HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation: Reshaping Our Workflow

The Elite Team and I have been using the HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation, and it has allowed us to reshape and slim down our workflow. It’s a powerful 17″ laptop with a DreamColor display, all the ports you need to ingest media, speed to playback in real time and the option to raid to internal drives for backup. It provides a new immediacy with watching dailies, editing, and coloring in the field with a small footprint.

HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation

HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation

HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation

The first thing about it that caught my attention is the fact that it’s a laptop with a 17″ DreamColor display. The same display with the colors that I use to light with and playback footage, but on a laptop. It’s my view finder into the HD DSLR color space, so that I know what I see is what I’m getting. Just like the DreamColor monitor, it can be calibrated to a variety of color spaces: sRgb, Rec. 601, Rec 709, Adobe RGB, and DCI-P3 Emulation.

DreamColor monitor

HP Mobile Display Assistant

HP Mobile Display Assistant

The footage can be quickly ingested into Adobe CS6, color corrected, and played back for the Director on the fly. It’s a powerful tool that allows immediate feedback on the footage I’m shooting in a much smaller and cost effective footprint.

Connectivity is another great feature of the Mobile Workstation. It has eSata, express card slot, firewire, USB 3.0, SDHC,blu ray burner, and the ability to quickly swap internal 2.5″ hard drives. If you were shooting to Compact Flash card, SxS cards, SDHC, you name it, this laptop can quickly import the footage. Then back it up to an internal raid, out to an external hard drive, or burn it to a Blu Ray. Absolute redundancy is critical with handling the digital negative on set and the Mobile workstation makes this so much easier. It’s also a rugged laptop that meets military standards for drop, vibration, dust, temperature and altitude, which is good for run and gun shooting in remote locations.

Ports on the Mobile Workstation

Ports on the Mobile Workstation

Bottom of the laptop with the HP easy access door removed

Bottom of the laptop with the HP easy access door removed

The power on this laptop is insane. It can be configured with up to 32gb of RAM, an I-7-3920XM 3.8GHZ processor, solid state hard drives, and ATI FirePro M4000 graphics with 1GB dedicated GDDR5 video memory. Tech jargon aside, what this means is real time playback of large video files, easy transfers, and short render time in Adobe CS6. It starts at $1,699 and a full list of the tech specs can be found here and you can buy it here .

 

 

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33 Responses to “HP Elitebook 8770w Mobile Workstation: Reshaping Our Workflow”

  1. Earl Nottingham says:

    Shane, the HP Elitebook sounds awesome. However I didn’t see in your post what configuration you are using as far as processor, memory and drives? Any recommendations – especially for DSLR file-size users?

    • Shane says:

      Earl Nottingham.The configuration I’m using has a 3rd gen I-7 2.3 GHz, 16gb of ram,256gb solid state drive and ATI M4000 GPU. If you’re using Adobe software more memory will help your render times, and a solid state hard drive is great for fast boot/load times. Just depends on your budget.

  2. Peter Johnston says:

    My older unibody macbook pro has been slowly dying for a while now. Looks like I found my replacement. Specs and price blow the new MBP retina out of the water. Hell, it even has a 56k modem for the next time I’m out at Delight’s Hot Springs Resort. Hope you’re doing well Shane!

    • Shane says:

      Peter Johnson. That would of come in handy roughing it out at the Hot Springs resort haha. Thanks I’m doing well, and hope you are too.

  3. William Barber says:

    I’ve had my Elitebook 8760w w/DreamColor display for about a year now, and haven’t for a moment regretted moving on from a macbook pro. Having a 2nd-gen i7 processor, lots of ram, and a quadro card in a portable package was enough to do some projects on this instead of my desktop. I’m sure this new 8770w is even better.

  4. Daniel Leite says:

    Wouldn’t a Nvidia GPU Make more sense for Adobe Workflow?

    Have hou triede Davinci Resolve on it?

    Thx

    DL

    • David H says:

      Rumor has it that Nvidia graphics will be available by the end of August.

      • Charlie W says:

        Where did you hear August? I spoke to an HP rep that said they are fully configurable mid July. I was hoping that meant nVidia, but maybe it’s just for CPU and RAM. I’m off mid August for a long haul and the MacBook Pro isn’t even close to viable.

  5. I’m holding out until PC Laptops have a Thunderbolt port on them. eSATA is fast but a pain. But good to know there are better color managed laptops. Now I’m using a fully loaded MSI GT683 with 16 GB of RAM and two internal drives: a 256 GB SSD and a 750 GB hard drive. And now with the new Drobo small drive with USB 3 and Thunderbold the future for going fully laptop with no desktop looks good!

    • Marc B says:

      If I had known that I was going to migrate to CS6 I would have gotten this instead of my 2011 MacBook Pro. Thunderbolt will make this an eve more killer laptop. This looks like a lot of bang for the buck.

