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2 reviews
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HP Pavilion Verde


$579.00 Released October, 2008

Product Shot 1 The Cons:Not REALLY any more green than any other computer - intentionally misleading and praying on stupid consumer guilt / trends. Not worth $ 579. No DVI/HDMI output, nForce 430 is not a low power chipset.

Introduced on October 20th 2008, the HP Pavilion Verde is a new desktop PC aimed at consumers who wish to purchase a new computer that will also help reduce their carbon footprint. Featuring recyclable packaging, the Verde uses the energy efficient AMD Athlon X2 4850e with a thermal evelope of 45w, 5GB of RAM, a 500GB hdd, DVD-writer with lightscribe,a 15-in-1 media card reader, six USB 2.0 ports, two FireWire ports, and VGA output powered by the onboard Nvidia 6150 SE.

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Product Shot 2 A slightly more expensive quad core model called the HP Pavilion Phoenix is also available.

Features

  • CPU / RAM: AMD Athlon X2 4850e (45w TDP), 5GB DDR2
  • Graphics: onboard Nvidia 6150 SE (up to 128MB of shared memory)
  • Storage: 500GB HDD
  • Optical & Expansion: DVD-writer with lightscribe, 15-in-1 media card reader, six USB 2.0 ports, two FireWire ports, VGA output

User Reviews (2)

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  • 2

    not REALLY any more green than any other computer - intentionally misleading and praying on stupid consumer guilt / trends

  • 2

    not worth $ 579

  • 1

    no DVI/HDMI output, nForce 430 is not a low power chipset

  • 0

    5GB of RAM is excessive and not very green

Comments (1)

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Yale
Yale: #hp_pavilion_verde

While utilizing onboard graphics does in fact decease the overall energy consumption of a pc (most store bought PCs that aren't geared towards gamers use onboard graphics anyway), a low power processor actually utilizes about the same amount of electricity as any other when running idle - which is most of the time. There is nothing else remotely "green" about this PC, or any other PC. In fact, it is said that most of the energy expended by a PC is in manufacturing.

Oct 20, 08
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