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HP EliteBook Folio 9470m Review

HP EliteBook Folio 9470m
MSRP $1,349.00
“The HP EliteBook Folio 9470m offers a nice balance of portability and power with long battery life, but its display is a drawback.”
Pros
  • Slim and light for a 14-inch laptop
  • Lots of ports
  • User-removable battery that doesn't jut out
  • Pointstick and touchpad with discrete mouse buttons
Cons
  • Display resolution and quality is too low
  • Small keys on right edge of keyboard
  • Uninspiring performance

HP’s EliteBook line is all about business. That often means design that’s less about sleek lines and more about packing in the ports and battery life. This is why many of HP’s business laptops look like they came from a time capsule buried in the sands about five years ago. That changed last year with the HP Folio 13 Ultrabook, which balanced power and portability with attractive design. The Folio was an experiment at the time, but it must have done well for the company, since HP is now willing to brand an Ultrabook with the EliteBook moniker.

The HP EliteBook Folio 9470m shares some design language with older EliteBooks, but without the bulk and weight. Unlike many consumer Ultrabooks, you don’t have to sacrifice port selection or the ability to swap out the battery yourself. That makes it a compelling choice for both enterprise and mainstream users. Is it as good in real life as it is on paper?

Good blend of business and Ultrabook

The Folio 9470m isn’t an EliteBook in name only. It shares the same silver-on-black color scheme as the rest of the line, and the streamlined, no-bling deck we expect. However, unlike most EliteBooks, the Folio is Ultrabook slim. Not razor thin or feather light, just very portable for a notebook with a 14-inch display.

hp elitebook folio 9470m front
Image used with permission by copyright holder

You still get a very solid-feeling machine thanks to the magnesium and aluminum case. Though we like the feel of metal under our fingers, the soft-touch coating on the lid and the bottom makes carrying more comfortable, and lessens the chance of it slipping out of your hands. There’s a small amount of flex in the lid if you purposefully apply pressure, but not enough to cause a problem when just opening or closing.

The Folio’s 0.75-inch thickness accommodates several full-sized ports; no dongles needed. It has an SD card slot, three USB 3.0 ports, VGA, DisplayPort, Ethernet, SmartCard reader, and combo headphone/mic. This is HP’s first docking Ultrabook, so users can expand the ports when sitting in the office. While we wish there was at least one more USB port, this is more than you get with most Ultrabooks.

Plenty of input options

The spill-resistant keyboard is the same as you’ll find on most EliteBooks, meaning it share the same flaws and triumphs. The matte coating on its Chiclet keys improves accuracy by keeping fingers from slipping, there’s plenty of space between them, and travel is decent (though not as good as you would find on a ThinkPad). The backlight is sufficient to keep keys visible in low light, but weaker than we’d like.

Unfortunately, some keys on the right edge are smaller than they need to be in order to make room for the Home, Page Down/Up, and End keys. Since there’s plenty of room on either side, HP could have found a way to make Backspace and Enter full-sized. As it is, we had to download a keymapper to keep us from accidentally hitting Home when we reached for Backspace.

hp elitebook folio 9470m trackpad and keyboard
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The space below the keyboard is large enough for a generous touchpad and two sets of mouse buttons. The top pair of buttons work with the Pointstick sitting between the G, H and B keys. Though this is an Ultrabook, there’s no “clickpad” nonsense: You get distinct left and right mouse buttons. This prevents issues with finger misplacement and accidental multitouch gesture activation.

There’s no touchscreen here, so you have to rely on the touchpad to bring up Windows 8 charms. We pulled off these gestures plus basic things like pinch-to-zoom with no issues. The buttons don’t click down in a very satisfying way, but they never gave us problems. If you prefer the Pointstick for navigation, you’ll find it precise and easy to use.

Disappointing display

The lack of touchscreen on the Folio 9470m is only a drawback if you’re dedicated to using Metro-style apps. Not including it keeps the cost and the weight down, the latter being the most important for an Ultrabook at this size. We can forgive not having touch, but we cannot forgive a 1366 x 768 resolution on a 14-inch display, especially at this price. Even for a business notebook, this is unacceptable. The ThinkPad Carbon X1 manages 1600 x 900 pixels in the same size display and starts at $100 less.

hp elitebook folio 9470m display
Image used with permission by copyright holder

On top of that, the display isn’t a very good one. A matte screen usually indicates wide viewing angles and good sunlight readability, but here it means neither. You don’t have to lean the screen back very far or get too much off center before distortion kicks in. At the highest brightness the Folio does all right on an overcast day, just not on a sunny one. Plus, colors look muted and lack brilliance.

Audio quality isn’t exactly tuned for rocking out, but you’ll do fine with presentations and Web conferences thanks to plenty of volume from the speakers.

