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HP continues to emphasize how usable the device is as a notebook, given its full-size keyboard, and versatility as a tablet with its 360-degree hinge.
At one time, a number of manufacturers were releasing 15-inch, 360-degree, convertible 2-in-1 laptops. That trend seems to be waning, but HP remains a holdout with its latest Envy x360 15.6.
The HP Envy x360 13 also performed well, although not as fast as some other Ryzen machines. In Geekbench 5, for example, it scored 1,101 in the single-core test and 4,485 in the multi-core test.
The HP Envy x360 starts at $750 / £750 for the Intel Core i5 model with 8 GB of RAM. Upgrade to the Intel Core i7 model and you also get double the RAM for $1,100/£1,199.
The Envy x360 is HP's mid-tier 15-inch convertible laptop, which sits below the Spectre x360 that's available in 15 and 13 inch sizes.
Although HP, Dell, Asus, Acer, and Lenovo all compete in the crowded 2-in-1 convertible market, most of the newest models in the Envy x360 13's price range that we've tested have come from Lenovo.
For our benchmark charts, I matched the Envy x360 15 against its abovementioned 15.6-inch convertible competitors from Lenovo and Dell, as well as HP's more upscale Spectre x360 15.
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