By
Harald Thon,
published on September 27, 2005
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: hp, adds, amd | Themes: Business Notebooks
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: hp, adds, amd | Themes: Business Notebooks
Contents
- 1. HP's Compaq Nx6125
- 2. HP's Compaq Nx6125, Continued
- 3. Case And Connectivity
- 4. Long Battery Life, Continued
- 5. Very Clear Labeling Of The Ports And Connectors
- 6. Very Clear Labeling Of The Ports And Connectors, Continued
- 7. Even More Ports? - A Docking Station!
- 8. A Bright, High Contrast Display, But Imprecise Fixed Backlight And Uneven Illumination
- 9. An Integrated X300 Graphics Core Is Perfectly Adequate For Office Applications
- 10. Keyboard And Displays
- 11. Onboard WLAN And PAN Module (Bluetooth)
- 12. Audio: Improved Microphone Position And Good Sound
- 13. There Is Whisper-soft Operation Most Of The Time
- 14. The Integrated Fingerprint Sensor And Security Suite
- 15. The Integrated Fingerprint Sensor And Security Suite, Continued
- 16. The Integrated Fingerprint Sensor And Security Suite, Continued
- 17. Benchmarks And Settings
- 18. The Compaq Nx6125 And The Competition
- 19. Battery Tests
- 20. Charging Times
- 21. Games
- 22. Games Direct X9
- 23. 3DMark05 (Synthetic DirectX 9 Benchmark)
- 24. PCMark04 (Synthetic Benchmark For CPU And RAM)
- 25. DivX Encoding With Auto Gordian Knot (mpeg 4 Encoding)
- 26. Lame MP3 Encoding
- 27. Sysmark 2004 SE (Office System Benchmark)
- 28. Summary
- 29. More on this topic
20. Charging Times
We also let you know how long it takes to fully charge the battery while the computer is in use. In order to compare the results for the notebooks, we set the display brightness in all notebooks to a fixed value of ca. 100cd/m².
We then set an Office program to run nonstop until the end of the charging cycle was indicated by a tool we programmed ourselves.

To simulate the charging process while under maximum load, we ran the demo version of a game nonstop, until the screen went dark.

- Previous page Battery Tests
- Next page Games