Premium 2018 Newest Hp Pavilion Flagship Desktop 27 Inch Review

Our Verdict

The HP Pavilion x360 (fourteen-Inch) features stiff performance and a comfortable keyboard, but its battery life is a piffling short.

For

  • Stiff performance
  • Comfy keyboard
  • Solid audio

Against

  • Below-average bombardment life
  • Dull display

Laptop Mag Verdict

The HP Pavilion x360 (xiv-Inch) features stiff performance and a comfy keyboard, but its battery life is a little brusque.

Pros

  • +

    Strong performance

  • +

    Comfortable keyboard

  • +

    Solid audio

Cons

  • -

    Below-average battery life

  • -

    Irksome display

The latest HP Pavilion x360 borders correct on the edge of a premium laptop, offering a strong processor, comfortable keyboard and a good pair of Bang & Olufsen speakers for $749 (starting at $499). This device would be among the best laptops (at least one of the all-time 2-in-i laptops) if information technology wasn't for its brusk bombardment life and dull display. Despite that, the Pavilion x360 is a decent machine for the toll.

Price and Configuration Options

The base of operations model Pavilion x360 runs for $499 and has a Core i3-8145U processor, 8GB of RAM, a 128GB SSD and a 1366 x 768 brandish. Meanwhile, the $899 model jam-packs a Cadre i5-8265U CPU, 12GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD and a 1920 10 1080 screen.

The Pavilion x360 that I tested costs $749 and comes outfitted with an Intel Core i5-8265U processor, 8GB of RAM, a 128GB SSD and a 1920 x 1080 panel.

Design

The hood of the Pavilion x360 is slathered in a warm gold paint, and stamped at the center is a reflective HP logo. The edges of the hood and the deck curve outward then inward equally they meet each other, creating an hourglass design that surrounds the Pavilion x360. There's also a Pavilion logo on the hinge of the laptop.

Opening the Pavilion x360 reveals a slightly more silver tone on the deck, a carved out department for the keyboard at the center, and a vent grill for the Blindside & Olufsen speakers just above it. There's too a fingerprint reader to the right of the touchpad. Thankfully, the bezels on the display are relatively slim.

Folding the Pavilion x360 into tent and and then tablet fashion reveals that the lesser and top parts don't exactly line up. But the bottom is at to the lowest degree magnetic, so information technology stayed in i position nicely.

At 3.6 pounds and 12.7 10 viii.eight x 0.eight inches, the Pavilion x360 is a bit of a chunker compared to the contest. The Acer Spin 3 comes in at 3.half-dozen pounds and 13.two x 9.1 10 0.eight inches, while the Huawei MateBook D weighs in at 3.four pounds and 12.7 x eight.7 x 0.6 inches. The 13-inch alternative, the Asus ZenBook 13 UX333FA, checks in at 2.vii pounds and 11.9 x vii.4 10 0.seven inches.

Ports

There are a decent number of ports on the Pavilion x360, including one USB 3.0 port, a headphone jack, the power push and a security-lock slot, all on the left side.

Meanwhile, the correct side features the power jack, an HDMI port, ane USB 3.0 port, 1 USB Type-C port and an SD carte du jour slot.

Display

The Pavilion x360's fourteen-inch, 1920 x 1080 display is a footling on the ho-hum side. And while the screen is relatively bright, its glossy texture makes it a little frustrating to look at.

Karen Gillian's cerise summit looked drained in the Jumanji: Next Level trailer on the Pavilion x360's panel. When Gillian was kicking ass in what looked like a dining area, I could run into most of the surrounding effects, but only at a certain angle, as at that place was significant glare. Despite that, the display is sharp enough that I spotted the stitching in Jack Black'due south hat.

According to our colorimeter, the Pavilion x360 console covered 61% of the sRGB color gamut, which is duller than the 76% mainstream laptop average, not to mention the Spin iii (69%), the MateBook D (73%) and the ZenBook thirteen (115%).

MORE: The Laptops with the Brightest Displays: Guide

At 261 nits, the Pavilion x360'south panel is brighter than the category average (253 nits), as well as the Spin 3 (237 nits), the MateBook D (230 nits) and the ZenBook 13 (225 nits).

Keyboard and Touchpad

Typing on the Pavilion x360's keyboard is immensely satisfying. The keys aren't snappy, but they feel smooth and require a decent amount of force and travel earlier they hit the bottom.

I sped through 74 words per minute on the 10FastFingers.com typing test, which is faster than my current 70-wpm average. The keys traveled at 1.four millimeters, which is on the cusp of our preferred one.5 to ii.0 mm range, and they required a solid 70 grams of forcefulness to activate.

Typing on the Pavilion x360'south keyboard is immensely satisfying.

The Pavilion x360's touchscreen panel was responsive as I drew a crude painting of a dusk (a.k.a. 5 blue lines on top, 5 greenish lines on the bottom, and an orange circle at the heart - perfection).

The four.iii x two.1-inch touchpad has a semi-matte texture that's not every bit comfortable as the ones installed on the EliteBook line, simply it works fine. The pad has Windows Precision drivers, and so it handled Windows x gestures, such as iii-finger tabbing and two-finger scrolling, nicely.

Sound

The Pavilion x360's top-firing Bang & Olufsen speakers are surprisingly good for a sub-$800 laptop. While the speakers could have been slightly louder, they were able to carry Missio'south "I See Yous" throughout a small-scale office. The opening vocals, combined with the keyboard notes, roped me into the moment. And when the pulsate beats dropped, I could experience the weight of the bass. The overall sound could be brighter, simply I've heard worse speakers on $2,000-plus machines.

