
The 2530p uses an aluminium shell bonded to a magnesium honeycomb, creating a casing that you can actually lean on without risking damage to the screen or components. It’s also more attractive than the model it replaces, with a brushed silver finish compared to that notebook’s textured black plastic.

Available with Intel Core 2 Duo Ultra Low Voltage (1.2 GHz, 3MB L2 cache) or Low Voltage (up to 1.86 GHz, 6 MB L2 cache) CPUs, up to 8GB of DDR2 RAM and up to 160GB 7,200rpm 2.5-inch HDD (or 80GB SSD), the 2530p also packs in an optional optical drive (only with the smaller 1.8-inch HDDs). Connectivity includes WiFi a/b/g/n, Bluetooth and gigabit ethernet, as well as on option of Qualcomm’s 3G Gobi WWAN module that supports both EVDO and HSPA mobile broadband.
The 2530p range starts from around $1,500. The 80GB SSD option is around $900, and there is a choice of three battery packs: 3, 6 or 9-cell, offering roughly 4, 8 or 12hrs use respectively.
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