HP 24 inch All-in-One Desktop PC, FHD Display, AMD Ryzen 5 7520U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD, AMD Radeon Graphics, Windows 11 Home, 24-cr0002 (2024)
Original price was: $1,899.00.$645.69Current price is: $645.69.
Additional Information
ASIN | B0DF9GBPQT |
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Customer Reviews |
4.0 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank |
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Date First Available | October 21, 2024 |
Warranty & Support
Manufacturer’s warranty can be requested from customer service. Click here to make a request to customer service.
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Customers say
Customers find the all-in-one desktop computer easy to set up and appreciate its size. The speed receives mixed feedback, with some customers saying it’s plenty fast while others find it very slow. The functionality also gets mixed reviews, with some customers saying it works excellently.
8 reviews for HP 24 inch All-in-One Desktop PC, FHD Display, AMD Ryzen 5 7520U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD, AMD Radeon Graphics, Windows 11 Home, 24-cr0002 (2024)
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HP 24 inch All-in-One Desktop PC, FHD Display, AMD Ryzen 5 7520U, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD, AMD Radeon Graphics, Windows 11 Home, 24-cr0002 (2024)
Original price was: $1,899.00.$645.69Current price is: $645.69.
Marsha HILT –
PERFECT ALL IN ONE
luv my all in one it is perfect…easy set up…
Susan MacDonald –
Great Computer
Computer is sleek and compact and sturdy. I am mostly a news, weather and email person, not gaming, and the computer is plenty fast. Was easy setup and download from my old computer and it only took about 10 minutes. There are a few things about windows 11 that I don’t love but would have had to get that anyway. Great computer so far.
Amazon Customer –
No good
Not good for working. Lags very bad
Katrina –
Love it
Absolutely love it. Fast shipping. Super easy to set up. Works great. I would definitely buy it again if I had to.
Ovaltine Jenkins –
I partially blame AMD and partially blame HP for this All in one
I wanna get the CPU of this thing out of the way. The 7520U isn’t AMD’s latest and greatest, it’s rather using Zen 2 cores (4 of them for 8 threads total) w/ a Radeon 610M, which is basically just the same RDNA 2-based iGPU on the Ryzen 7000-series desktop CPUs but higher clocked. It’s not a great performer, and sure it will handle basic games like Minecraft, but the iGPU is nothing to write home about. Power draw in Cinebench R23 means it starts off at 29W package power, drops off to ~25W within 30 seconds, and then down to 15W after about 2 minutes; it does have burst performance, but it’s overall similar to 11th gen Tiger Lake CPUs like the 1165G7.Build quality is fine, not great, but it’s not a premium device. The plastic feels like it’s recycled, so very strong, very sturdy, with a nice matte finish. The popup camera feels like it’s something you can break if you use too much force, but it has a very satisfying “click” to the feel. The camera also has an IR emitter for Windows Hello, so you can have face login. The display isn’t bad either even though it’s nothing special: 1080p, 60hz. Viewing angles aren’t bad, it gets bright enough, and it’s useable overall as you would expect a device from this segment.I gave up on disassembly. Even though there’s a video online you can follow from HP themselves, it was impossible to pry the display out of the chassis even after removing the 6 bottom screws behind the chin bezel, which also means I couldn’t verify the memory upgradeability of this. HP’s own specs conflict themselves: they claim this has “onboard LPDDR5 memory” (which is soldered) but also claims it has 2 memory slots? At least the storage is upgradeable along with the wifi card. The Realtek wifi card it has isn’t bad, and being a desktop, it’s not as sensitive to the disconnect/reconnect speeds, but having an option to switch to another wifi card brand is very nice to have.The issue with this device is first, HP’s absurd amount of pre-installed bloat and the price. As expected, HP has McAffee installed, but along with a bunch of stuff like “Energy Star”, which literally just redirects you to the Energy Star website, like what??? It even has HP Omen Hub, on a non-gaming device??? HP Support Assistant is the one you want to use to download latest drivers, everything else I’ve found you can just uninstall. In fact, I would suggest just doing a fresh windows reinstall when you first setup the device w/ a Windows installer USB. The price makes this also a tough sell: at the time of this review, it’s $684. You know what you can also buy for $600 to $700? A refurbished 2019 21.5in 4K iMac. Sure the specs and pricing will be far less consistent for the iMac (because of the various CPU/Storage options the iMac has, and it is technically a smaller display), but you get a much nicer screen, a better GPU (iMacs of that gen comes at least with a Radeon 555X), and you can always run bootcamp if you need windows. If this thing has to compete price wise with that model of iMac, I would take the iMac over this any time of the day. However if you just need something simple, something that’s useable as an all-in-one, this HP will do okay, but you might be able to save some money shopping for something else or going for a used device instead.
Kindle Customer –
Very straightforward has newest version of windows
Great desktop all in one computer just be careful during set up if you add kids at the beginning you may have a issue with the rest of the setup. I wrote the first part because we had that problem, once resolved we love it
Patti –
AIO Can Be Great
My AIO did not set up well with other production apps I use. One for instance is HP Smart which I use daily for scanning and email. Etc. I called HP and they wanted $150 to fix the issue. I returned the AIO to Amazon due to that and limited use. I reordered a laptop and everything is working fine.
EJ PECH –
Great buy
Good computer. Works excellent. Fast.