More than: five Tips for Quality Notebook Sound

The audio benefits from the Blindside & Olufsen audio app, which includes presets for Music, Movie and Vocalisation. Within those settings are dials for bass, treble and dialog clarity, every bit well as a full equalizer.

Functioning

Armed with an Intel Core i5-8265U processor and 8GB of RAM, the Pavilion x360 juggled 30 Google Chrome tabs and four 1080p YouTube videos simultaneously without a sweat.

On the Geekbench four.1 overall functioning test, the Pavilion x360 scored 12,495, which is only higher up the 9,482 mainstream laptop average. It couldn't become past the Spin 3'southward Core i5-8250U (13,203) or the ZenBook 13's Core i5-8265U (fifteen,110), but it was faster than the MateBook D'south AMD Ryzen 5 2500U (eight,845).

More: Best and Worst Laptop Brands

The Pavilion x360 transcoded a 4K video to 1080p in 21 minutes and 59 seconds on our HandBrake benchmark, which may seem long, merely it's a lot quicker than the category average (31:xix). However, the Spin 3 (21:09), the MateBook D (21:thirty) and the ZenBook 13 (20:48) all finished faster.

HP'southward 128GB SSD copied 4.97GB of data in 41 seconds, translating to 124 MBps, which is simply slightly faster than the boilerplate mainstream laptop (119 MBps). The MateBook D's 256GB SSD (110 MBps) is a fiddling slower, and the Spin 3's 256GB SSD (145 MBps) ramps up some speed, while the ZenBook thirteen'due south 256GB SSD (424 MBps) breaks the sound barrier in comparison.

Graphics

Packed with an Intel UHD 620 GPU, the Pavilion x360 scored 71,938 on the 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited graphics benchmark, which surpassed the mainstream laptop average (61,258) as well as the performance from the Spin 3's Intel UHD 620 (61,440) and the MateBook D's Radeon Vega 8 (63,302). Nonetheless, the ZenBook xiii's Intel UHD 620 (80,655) outdid the competition.

In real-earth testing, the Pavilion x360 ran the Dirt 3 benchmark at 26 frames per 2d, which is nearly half of the category average (43 fps), not to mention below the xxx-fps minimum for playability. On top of that, the Spin 3 (47 fps), the MateBook D (65 fps) and the ZenBook thirteen (59 fps) all performed above average.

Bombardment Life

Unfortunately, the Pavilion x360 doesn't have stellar battery life. Later it continuously surfed the web over Wi-Fi at 150 nits of effulgence, the battery survived for 6 hours and 17 minutes, which is just below the half-dozen:39 mainstream laptop boilerplate.

Unfortunately, the Pavilion x360 doesn't have stellar battery life.

While the Pavilion comes close to the boilerplate, its runtime was destroyed by the Spin 3 (nine:12), the MateBook D (9:16) and the ZenBook xiii (xi:28).

Webcam

While the Pavilion x360'southward 720p shooter isn't as grainy as nearly webcams, it however struggled to reveal the item in my hair and beard. The camera caught the red, white and blue in my shirt, but non the pinkish, green or xanthous. Non to mention that it succumbed to the flair of the ceiling lights, so half of the ceiling was washed out.

Rut

The Pavilion x360 performed well under pressure level. After it streamed a 15-infinitesimal, 1080p video, the hottest underside got was 91 degrees Fahrenheit, which is well within our 95-degree condolement zone. The center of the keyboard and touchpad came in at 85 and eighty degrees, respectively.

Software and Warranty

In that location are several HP-branded utilities in the Pavilion x360, including HP JumpStart (a tutorial for Windows 10), HP Support Assistant (updates HP device drivers), HP Smart (tracks printing status), and HP PC Hardware Diagnostics (provides system information and tests). There's also HP CoolSense, which can automatically adjust performance and fan settings to commencement heat.

There's also a ton of Windows x bloatware, including Candy Beat Saga, Gardenscapes and Asphalt Street Storm Racing.

The Pavilion x360 comes with a one-year limited warranty. See how HP performed on our Tech Support Showdown and Best and Worst Brands ranking.

Bottom Line

The HP Pavilion x360 ($749) is a solid mainstream laptop in that information technology offers commendable performance, a satisfying keyboard, and some bangin' speakers. But it's tough to become over its brusk battery life and ho-hum display, peculiarly when you're paying close to premium prices.

For $850, you lot can get the ZenBook 13, which features a more premium blueprint, stronger performance and a battery that'll allow you stay online for more than than 11 hours.

Simply overall, the Pavilion x360 is a decent laptop if yous can bargain with its short battery life.

Credit: Laptop Mag

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HP Pavilion x360 (14-inch) Specs

Brand HP
CPU Intel Core i5-8265U processor
Display Size fourteen
Graphics Menu Intel UHD 620 GPU
Hard Bulldoze Size 128GB SSD
Hard Bulldoze Type SSD
Highest Available Resolution 1920 x 1080
Native Resolution 1920x1080
RAM 8GB
RAM Upgradable to 12GB
Size 12.vii x viii.8 x 0.8 inches
Touchpad Size 4.3 x 2.i-inch
Warranty/Back up One-yr limited warranty
Weight 3.62 pounds

Less

Rami Tabari is an Editor for Laptop Mag. He reviews every shape and course of a laptop as well as all sorts of absurd tech. Y'all can detect him sitting at his desk surrounded by a hoarder's dream of laptops, and when he navigates his fashion out to civilization, you tin catch him watching really bad anime or playing some kind of painfully difficult game. He'due south the best at every game and he just doesn't lose. That's why you'll occasionally catch his byline attached to the latest Souls-like challenge.

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Source: https://www.laptopmag.com/reviews/laptops/hp-pavilion-x360-14-inch

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