Ordered following HP on Black Friday:
HP Pavilion dv6t Quad Edition customizable Notebook PC
dark umber
Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
2nd generation Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-2670QM (2.2 GHz, 6MB L3 Cache) with Turbo Boost up to 3.1 GHz
1GB Radeon(TM) HD 6770M GDDR5 Graphics [HDMI, VGA]
FREE UPGRADE to 8GB DDR3 System Memory (2 Dimm)
750GB 7200 rpm Hard Drive with HP ProtectSmart Hard Drive Protection
$40 OFF Microsoft(R) Office Home and Student 2010
No additional security software
Two 9 Cell Lithium-Ion Batteries
15.6" Full HD HP Anti-glare LED (1920 x 1080)
Blu-ray player & SuperMulti DVD burner
HP TrueVision HD Webcam with Integrated Digital Microphone and HP SimplePass Fingerprint Reader
Intel 802.11b/g/n WLAN and Bluetooth(R)
Standard Keyboard with numeric keypad
HP Home & Home Office Store in-box envelope
$1,573.99 $1,143.99
($430.00 Coupon)
Additional Purchases:
Purposely upgraded the HDD to 7200RPM in the PC configuration since I'm ripping it out to an enclosure and putting in an SSD.
Kingston HyperX 120G 2.5" 120GB SATA III MLC SSD - $149.99 (after mail in rebate)
COOLMAX HD-250BK-U3 Aluminum 2.5" Black USB 3.0 External Enclosure - $17.99
This laptop is known to run fairly hot when using discrete graphics. For that reason, I'm doing some experimenting. As noted, I ordered two 9-cell batteries. These stick out the bottom rear, placing the laptop at an incline and increasing airflow. I suspect however this won't be enough and will purchase a laptop cooler.
The problem is that the battery's incline may actually affect airflow of a cooler (assuming I can't comfortably hang it off the back of the cooler) ... so with this in mind, I also ordered a HP 6-cell Extended-Life Battery - MU06 (talked them down to $74.99). If the 9-cell doesn't hamper cooling or I find a cooler it can hang over ... I'm sending back the 6-cell. If not, I'll ebay one of the 9-cells and use the other for when I'm not using discrete and could use the extra charge (you know, actual portable duties

).
The interesting thing about this laptop is a lot of heat can be found to the left of the trackpad. There is an intake under it, but most coolers do not directly hit that area. Fans are typically either in the center or towards the rear. For that reason I'm ordering several coolers once the laptop's delivery approaches and will be running thermal characteristics for all of them. The ones that fail will be heading back to Amazon (hate to take advantage of their return policy - but there's really no other way around it). Two that look promising are the Cooler Master NotePal U3 and the U-Stand. Due to their adjustable nature, I should be able to directly cool the problem intake. Others on my list include units from Zalman, NZXT, Targus, and Antec. I'll post some results for the hell of it.
How'd I do?