HP has made one of its thinnest laptops yet. The Envy Notebook
13-d002na clocks in at a measly 12.9mm high undercutting the fat edge of
a 13-inch MacBook Air by some margin – 4.1mm to be precise, and this HP offering is also only 10 grams heavier.
Under
the hood there's the new Skylake i7-6500U processor, just one below the
flagship CPU in the fleet, the i7-6600U. For £800 (it's priced at
$1,050 in the US, which is around AU$1,500) this is not to be sniffed
at. Dell's XPS 13
with a similar configuration (boasting an i7-6500U and a 250GB SSD) is
considerably more expensive at £1,280 (around $1,836). Admittedly the
Envy doesn't include a touchscreen but many workers and students who
just require a solid, reliable and hard-wearing laptop can save money by
plumping for this. It is however more pricey than the much coveted Asus Zenbook UX305
which also features a full HD screen, but with a much improved battery –
this machine teeters around the £530 mark (around $770, AU$1,100). Of
course, much of this is due to the CPU – the Asus we reviewed features a
Core M 5Y10 which is 70% more power-efficient but runs at 2GHz compared
to the Envy's 3.2GHz. So with these two it's a toss-up between speed
versus value and power-efficiency. A more high-level user who requires a
higher grade CPU for, say, video editing, could well see the value in
plumping for the Envy over the Zenbook.
Design
Encasing
the Envy's screen is tough, brushed aluminium. The overall look is
professional and aesthetically exceeds its price tag. The base is
plastic but to the casual eye, or even anyone picking this up, this fact
would likely go unnoticed. Our test unit had an ever so slight warp in
the base meaning it wouldn't sit flush to a surface, but we're talking
millimetres here. The
much lauded (by HP) hinge has been designed to give the keyboard an
extra boost at the back creating a better typing position. Desk-based
users will immediately warm to this feature as it reduces RSI and finger
fatigue. However the lipped edge (see above) digs into your lap after
an hour or so, leaving a numb feeling in the knees. Although not as bad as some,
touchpads on HP laptops are often less reliable and more erratic than
others. While dragging the cursor to select text, it would often
misinterpret the data and zoom incredibly far in or far out. The
unpredictability of this was frustrating.
The keyboard also has a
design quirk in the form of the hash key, which lies directly between
the backspace and Enter buttons. If you're used to an L-shaped Enter key
then you're going to end up with a lot of lines ending in '#'. Not a
huge problem, but something that new users will take a little getting
used to. Plus points to the keyboard include the fact that it's backlit
and features a very reliable fingerprint scanner. A major turnoff about the hp envy is that its boosts of a very weak battery
Comments
Post a Comment