Convertible laptops proceed to develop in recognition, probably due to the distinctive flexibility they provide to people who wish to swap up their use—shape-shifting amongst conventional pocket book, pill, and tappable leisure gadget varieties. The most recent gadget to enter this fray is HP’s OmniBook X Flip, obtainable in each 16-inch and 14-inch variations, the latter of which is what I used to be despatched to assessment.
Its poor battery life and awkward design, nonetheless, make it fall in need of being among the many best 2-in-1 laptops I’ve examined, even when the value is quite attractive.
Questionable Decisions
{Photograph}: Chris Null
At first look, it’s an unremarkable gadget, fully clad in silvery aluminum, interrupted solely by understated HP branding on the lid. However look nearer and also you’ll quickly see some design parts which may increase an eyebrow.
It begins, oddly sufficient, with the underside of the laptop computer, which appears to be like like an angled pedestal upon which the keyboard rests. It additionally makes the laptop computer seem thicker than it’s, although at 19 mm (0.75 inches) thick, it’s really about common for the 14-inch class. (The three.1-pound weight, nonetheless, is relatively heavy, and it feels as such within the hand.)
The opposite huge twist is the keyboard. Reasonably than that includes the island-style keys ubiquitous immediately, the OmniBook X Flip has its keys all run collectively, with only a sliver of house between every of them. This makes every key only a bit bigger than regular, and whereas that will sound useful, I discovered it made for a barely harder touch-typing expertise as I by accident hit two keys directly extra typically than anticipated. It additionally appears to be like decidedly bizarre, too, a surefire love-it-or-hate-it retro look that distinctly jogged my memory of some computer systems from the Eighties.
A Poor Performer
{Photograph}: Chris Null
HP swaps Intel for AMD on the 14-inch OmniBook X Flip (although the 16-inch mannequin makes use of Intel CPUs), and the mannequin reviewed is likely one of the higher-end configurations obtainable, together with an AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 CPU with AMD Radeon 860M graphics, 32 GB of RAM, and a 1-terabyte SSD.



















