  6. I am actually about to get a beefy 8760w as well (ex-short lease). Am considering taking out the BluRay drive and replacing it with an additional SSD, for use as a dedicated temp drive. Another option might be to hook up an external SSD via one of the USB3.0 or eSata ports if you’re planning to projects in the field.

    Shane, like Daniel Lette also said, I *am* actually surprised that you chose an ATI graphics card, considering that they don’t work as well (OpenGL) as nVidia (CUDA) with the Mercury Playback Engine in CS6.

    Would love to have Thunderbolt ports as well, but that’s going to be part of the next round in 3 years from now. Oh well, ya can’t have it all.

    • Shane says:

      Richard van den Boogaard. Thanks for the comment and info. The model I got wasn’t configured with an Nvidia card which I know does work great with Adobe CS6. The ATI cards works great as well, but I’ll go for a Nvidia CUDA when its time to upgrade.

  7. Jack Yan Chen says:

    Funny story this post came just in. I’m currently looking at a new laptop and I was looking at shelling out for one of those new Macbook Pros with the new retina displays.

    What’s the battery life on that like? Can you still edit with it without having to plug it in?

    • Richard says:

      I’d say for about an hour or so… Maybe Shane knows the exact details. But you need to drain the battery frequently, otherwise you’ll shorten it’s lifespan.

  8. Coil says:

    Shane,

    Does this mean you’re switching over from the Mac OS to a Windows OS?

    • Richard says:

      Who cares about the OS, it’s the tools you use that get the job done…

      • Jack Yan Chen says:

        I agree completely.

      • lemmo says:

        Windows is and remains a dog, it takes forever to boot, eats memory, hell just navigating to a file with Windows Explore is a mission it seems (takes forever).. Mac OS is lightning by comparison…

        • What are you using, Windows XP? Windows 7 is just as fast, if not faster than OSX. The only people with this mentality are the people who refuse to accept anything else besides Apple. I use both on a frequent basis, and enjoy both platforms for different reasons.

          Shane; great article. It’s good to see another company jumping into the professional market with products like this!

      • Coil says:

        Richard: As a Mac and Windows user; DSLR, Red, and film shooter; I am well aware of the adage that a ‘tool is a tool.’ With respect, I care, as apparently do others–hence the legitimate question.

        I’ve been talking with several busy editors who are considering switching over to Windows, as they’re not happy with the course Apple is currently taking. These are editors who have been using Apple products for the past decade. With the announcement of this new HP Elitebook laptop running on a Windows OS; Red’s HP 820 tower and the ensuing discussion on Apple & the pro market, I simply wanted to know what some of the big time pros are thinking on this relevant topic.

        Brandon: Agreed on both points. Windows 7 has redeemed the Windows brand IMHO; and great article and announcement Shane, thank you for sharing.

        • If Macs would be first and foremost be
          a) supporting nVidia cards natively instead of ATI (read: you can order one with such a card);
          b) the company would show serious commitment to the Pro market (Final Cut X, new MacPros in 2013);
          c) they wouldn’t be as expensive;
          I would seriously consider this platform. I love Apple for the iPad (there’s no other gadget that I have used as much) and my next phone will be an iPhone for sure.

          However, given that the answers to these questions is either a resounding no (or at least a question mark), I committed to Windows 7. My system is rock solid, except for the almost weekly nag screens you get for required updates.

          My comment, however, referred to the fact that when working with Adobe CS6, you hardly see (or work with) the OS anymore. In short: use whatever you like (or can/want to afford).

  9. Peter says:

    How is one suppose to profile a Dreamcolor Display? Didn’t HP discontinue their Advanced Profiling Solution?

  10. Jason says:

    Hi Shane,

    Love your blog! Would you recommend this laptop as the main video editing machine for a small video production company? People seem to only use it as a secondary machine or location laptop. I was shopping for a desktop, but this seems to be a workhorse.

    Thanks!

    Jason

  11. Samuel says:

    Hi Shane,

    Greetings from down under, I have just been surfing you blog and seen you work, I was amazed by the quality of work and human care. Thanks for posting. I was wondering what is your current workflow with the Laptop, after you bought it did you had to customize it ?.
    Thank You
    Keep rocking

  12. One among my favourite blogs, how long have your own been producing for?

  13. VFichera says:

    Here’s a question for you: the new 8770′s keyboard is quite stiff and sturdy — so stiff is the action that a person with hand disabilities might have difficulties with it. An Elite tech support person said that the 8760 has a softer keyboard but the same DreamColor screen.

    Does anyone have any experience with the two models (8760 has 2nd gen Intel, 8770, 3r gen) who could give us a subjective comparison of the “action” feel of the two keyboards?

    Also, did your Elitebook get shipped in a thin corrugated cardboard box leaving less than an inch distance between the box wall and the computer?

    Thanks for any information you can provide.

    P.S. Because not all customers of HP are with companies like Hurlbut Visuals, well, it’s nearly impossible to get such specs answers from HP itself directly. Sigh.

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