting a vendor fix a PC, especially a brand new PC, you have no idea how long that will take or what the results will be and in the meantime you can't use the PC for anything important. That's not what you buy a new PC for. I said "no thanks" and took it back to the store for a refund. If you dare to buy this, then immediately test it using Windows backup to a USB drive and see for yourself. Be sure you are within the store's acceptable return/exchange period or you may be stuck - ask about "restocking fees" before you buy. Better idea: don't buy it in the first place. I ended up paying more for the HP p6240f but it didn't have any Nvidia chips in it and it is now working fine. I lost a lot of time on this but at least I'm glad I caught it before my return period expired. Most people don't start backing up their new PC for a long time after they buy it so I feel sorry for those who discover this too late.

Note: Nvidia has had problems with some of their chipsets the past few years - google it and see.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Constant problems and terrible customer service, January 1, 2010
By 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
My wife and I bought this PC six weeks ago because of what appeared to be a lot of computer for a great price. Unfortunately this computer has caused us nothing but problems since we got it, and having to deal with HP's customer service on multiple occasions has only made the situation worse.

We are young professionals and experienced PC users. At first we were impressed by the speed of the PC -- it is fast. However, almost immediately we started to receive blue screen errors when performing basic functions. Transferring files to an external hard drive -- the computer crashes. Burning a CD -- the computer crashes. Syncing an iPod -- crash.

We have now contacted HP support five times spending well over six hours trying to get answers and solutions that still do not exist. We have had to un-install and re-install the operating system, do the same for the graphics driver, and download a Microsoft hot fix, none of which have solved the problems.

This computer was bought new and was defective right out of the box. Having dealt with the painful customer service at HP several times, we are not convinced the repair option will resolve the issues given the history of problems we've already had and the numerous attempts to fix them through HP support. After receiving nearly 20 blue screen crashes, we requested a replacement PC, but HP has refused.

This PC appeared to be a great value, however our experience has been one hassle after another.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great PC for the Money, January 7, 2010
By 
PC Gamer "PC Gamer" (Los Angeles, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
First of all, regarding the other reviews that cite a problem with large data transfers to external USB devices, it was a problem, and a known problem. Microsoft has since created a service pack to address and fix the issue. Go to HP Support and download/install the 'Microsoft Host Controller Driver Update' update. You can find it by searching on 'Pavilion 6210f' under 'Software and Drivers'. The file name is 'sp44620.exe'.

Other than that minor glitch (and the inconvenience of those who had to suffer through it), this is a great PC. It is very quick and has a ton of RAM (6 gigs) and HDD space (600 gigs). NOTE: some configurations of this PC come with less RAM and HDD, so make sure you check the specs before buying. Also has surround sound and a decent video card.

The other thing I like about it is that it is very quiet... probably the quietest PC I've ever had.

Overall I'm quite happy with it and would recommend it to anyone. It's loaded and only cost me $500.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great value easy setup, December 14, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
Easy to setup and powerful enough for all but the most intensive users. Driver set is complete and it even recognized an old HP 4L printer connected with a parallel to USB adapter cord. One quibble. The power off switch is raised and located near the front edge of the top of the unit. You will be hitting it many times by mistake when you reach for something under your desk without looking.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Loved it at first... but then the blue screen of death started popping up., December 16, 2009
By 
Joe Jenkins (Colorado Springs, CO USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: HP Pavilion P6210F Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium) (Personal Computers)
I bought this computer after much research. It's a great mix of speed, hard drive, video memory and low price. I got everything up and running easily. It worked great until I bought a new 16 g iPod 5th gen. On the first attempt to sync the iPod using iTunes, I got the blue screen of death (BSOD). On every attempt to sync, I get the BSOC. I have tried everything imaginable to make it work... and I mean every possible fix known. After 2 weeks, 8 hours on the phone with apple (Idaho, India, and New Mexico call centers, all smart, nice and helpful people), 2 trips to speak with a "Genius" at an apple store, one call to HP where the attitude is "we can't help if it's not an HP product", I am about ready to give up. I like apple's attitude, can do spirit and friendliness but they ain't helping either. Oh well, other than this little problem, it's a great computer. I have one more resource to check out... Microsoft. Yeah, I'm looking forward to that. Update forthcoming.
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