Design

With a name like Folio, it shouldn’t be surprising to hear that the HP Spectre Folio is the one notebook computer that feels the most like you’re carrying a notebook. The chrome-tanned leather offers an incredible in-hand feel for this laptop, but also feels like it’s going to be very durable. This isn’t the leather of a belt, but more like well-made furniture, with the feeling that it’s going to last for years.

HP offers both the Cognac Brown color of our review unit, as well as a Bordeaux Burgundy, but the styling is far more different than the exterior color.  The brown unit ships with a black keyboard and accents, but the burgundy model switches the keyboard deck to silver giving the laptop some incredible contrast.

The attention to detail on the Spectre Folio is impressive. There’s a wonderful stitching on the back of the laptop where the display folds, and under that is a subtle HP logo in the leather itself. The underside consists of the same leather as the rest of the notebook, with a slightly raised foot at the back to give it some stability. Another great touch is when you fold the display back and can see images of the four ways this convertible laptop can be used. That area is likely to be seen very little, since it’s hidden in any use mode, but it’s a great design element to add beautiful imagery there. Opening the laptop up takes some pressure, but the natural gap at the front of the closed laptop where the two leather edges meet makes this a very simple process.

Once it is open, you can see the display, flanked by leather edging. The keyboard deck is also wrapped in leather, meaning if you decided to rest your wrists on the keyboard deck, they get to enjoy the experience. HP has done a wonderful job tone-matching the trackpad as well, so it looks like a truly integrated piece of the design.

Although the design is unique, one area that could be better is the display itself. Although the side bezels are thin and somewhat blend in with the leather exterior, the top bezel is somewhat wide. In its defense, it does house the webcam and IR cameras in the correct location, so that is forgiven. The bottom, however, features a large chin. HP has gone with a 16:9 display aspect ratio, but being a true convertible notebook, this extra space would have suited a 3:2 display so well, and offered better usability in the tablet mode. We’re slowly seeing some 3:2 offerings on the market, but not quickly enough to make this reviewer happy.

HP’s keyboard is light on key travel, but the keys still feel solid. It’s always a compromise on a notebook that aims to be thin, but this one strikes a good balance and is easy to adjust to. The keyboard deck also stretches very close to the edges, and HP offers some extra navigation keys on the right. The keys also offer a couple levels of backlighting with white LEDs.

Subtly tucked up in the top left corner of the keyboard deck is the power button. It’s nice that it’s not a key in the keyboard like some laptops offer, but being a convertible, there’s no real way to power the laptop on if it’s in tablet mode. It’s a bit strange that you have to open the laptop up to turn it on, which is why most convertibles offer a power button on the side.

The trackpad is excellent, offering an incredibly smooth surface, although it is a bit smaller than you may be used to. HP’s Spectre x360, as an example, offers a trackpad that is 37% wider and 14% taller. But, despite the small size, it does work well. If you need to augment your input, you can use both touch, or the included stylus. