Pros: Attractive design; Vivid display; Solid performance; Above-average
battery life; Runs cool
Cons: Bulky for a tablet and a laptop; Tablet wobbles
when attached to dock
The Verdict: The HP Spectre 13 X2 offers the
productivity of a thin and light with the portability of a tablet with a vivid
display and above-average battery life.
HP is hoping to hit that sweet spot
between productivity and multimedia with its latest product, the HP Spectre 13
X2 (starting at $1,099, $1,169 as configured). The 2-in-1 is outfitted with a
powerful Intel Core i5 processor and Intel integrated graphics. Throw in a
comfortable keyboard and a vibrant 1080p display and its hard-to-ignore hybrid.
But can the X2 hold its own against similarly priced thin-and-light laptops?
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HP Spectre 13 X2 Review |
Design
If you didn't know any better, the X2 could easily be mistaken for a regular
notebook, which is the biggest compliment we can give a hybrid. The device's lid
is covered in a sleek slate gray aluminum offset by a large gray plastic band at
the top.A large chrome HP emblem holds court in the center of the device. The
biggest indicators that the X2 might be more than a laptop are the power and
volume buttons, which are located at the top right and left of the lid rather
than on the deck
We like the small black foot holding the tablet in place, especially the
Hewlett-Packard lettering etched delicately its center. The hybrid's interior
reveals a silver aluminum keyboard deck. The keyboard is in a recessed space
just above the touchpad.
Directly above the keyboard sits a silver sliver of a hinge with a textured
button in the center. Sliding the button to the left disengages the locking
mechanism for the lid, transforming the hybrid into a tablet and keyboard dock.
Reconnecting the tablet is as easy as snapping the tablet into the dock. We
discovered however, some vertical wobble when the hybrid is in laptop mode.
The tablet has a massive 13.3-inch display surrounded by a thick glossy
bezel. A webcam sits in the center of the top bezel with a home button in the
bottom center. The lower bezel gives way to a large speaker grill that runs the
length of the tablet.
By itself, the X2 tablet measures 2.2 pounds and measures13.4 x 8.5 x
0.44-inches, which is heavier and thicker than the Microsoft Surface 2 (1.49
pounds, 10.81 x 6.79 x 0.35 inches). To be fair, the latter has a smaller TKINCH
display.
Together with its base, Spectre 13 X2 weighs 4.4 pounds, which is heavier
than the 3.3-pound XPS 13 and the 3-pound Aspire S7. Paired with either of its
covers (Type Cover 2 and Type Cover 2) the Surface 2 weight comes in at a slight
1.89 pounds and 2.05 pounds respectively.
Attached to the keyboard dock, the X2's dimensions thicken to 13.4 x 7.2 x
0.7 inches, which is on a par with the Dell XPS 13 (12.4 x 8.1 x 0.7 inches).
However Acer Aspire S7 is thinner with a barely there measurement of 12.7 x 8.8
x 0.51 inches.
Display
You can't hold a candle to the Spectre X2's 13.3-inch, 1080p display, but we
wish we could. Average light meter measurements puts the hybrid's screen at 279
lux which beats the 249 lux thin-and-light average. However that's not enough to
surpass the Dell XPS 13 (315 lux), Acer Aspire S7 (329 lux) or Microsoft Surface
2 (364 lux).
Despite the display dimness, the X2 manages to deliver rich, vibrant color
with sharp detail. A 1080p image of a parrot was an explosion of golds, royal
blues, emerald greens and tomato reds. Details were clear enough to see the
individual barbs on each colorful feather.
The opening seconds of the 1080p trailer of "Guardians of the Galaxy" were
dark, but we could still make out the intricate etchings in the gold wall behind
Star Lord. Gamora's fern green skin made the perfect backdrop for her bright red
hair, and the rusty red ridges on Dax the Destoyer's skin seemed to undulate
against the hero's musculature.
Viewing angles are wide enough to accommodate three people comfortably. The
10-point touchscreen is very fluid and responsive, which comes in handy when
you're using it as a tablet.
Audio
The X2's front-facing speakers bathed our small test room in loud audio. As
we've said before however, loud doesn't necessarily mean good. Despite the
assist from Beats Audio, the bass was absent from the Outkast/UGK collaboration
"Int'l Players Anthem." The cymbals were weak and the soulful background vocals
sounded flat. Vocals were also hollow and distant.
The hybrid registered 72 decibels on the Laptop Audio Test, failing to meet
that 85 dB category average.
Keyboard and Touchpad
HP knows how to make a pretty keyboard. The plastic silver are big with nice
spacing. We liked small flourishes such as the rounded edges of the Esc, CTRL,
Delete and End keys, whichplayed up the curvature of the keyboard deck. The
backlighting is nice and bright, making it easy to work in a dim setting.
We discovered that the keys lacked the travel we're accustomed to, but still
had solid feedback. That, combined with the spacious palm rest made for some
comfortable typing. We hit our usual 55 words per minute with a 1 percent error
rate on the Ten Thumbs Typing test.
Gestures, including two-finger scroll and rotate, three-finger swipe and
press and four-finger flick were swift and accurate on the 3.75 x 2.5-inch
Synaptics touchpad. The bottom corners deployed with a small, but satisfying
click.
Webcam
The integrated HD webcam captures images and video in 1080p. Colors such as
our reddish brown and black locs were accurate as was our skin tone. However we
were left wanting for details as our individual locs looked like blurry
lines.
Ports
There aren't many ports on the tablet half of the Spectre 13 X2. A
proprietary docking port and pair of slots for the keyboard dock can be found on
the bottom with a power and headset jack. There's also a microSD slot that's
concealed by a hard-to-disengage port cover.
A USB 3.0 port sits on the right of the keyboard dock with jacks for a
headset and the power cord. Another USB 3.0 port resides on the dock's left,
along with a HDMI port.
Heat
After 15 minutes of streaming Hulu at ful lscreen, the Spectre 13 x2's
touchpad measured 83 degrees Fahrenheit. Both the space between the G and H keys
and the laptop's undercarriage registered a cool 80 degrees. All of this is well
below our 95 degree comfort threshold. However we discovered that the top left
of the monitor was a toastier 99 degrees.
Performance
Thanks to the 1.6-GHz Intel Core i5-4202Y CPU with 4GB of RAM, the HP Spectre
13 X2 can handle its fair share of productivity and multimedia tasks. The hybrid
successfully streamed an episode of "House of Cards" from Netflix with six open
tabs in Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome and Internet Explorer while conducting a
full system scan.
That's respectable, but oftentimes it wasn't enough to keep pace with regular
thin and lights on our synthetic tests. For example, the X2 notched 4,044 on the
PCMark7 benchmark, which puts it above the 3,931 average, but belowthe Dell XPS
13 and Acer Aspire S7, which scored 4,858 and 5,051 respectively. (Both are
powered by 1.6-GHz Intel Core i5 processors.).
The X2 achieved a measure of revenge on the boot test, starting Windows 8.1
in 10 seconds, six seconds faster than the average. The XPS 13 (128GB SSD) was
only a few seconds behind with 13 seconds while the Microsoft Surface 2 (32GB
eMMC storage drive) booted Windows 8.1 in a sluggish 17 seconds. The Aspire S7
(128GB SSD) left everyone in the dust, launching Windows 8 in 9 seconds.
During the File Transfer Test, the Spectre 13 X2 duplicated 4.97GB of
multimedia files in 1 minute and 1 second for a transfer rate of 80.8Mbps.
That's well below the 111Mbps thin-and-light average, but still enough to beat
the Surface 2's result of 40Mbps. The XPS 13 and Aspire S7 hit 145 and
113Mbps.
When we ran the OpenOffice Spreadsheet Macro Test, the X2 paired 20,000 names
and addresses in 6 minutes and 55 seconds. It falls slightly short of the 6:45
category average, as well as the Aspire S7 and XPS 13, whichposted times of 5:12
and 5:20 respectively.
Graphics
The Intel HD Graphics chip in the HP Spectre 13 X2 ensures that the hybrid
can play high-def videos and casual games. On the 3DMark Ice Storm Extreme
benchmark, the X2 hit 19,149, which is slightly below the 20,328 thin-and-light
average. However that was enough to trounce the Microsoft Surface 2's Tegra 4's
CPU which scored 9,168. It was no match for the Dell XPS 13's Intel HD Graphics
4400 GPU, chip which notched 30,332.
On the "World of Warcraft" benchmark, the X2 averaged 34 frames per second on
autodetect, just clearing the 32 fps average. The Acer Aspire S7's Intel HD
Graphics 4400 GPU hit 39 fps while the XPS 13 reached an impressive 45 fps. When
we jumped to 1080p, the x2dropped to 12 fps which is lower than our 30 fps
playability threshold and the 29 fps average. The Aspire S7 and XPS 13 hit 28
and 32 fps respectively.
When bumped the settings to ultra, the X2 scrounged together 8 fps at 1366 x
768 on autodetect, half of the 16 fps average. The XPS and Aspire S7 were only a
few frames apart at 24 and 21 fps. On 1080p, the Spectre 13 X2 delivered an
unplayable 5 fps, missing the 14 fps category average. The Aspire S7 and XPS 13
continued their neck and neck battle hitting 15 and 17 fps.
Battery Life
The HP Spectre 13 X2 lasted 7 hours and 19 minutes on the Laptop Mag Battery
test (Web surfing over Wi-Fi. That's well above the 6:42 thin-and-light average,
but nowhere near the Dell XPS 13 (8:38) and Acer Aspire S7 (8:53). The Microsoft
Surface 2 surpassed everyone with a time of 9:19.
Software and Warranty
HP outfitted the Spectre 13 X2 with a fair amount of apps and utilities
including HP Connected Drive which allows users to access content across devices
such as laptops, smartphones and tablets. HP Connected Photo enables quick
access to photos stored on Facebook and Snapfish.
The company also pre-loaded HP Connected Music, a free service that combines
your local music files with online music and Internet radio. However the heavy
hitter here is the included Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5. Regularly priced at
$149, the software lets you adjust, enhance and organize your digital photos
with ease.
Third-party apps include Microsoft Office, Netflix, Box and a 1-year trial of
McAfee LiveSafe.
Configurations
Our $1,169 configuration of the HP Spectre 13 X2 features a 1.6-GHz Intel
Core i5-4202Y CPU with 4GB of RAM, 128GB SSD, Intel HD Graphics and a 1920 x
1080 display. The $1,099 base model has a 1.6-GHz Intel Core i5-4202Y CPU with
4GB of RAM, 128GB SSD, Intel HD Graphics and a 1366 x 768 display.
Verdict
Build a better hybrid and the world will be a path to your door...or
something like that. Thanks to its Intel Core i5 CPU and integrated graphics,
the X2 is a solid workhorse delivering just enough power for work and play. It
also delivers a respectable battery life.
However for $1,299, consumers can get the Dell XPS 13 that offers better
performance, a brighter display and longer battery life in a slimmer, lighter
chassis. Still the HP Spectre 13 X2 is an inspired choice for consumers in the
market for a hybrid with versatility and power.
See More: HP EliteBook Folio 1040 Review
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