And charms there are, though in a somewhat dated design. HP's ProBook line slots in below the company's EliteBook series as a mainstream, value-conscious choice for small to medium businesses and the likes of government offices and educational institutions. The ProBook 6360b is a 13.3-inch ultraportable with a burnished aluminum lid with latch and a magnesium-reinforced ABS plastic chassis. Though not business-rugged like the EliteBooks, it features a bottom case with a drain to help protect against minor spills.
Design
The ProBook 6360b is of course rectangular, not square, but we found ourselves thinking of it as square in a "not hip, daddy-o" way: It's a bland-looking slab measuring 1.3 by 12.7 by 8.7 inches (HWD) and weighing 4.8 pounds—definitely on the hefty side compared to, for instance, our Editors' Choice ultraportable, the 3.2-pound Toshiba Portege R835-P88 (Best Deal: $779.99 at CompUSA.com).
The 13.3-inch screen offers the usual 1,366 by 768 resolution and a nice matte antiglare finish. Text and fine details looked crisp and colors were vivid across a moderate range of viewing angles. Brightness and contrast were good as long as we kept the backlight to its top three or four settings. Audio is decently loud and clear.
Its chiclet-style keyboard could be the 6360b's best feature. The layout is faultless, with dedicated Home, End, PgUp, and PgDn keys (albeit with HP's usual laptop quirk of half-sized up and down arrows sandwiched between full-sized left and right arrows), and the slightly scalloped keys fit the fingers comfortably. Typing feel is firm, with good travel. Both a touchpad and pointing stick are on hand for mouse maneuvers; the twin pairs of buttons work smoothly but the concave stick doesn't grip the finger as well as one of Lenovo's TrackPoints.
Three buttons above the keyboard toggle Wi-Fi, launch your Web browser, and mute audio. When the ProBook 6360b is switched off, the middle button launches QuickWeb, which (once configured for a favorite Wi-Fi network) brings up a browser and widgets such as a stock ticker and weather and news headlines in about 20 seconds without booting Windows.
Features
Don't look for Intel Wireless Display (WiDi) for giving presentations on an HDTV set—the ProBook 6360b doesn't even have a wired HDMI port. Nor will you find USB 3.0 for connecting up-to-date storage devices. Instead, the HP has four USB 2.0 ports—one a USB/eSATA combo port—along with Ethernet, FireWire, VGA, DisplayPort, and 56Kbps modem ports, plus microphone and headphone jacks. There's an ExpressCard slot on the left side, just above the DVD±RW drive, and an SD/MMC media reader on the front bezel.
Broadcom 802.11a/g/n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless are standard, as is a docking-station connector on the laptop's bottom. A fingerprint reader below the keyboard gives added security, as does the HP ProtectTools suite preloaded on the 320GB, 7,200-rpm hard drive. The latter is a set of utilities that helps with functions such as encrypting data, managing passwords and authentication, and sanitizing files—overwriting and deleting them so they can't be recovered. Our ProBook had a three-year upgrade to the standard one-year limited warranty, which offers pick-up or carry-in protection with no on-site service.
Performance
HP ProBook 6360b Equipped with a 2.6GHz Core i5-2540M processor and 4GB of RAM, the ProBook 6360b delivers solid performance. Its PCMark 7 score of 2,305 and Handbrake video encoding time of 1 minute 45 seconds are virtually identical to the Toshiba R835-P88's 2,313 and 1:46, respectively. It tied the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 (Best Deal: $1,265.99 at ANTOnline) in CineBench R11.5, with a score of 2.85 points, and was a few seconds faster than its peers in Photoshop CS5 (3:48).