?HP Stream 11 Review: $200 and Worth Every Penny
Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Acer Laptop Battery
I just got finished rounding up the best Chromebooks out there, but there's more to the world of dirt-cheap computing than Google's browser-machines. The HP Stream is a $200 full-Windows laptop, and it's surprisingly good.
A $200 laptop from HP that runs full Windows 8. A pokey little guy with a colorful finish, a 720p screen, a dual-core Intel Bay Trail processor, and 2GB of RAM. A chance for Microsoft to take on the Chromebook. Damn good for a $200 machine.
There have always been cheap Windows laptops, but this Windows laptop with battery like Acer Aspire 1680 Battery, Acer Aspire 1410 Battery, Acer TravelMate 4500 Battery, Acer LCBTP03003 Battery, Acer Aspire 1300 Battery, Acer BTP-APJ1 Battery, Acer BTP-AQJ1 Battery, Acer BTP-ARJ1 Battery, Acer BATCL32 battery, Acer BATCL32L battery, Acer Extensa 4620 battery, Acer Aspire One D150 batteryis super cheap. At $200, the HP Stream 11 doesn't cost a penny more than the cheapest Chromebooks currently available. But unlike Chromebooks, this dirt-cheap laptop isn't handicapped by a web-browser based OS or the need for a constant internet connection. Windows 8 gives you access to way more programs than a Chromebook ever could. That is, as long as the processor can keep up.
DesignWhen I first looked at the HP Stream 11, I thought it looked dumb. With its cartoony blue exterior (also available in pink!) it's a little silly-looking from the get-go, and the color gradient on the frame next to the keyboard only made it worse. But after a while, it really grew on me. Sure, it's still a little Fisher Price-y, but in a charming sort of way. Also, at $200, I'm hard pressed to complain about aesthetics.
More important than looks is build quality, and the HP Stream 11 is a solid little tyke. It's got a slightly squishy but completely typable keyboard that's even a little better than the Toshiba Chromebook 2, one of my favorite Chromebooks yet. (The $300 Acer Chromebook 14's keys are nicer, with a little more throw, but not $100 nicer if you get my drift.) There's virtually no flex to the Stream 11's keyboard tray, even if you're pushing on the frame deliberately hard. Most importantly, I don't mind typing on this thing at all. In fact, I typed about half this review on it.
The solid feel holds up elsewhere. The hinge isn't flimsy, as it can be on a lot of laptops down in this price range. The Stream doesn't have a touchscreen, so it's not like that hinge has to stand up to you poking the display, but it could if it had to. The whole thing seems like it could take a moderate beating, the kind you might subject a $200 laptop to because you don't particularly care if it survives.
It's not all sunshine and roses though: the screen is an obvious place where corners were cut. The matte 1366 x 768 display is pretty rough. It has that "bad matte screen" rainbow effect that makes whites look distorted. The screen is totally serviceable, sure, but it's more like what you might expect to find attached to a aging public terminal somewhere as opposed to attached to your laptop. Web browsing, sure. Movie watching? Not if you can avoid it.
That's just the screen's fault though; the Stream's bottom-facing speakers are surprisingly competent. With the volume turned all the way up they can be almost uncomfortably loud, and while the quality is nothing to write home about, they aren't tinny or distorted. I could actually hear the basslines in the music I tried listening to. Not bad for $200!
The touchpad, unfortunately, isn't such a pleasant surprise. It's serviceable but far from great, and not quite good. I've had more than my fair share of misclicks, like bringing up the right-click menu and having the cursor select an option seemingly of its own volition, or having the mouse drift just slightly to the right while I'm trying to click something small.
Fortunately you can avoid one or both of those things with a Bluetooth mouse and/or by using the Stream's HDMI port to hook up to a prettier monitor, though resolutions higher than the native 1366 x 768 start putting a lot more stress on the lappy's lacking guts. In addition, the Stream's also got a USB 2.0 port, a USB 3.0 port, and an SD card reader. All the bare essentials, unless you're that guy who's still keeping the optical disc companies in business.
Using the Stream is just like using any other Windows 8.1 machine, but with the caveat that you have to be prepared for plenty of stuff not to work. Chromebooks get around having low-power guts by using an OS that won't touch most of the things they can't handle (with the exception of some more sophisticated Chrome and OpenGL games).
Instead, the Stream's full Windows 8.1 basically begs you to download everything you could ever want to download, and discover on your own what won't work. The limitations are pretty obvious. PC games are pretty much out. Ditto Photoshop or anything else that's even remotely graphics intensive. But what else would you expect from a $200 machine?
That doesn't mean that full Windows is not without its huge perks. The HP Stream 11 is the cheapest laptop I've ever actually been able to get any work done on because it can run AIM clients (which are how many of us chat at Gizmodo). Spotify's dedicated streaming music app also works swimmingly. Same with the dedicated TweetDeck app and other little creature-comfort type applications. Being able to use Pidgin for chat instead of loading up some Chrome tab goes a long way towards making you feel like you're using a real computer.
The big work-draw for most people is going to be Office. Not only can the HP Stream 11 run classics like Word and Excel (and run them damn well-surprisingly silky smooth performance here) it also comes with Office 365 Personal for a year. That includes must-haves Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook among others, and includes 1TB of OneDrive storage. Those full, robust applications beat the hell out of being stuck with Google Docs like you are on a Chromebook. I found that the Stream can run every member of the suite admirably (though not at the same time), which makes it the best out-of-the-box productivity machine you can get for the price.
On the web-browsing side, the HP Stream 11 is a little more competent than your average Chromebook, which is to say it can handle its fair share of tabs. While I was testing it, I found I could noodle around in a window with some 9 or 10 tabs-even a few really heavy ones like Tweetdeck and Chartbeat-before the lag started really kicking in. Even then, I could still eke out choppy but usable performance with as many as a dozen tabs going at once. That's far from unlimited, but it's damn good for 200-dollar fare, and better performance that I've seen on any Chromebook packing anything less than a Core i3 processor.
The catch is that you pay for that performance in battery life. The Stream couldn't hit the 6-hour mark in my tests, and charted closer to five hours in my more anecdotal "I'm just gonna work on this thing for a while" sessions. You can probably stretch it some by tuning the power-settings something fierce, but at the end of the day the Stream is a half-day device, a three-quarter day device on the outside. It's good for doing a little work, sure, but if you plan to spend a whole day on the thing, you're going to need an outlet.
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