Don't have a tx2000 but I do have an HP dv2000. Got my laptop custom ordered from HP with discrete Nvidia GeForce Go 7200 (bought in April of 2007). After about a year and a half (after warranty expired), my laptop died. From the diagnostic beeps, it was because something went wrong with the graphics card. I talked to them for a few days, trying to get them to replace/fix my laptop because of the faulty Nvidia chips. They acknowledged that they had problems with the Nvidia graphics, but they wouldn't offer to fix it for me since my laptop was a custom order citing the fact that they couldn't guarantee that it was the graphics and not something else that might be causing the problem. To make a long story short, I ended up paying for the repairs but was able to get reimbursed from American Express (nice perk of buying electronics with their card since they'll give you an extra year of warranty). In the end, when I got my laptop back from HP, they replaced the motherboard (well, I assume that they did) and left it with the Intel integrated crud instead of replacing the faulty Nvidia chip. Too frustrating.
The device is aimed at gamers and TV watchers, generating a 3D image with use of a pair of 0.7-inch OLED panels, which each display separate images, doing away with the ghost imagery that often comes along with 3D displays.
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Don't have a tx2000 but I do have an HP dv2000. Got my laptop custom ordered from HP with discrete Nvidia GeForce Go 7200 (bought in April of 2007). After about a year and a half (after warranty expired), my laptop died. From the diagnostic beeps, it was because something went wrong with the graphics card. I talked to them for a few days, trying to get them to replace/fix my laptop because of the faulty Nvidia chips. They acknowledged that they had problems with the Nvidia graphics, but they wouldn't offer to fix it for me since my laptop was a custom order citing the fact that they couldn't guarantee that it was the graphics and not something else that might be causing the problem. To make a long story short, I ended up paying for the repairs but was able to get reimbursed from American Express (nice perk of buying electronics with their card since they'll give you an extra year of warranty). In the end, when I got my laptop back from HP, they replaced the motherboard (well, I assume that they did) and left it with the Intel integrated crud instead of replacing the faulty Nvidia chip. Too frustrating.