![]() We registered a score of 7,243 on Geekbench 5.4, which is a fair bit less than the Swift 5’s 9,859, as well as the M2 MacBook Pro’s score of 8,911. Still, when it comes to benchmark testing, there is a difference in performance. Both are super speedy and responsive, with 16GB RAM here ensuring that the device never feels bogged down even amid loads of active browser tabs. Practically, in everyday use, I didn’t notice any real difference in usability between the Spectre x360 and the Acer Swift 5, for example, which uses the higher-end i7-1260P processor. As such, it puts out a bit less speed than the Core i7-1260P that some recent premium notebooks are using, but it also sucks up less battery life as a result. It uses a 12th-gen Intel Core i7-1255U chip, which is designed for ultrathin laptops. HP packed quite a bit of power within the skinny frame of the HP Spectre x360. It performs well, but the Core i7-1260P chip in some rival laptops is faster.The latest 13.5-inch Spectre x360 has a speedy Intel Core i7-1255U chip. ![]() It responded admirably to both my fingers and the bundled HP MPP 2.0 Tilt Pen, which I’ll touch on further later in the review. This bold and crisp 13.5-inch panel is a touchscreen too, of course, which is essential for the tablet form and may be useful to media creators and consumers alike. I’m used to cranking up a 2021 M1 MacBook Pro at full brightness, which tops HP’s panel on that mark. Most of the time, the HP Spectre x360 met my visibility needs, but there were occasions where I wanted a little more brightness. HP advertises a respectable 400 nits of brightness, whereas we measured an average of 362 nits. The 3:2 aspect ratio here gives you a taller space than a standard widescreen (16:9) approach, which is handy for productivity needs, and the 90% screen-to-body ratio means there’s little bezel surrounding the view. Meanwhile, you can’t go wrong with a 3K x 2K resolution, providing ample crispness for text and graphics plus loads of potential screen real estate if you run at the native resolution without zooming. Both specs top the Dell XPS 13 Plus and Apple’s M2 MacBook Pro alike. ![]() It scored well in our testing too, hitting 123.8% of the sRGB color gamut and 87.7% of the DCI-P3 space. There are some truly fine LCD panels on today’s premier laptops, but the advantages of an OLED screen still stand out by comparison. It’s been a while since I tested a laptop with an OLED panel and I was immediately struck by the deepness of the black levels and the vivid contrast. The configuration I tested features a bold 13.5-inch OLED touch display at a blisteringly sharp 3,000 x 2,000 resolution.
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