Changing laptops continue The increase in popularity is probably, possibly because of the extraordinary flexibility that offers people who want to change their use. The latest device to enter this field is HP’s Omnibok X Philip, which is available in both the 16 -inch and 14 -inch version, which was later sent to me to review.
The poor life of the battery and the strange design, however, is very attractive because of being less than the best 2 -1 laptop I have tested.
Objectionable choice
Photo: Chris Noel
At first glance, it is an irreversible device, fully worn in silver aluminum, only obstructing the lid through low HP branding. But look closely and you will soon see some design elements that may lift the eyebrows.
It starts to a great extent, with the bottom of the laptop, which looks like an angle pedestal on which the keyboard is stuck. It shows the laptop more thick than that, though 19 mm (0.75 inches) is thicker, in fact it is in fact an average of an average of the 14 -inch category. (However, the weight of 3.1 pounds is relatively heavy, and it feels like this in the hand.)
The second big turn is the keyboard. Today, instead of characterizing the island’s keys everywhere, Omni Bok X Philip’s own keys run together, one of the nasty things between each of them. This makes each key slightly larger than usual, and while it may be helpful, I found out that it made it for a slightly difficult touch typing experience because I accidentally hit two keys once again more than once more than expected. It also seems to be a decisive extent, it is also a certain love or hated.
A poor actor
Photo: Chris Noel
HP changed Intel for AMD on 14-inch Omnibok X Philip (though a 16-inch model uses Intel CPU), and the model that has been reviewed is one of the high-end settings, including AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 CPU, which includes AMD Radeon 860m GB, 32 GB of GB, 32 GB of GB, 32 GB of 32 GB Is


