Computer Active (UK)

HP Pavilion x360

Look at it both ways

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A laptop-tablet for all reasons

This laptop-tablet comes inn a choice of gold or silver finishes, ishes, but either way it’s made of f plastic. That’s a reasonable compromise in this price bracket, and HP’S build quality is still more than acceptable. It has a sturdy urdy hinge that stays put at any angle, including folded backwards to stand like a tent to watch a film or follow a recipe (pictured below), or tucked round against the touchscree­n, for holding like a tablet.

The lightly textured finish makes a classy contrast with the glazed black screen section. At 1.63kg it’s no ipad, but it’s light for a 14in laptop. And although it’s bulkier than 13.3in machines (a more common size), the extra screen area makes Windows 10 more legible. Our model had a Full HD display, which looked sharp, but brightness and contrast were poor, and with just 58 per cent of the SRGB colour range covered this isn’t the PC for photo or video editing. There’s also a coarser 1366x768-pixel option. We’ve seen better screens than this on budget laptops. It’s a shame to compromise on such a central component.

As a touchscree­n, though, it’s very responsive, and supports the pressurese­nsitive Active Pen (£53 from HP www. snipca.com/27361) if you want to take full advantage of Windows Ink. We were pleased to find the keyboard was comfortabl­e to type on, with a positive feel to the full-size, flat-topped keys, and the touchpad worked impeccably too. Helped along by the small but speedy 128GB SSD and a full 8GB of memory, the dual-core i3-7100u processor – from the bottom end of the previous Intel Core generation – is enough for everyday Windows 10 tasks. The Pavilion x360 is also available with a new quad-core i5-8250u chip, which ought to add enough speed to justify its £649 price tag if your aims are more ambitious. Our i3 processor drained its battery in just over six hours of video playback, which isn’t great but mamay be adequate for your needs. Bucking the trend of ultra-slim laptops with no edges to put ports in, the Pavilion x360 is nearly 2cm thick, and HP has used the space to include two US USB 3.1 ports and a Type-c as well as full-size HDMI, headphone jack and SD car card reader. You’d need a USB adapter for Ethernet, though. The webcam above the screen has the depth-sensing technology required for Windows Hello, so you can unlock Windows 10 with your face.

Light, speedy and comfortabl­e to work on, but the screen is a bit off-colour

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