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of the Compaq Laptop Battery First post by: www.batterystores.ca
The Prosignia 190's two modular bays let you set it up for either extra-long battery life or extra-light weight. To watch back-to-back movies or work long stretches while in transit, you can swap out the removable floppy and DVD-ROM drives for two additional batteries ($179 for a 12-cell and $129 for an 8-cell). The total of three internal batteries such as Compaq Armada M700 Battery, Compaq EVO N610C Battery, Compaq EVO N620C Battery, Compaq Presario 1200 Battery, Compaq Presario 1800 Battery, Compaq 116314-001 Battery, Compaq Presario 700 Battery, Compaq Presario 900 Battery, Compaq Presario 1700 Battery, Compaq Presario X1000 Battery, Compaq Armada E500 Battery, the first we've seen in a notebook, provide up to 9 hours of outlet-free computing, according to Compaq (we tested only the primary battery). Or just insert space holders into both bays; doing so brings the Prosignia's 7.2-pound standard weight down to 6.1 pounds, impressively light for a notebook with a 15-inch screen. For heavy-duty storage, you can plug a second hard drive ($439 for a 12GB drive; $749 for an 18GB one) into the DVD-ROM drive bay.
WHAT'S NOT: Aside from an obtrusive screen latch and speaker ports positioned directly beneath typing hands, we can find little about the Prosignia 190 to ding.
WHAT ELSE: This Prosignia's sedate all-gray looks belie its many extras. Type A personalities eager to get a jump on work will like the myriad ways to launch applications, files, and Web sites from the keyboard (via four programmable shortcut buttons at the top, plus reprogrammable mouse buttons). Compaq's generous, well-written documentation includes a printed user's guide, an extensive ergonomic guide in the machine, and a downloadable online manual at the company's site. A copy of Microsoft's Office 2000 Professional Edition is bundled. If you leave out the locking screw, you can quickly pop out the primary hard drive for safekeeping. (The hard drive resides under a panel on the bottom, and the RAM sits beneath the keyboard, which you can peel back by pressing four large tabs at the top.) Like most Prosignias, the 190 has, for a notebook, better-than-average built-in audio. Unfortunately, it doesn't quite match the superbly full, rounded stereo of last year's Prosignia 140 and 160, the best-sounding notebooks we've heard. Performance in our PC WorldBench benchmark test--the Prosignia scored 130--was average for a Pentium III-650/500, which makes this model one of the fastest portables you can buy right now. Note to security-conscious companies: The Prosignia 190 is the first notebook we've seen offered with Keytronics' Biometrics FingerPrint Scanner ($94 extra). The device plugs into the notebook's serial port and is held with Velcro to the back of the screen. Compaq says its notebook keyboards eventually will include built-in scanners. Typing on the 190's keyboard is easy enough, except for the small, inconveniently placed Delete, Page Up, and Page Down keys.
BEST USE: The Prosignia 190 can morph into whatever a business needs: a portable with fantastically long battery life or extra storage, and a giant screen in a 6.1-pound package.
SUMMARY
Compaq Prosignia 190
PC WorldBench 2000 score of 130, Pentium III-650/500 CPU, 128MB of SDRAM, 15-inch active screen, 12GB hard drive, touchpad, 4X DVD-ROM drive, V.90 modem, multipurpose bay takes a second lithium ion battery, additional bay for third battery, Microsoft Office 2000 Professional Edition; 3-year parts warranty, 1-year labor warranty, free unlimited support, 24/7 toll-free support.