HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On

HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On

The 13.3-inch Spectre’s big claim to fame here is its minuscule size and the amount of power its able to pack inside that tiny frame. Normally, as computers devolve from gargantuan machines to teeny laptops, you start seeing performance trade-offs. A processor is be first to downgrade — see the case of the Apple’s MacBook — because a low-power processor means no heat sinks or cooling fans. The result? Maximum thinness.

With the new Spectre, HP decided to eschew traditional design and stick with the powerful Core I Skylake chips — the best Intel processors found in most high-end laptops — yet still keep that impressively small and lightweight figure. In fact, it comes in at 10.4mm thick — almost 3mm thinner than Apple’s MacBook, which we already called “Stupidly Thin”.

HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On

But while the Spectre is able to thwart the “super slim equals super shitty processor” trend, it still pays sacrificial deference to the gods of lissome gadgets. The battery, for one, reportedly tops out at nine-and-a-half hours. Not amazing, but not terrible — a fastball down the strike zone of mediocrity.

However, the biggest downgrade is the display, not sporting a pixel-dense QHD (3200×1800) display like many others, but a run-of-the-mill full HD (1920×1080) screen. HP says the display is closer to the glass so it feels brighter and more vivid, but in my hands on I couldn’t really see much of a difference.

It’s also not a touch display and no touch-enabled versions are available. For some that’s fine, but Windows 10 is a very touch-friendly operating system. Microsoft’s latest keynote focused heavily on pen-enabled tech, so it seems like the future of Windows is more tied to hybrid two-in-ones, like the Surface Book, rather than a traditional clamshell laptop like the HP Spectre.

HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On
The guts. BUT DON’T ACTUALLY DISASSEMBLE YOU WILL BE SAD.

The guts. BUT DON’T ACTUALLY DISASSEMBLE YOU WILL BE SAD.

The real stand out, good and bad, of the Spectre is its design. I’ve long accepted that design is subjective, but it’s undeniable that companies can create well-designed machines that are also universally appealing. It’s why Apple is a $US700+ ($920)+ billion company. Although the internal construction of HP’s Spectre borders on mechanical sorcery — with an intricate system of rubber seals and fans to keep such a powerful processor cool — its looks are not as impressive.

There is a reason why this laptop is being announced in Versailles, Paris. The Spectre is part of HP’s “premium” line, and it looks the part — if you’re some kind of cliché billionaire, monocle included. The chassis is carbon fibre and aluminium with gold keyboard accents and a shiny, polished copper-gold back hinge that’s an absolute fingerprint nightmare. The laptop even has a new logo (below) reserved only for HP’s best of the best, so you can show people you’re awesome and loaded.

Sure. It looks nice, but it’s not exactly a laptop with far-reaching design appeal.

HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On

As for other fun “whoa cool” features, the Spectre also comes with a three USB Type-C ports, placed in the chromed-out bar on the back (above), two of which support Thunderbolt for fast data connection speeds.

But if the sight of that gilded hinge has you salivating and you want to feel really baller, you could always drop major $$$ on HP’s solid gold-and-diamond Spectre.

HP Spectre Laptop: Hands On
Presenting the Kanye West of laptops.

Presenting the Kanye West of laptops.

The Spectre is out in Australia now, with a recommended price starting at $2299 for the i5 version and stretching to $2999 for the i7. HP’s also updating some of its cheaper laptops — the HP Envy x360 and HP Envy — with better graphics, displays, and processors.

But the Spectre is the star of the show. It’s powerful and small and screams top-of-the-line. Unfortunately it doesn’t exactly reinvent the ultra-thin laptop. Like all laptops, it comes with its own setbacks for the sake of power and thinness. The most powerful laptop for its size? No doubt. But at what cost?

HP Spectre Specs:

  • Display: 13.3-inch
  • Resolution: 1920 x 1080 (166 ppi)
  • Footprint: 325x229mm
  • Thickness: 10.4mm
  • Weight: 1.11kg
  • OS: Windows 10
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 and i7 (Skylake – 6th Generation)
  • Battery: 9 hours and 45 minutes (according to HP)
  • Storage: 256GB and 512GB
  • RAM: 8GB (only)
  • Starting Price: $2299 (i5), $2999 (i7)

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