
(Image credit: Anuj Bhatia/Indian Express) HP Spectre x360 14 review: Performance and battery This is a hybrid laptop with a 360-degree hinge. You will also find a huge trackpad below the keyboard. Generally, HP’s Spectre range has the best keyboard on laptops. Its backlit, island-style keyboard is quiet, has more travel, and there’s plenty of bounce. (Image credit: Anuj Bhatia/Indian Express) HP Spectre x360 14 review: keyboard and trackpad They are still better than many laptops that I have recently reviewed. Although they deliver a clean sound, they don’t get particularly loud. You get four Bang & Olufsen speakers on the laptop. The sound quality is great but not amazing.
#Hp spectre x360 review plus#
For security, the webcam has IR face recognition, plus there is also a fingerprint scanner to access Windows Hello logins. It also comes with a privacy cover just press a Fn row key and it covers over the lens.
#Hp spectre x360 review 720p#
The screen has small bezels (the screen-to-body ratio at 90.33%), with a respectable 720p HD webcam placed above the screen.

Text and icons look easy on the eyes, and there is joy in watching movies on the display. The display gets really bright, peaking at 400 nits. The OLED panel is very bright, and offers a good colour gamut.
#Hp spectre x360 review pro#
Anyway, its squarer 3:2 aspect (similar to Microsoft’s Surface Pro tablets and laptops) gives an expansive view of text and web pages. It’s a 13.5-inch (3000-by-2000-pixel resolution) OLED, multitouch-enabled display (to be exact) and not 14-inches. The display on the Spectre x360 14 is gorgeous. (Image credit: Anuj Bhatia/ Indian Express) HP Spectre x360 14 review: Display and audio The OLED display is extremely punchy and rich. So there is a high chance you might lose the stylus. The notebook ships with a leather carrying case and HP Tilt Pen, which is supposed to magnetically stick to the left edge but never really does. You will also find a headphone jack and an SD card reader. But one thing is super weird in the notebook - a single USB 3.2 Type-A port on the left edge and two Thunderbolt 4/USB-C ports on the right side, and one of them is angled at the back right corner. This laptop is really beautiful to hold, use, and look at. There’s a satisfying resistance when you close the lid of the notebook. I think the tent mode is great for watching videos and showing presentations to clients. HP’s four-slash logo adorns the lid, while two hinges allow you to use the notebook in different ways, including the tent and tablet modes. (Image credit: Anuj Bhatia/Indian Express) This feels like a high-end device and the build quality backs up the design. But it’s not the Poseidon Blue that’s attractive, it is the impossible thin chassis. It is different, no doubt about it and for some, it might be too flashy. Made out of CNC-machined aluminum chassis, my review unit came in Poseidon Blue colour scheme and Pale Brass accents, with gem-cut edges and sharp corners.
