Quick Start Guide
Table Of Contents
- Overview
- Standard Features and Configurable Components (availability may vary by country)
- Technical Specifications - Processors
- Technical Specifications – Display Panel Specifications
- Technical Specifications – All-in-One Stand Specifications
- Technical Specifications – Graphics
- Technical Specifications – Storage
- Technical Specifications – Networking
- Technical Specifications – Input/Output Devices
- Technical Specifications – Audio/Multimedia
- Technical Specifications – Power
- Technical Specifications – Weights and Dimensions
- Miscellaneous Features
- After Market Options
- HP ProDesk 400 G6 DM / AIO – G7 MT / SFF
- Change Log
QuickSpecs
HP ProDesk 400 G6 DM / AIO – G7 MT / SFF
Miscellaneous Features
Not all configuration components are available in all regions/countries.
c06640086 – DA 16665 – Worldwide — Version 2 — August 26, 2020
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Additional Features
Description
Product Orientation
Microtower (MT) can be oriented in a tower (vertical) orientation.
Small Form Factor (SFF) can be oriented as either a desktop (horizontal) or a tower
(vertical) with optional vertical stand.
Desktop Mini (DM) can be oriented as either a desktop (horizontal) or a tower (vertical)
with optional vertical stand.
Boot Sectors Protection
MBR and GPT sectors of the hard drive are critical to booting the operating system. By
saving the MBR or GPT data (depending on the how the OS was installed), the BIOS will
be able to monitor for changes and allow the user to override them with the backup
copy at boot-up.
Drive Protection System
DPS Access through F10 Setup during Boot
A diagnostic hard drive self- test. It scans critical physical components and every sector
of the hard drive for physical faults and then reports any faults to the user
Running independently of the operating system, it can be accessed through a Windows-
based diagnostics utility or through the computer's setup procedure. It produces an
evaluation on whether the hard drive is the source of the problem and needs to be
replaced
The system expands on the Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology
(SMART), a continuously running systems diagnostic that alerts the user to certain
types of failures
SMART Technology (Self-Monitoring,
Analysis and Reporting Technology)
Allows hard drives to monitor their own health and to raise flags if imminent failures
were predicted
SMART I - Drive Failure Prediction
Predicts failures before they occur. Tracks fault prediction and failure indication
parameters such as re-allocated sector count, spin retry count, calibration retry count
SMART II - Off-Line Data Collection
By avoiding actual hard drive failures, SMART hard drives act as "insurance" against
unplanned user downtime and potential data loss from hard drive failure
SMART III - Off-Line Read Scanning with
Defect Reallocation
IOEDC: I/O Error Detection Circuitry
SMART IV - End-to-End CRC for hard
drives
Detects errors in Read/Write buffers on HDD cache RAM