Keeping it cool

The EliteBook Folio remains fairly quiet when not connected to the AC adapter. When hooked up the fan runs constantly, though noise levels aren’t that noticable in quiet environments.

When pushed, the Folio didn’t get noticeably hot, even after benchmarking and playing HD video at full screen for 15 minutes.

True ultra-portability

Our review unit’s 3.6 pound weight is light for a 14-inch laptop, though isn’t as impressive as the ThinkPad Carbon X1 (3 pounds without a touchscreen) with the same size screen. Still, the Folio is still very portable and won’t put undue stress on your back or shoulders when you carry it around everywhere.

hp elitebook folio 9470m battery compartment and fan
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The battery doesn’t jut out as it does on other EliteBook models we’ve tested. It’s Ultrabook compact, yet still user removable. If you need to carry an extra for even greater longevity, it’s possible to swap it yourself (unlike almost every other Ultrabook ever). HP also makes a slice battery ($199) that adds 10 hours of battery on top of the juice you get out of the regular one. As equipped, it lasted 6 hours 35 minutes on the Peacekeeper battery rundown test. Under normal usage, you can probably get about 7 and a half hours or more. When asleep, the Folio sipped power, meaning you might be able to get through a whole day of off and on use without the need to lug the AC adapter along.

No touchscreen? No problem

Using Windows 8 without a touchscreen isn’t that big a deal, especially for business users who are more likely to use programs in Desktop mode and not many of touch-centric apps. If you’re used to the touchscreen experience it may take a while to remember that you can’t reach up and tap icons. If you come from Windows 7, the transition isn’t dramatic.

Our review unit came with very little pre-loaded software beyond the Windows 8 essentials. Cyberlink Media Suite, PDF Complete Enterprise Edition, and Evernote are the most prominent besides HP’s business tools. This includes a program for the fingerprint reader on the right edge of the deck that gives you an extra way to login and keep your data safe. Additionally, you can choose to have the HP Premier Image installed, which includes an anti-virus program and EliteBook business software. Further security features include an embedded TPM chip, SmartCard reader, and HP BIOS Vault.

The 720p webcam above the display isn’t the best teleconferencing portal. In well-lit areas the captured image looked blown out with too much noise. It goes downhill in low light.

Not as powerful as it could be

HP equiped our Elitebook Folio 9470m review unit with a 1.8GHz Intel Core i5 3427U CPU, 4GB of RAM, integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics, and an 180GB Intel SSD (the least expensive configuration offered). This is almost identical to the internals on the ThinkPad Carbon X1, but the Folio doesn’t always match up in synthetic benchmarks. SiSoft Sandra’s Processor Arithmetic benchmark turned in a score of 28 GOPs while 7-Zip reached a combined result of 5,372 MIPS (the X1 got 7,776). PCMark 07 turned in a score of 4,595, below the X1’s 4,926.

 hp elitebook folio 9470m back ports

Overall, the Folio is a solid but not impressive performer. We noted this in our hands-on testing as well. It boots very fast – around 11 seconds – and when doing basic tasks with medium-load programs, everything runs smooth. When we pushed the laptop a bit we got the normal slow down at very intense levels (dozens of browser tabs, batch processing in Photoshop), but nothing that suggests it can’t handle some heavy-duty work when called for.

The Folio scored 4,180 and 601 in 3DMark06 and 3DMark11, respectively. This laptop won’t make a robust work machine for graphics-heavy applications thanks to the integrated graphics, but can convert a video or render high quality images in good time.

Conclusion

The HP EliteBook Folio 9470m, like the Folio 13 before it, offers a nice balance of portability and power with long battery life. There are some significant drawbacks, the biggest one being the display. Our $1,349 base configuration isn’t the only one available. HP also offers the same internals, plus a 1600 x 900 display, for $1,549. That’s still more expensive than the non-touch ThinkPad Carbon X1, which has a better overall display and keyboard. It does not have near the same number of ports, and that’s a big consideration, especially for business users. As is the ability to connect to a dock, something else the Carbon X1 lacks.

Ultimately, whichever aspects are more important to you will determine if the EliteBook Folio 9470m is the better choice. If ports and a removable battery are high on your list, you should definitely consider HP’s offering.

Highs

  • Slim and light for a 14-inch laptop
  • Lots of ports
  • User-removable battery that doesn’t jut out
  • Pointstick and touchpad with discrete mouse buttons

Lows

  • Display resolution and quality is too low
  • Small keys on right edge of keyboard
  • Uninspiring performance

Editors' Recommendations

K. T. Bradford
Former Digital Trends Contributor
K. T Bradford is a lover of gadgets and all things geek. Prior to writing for Digital Trends she cut her teeth on tech…
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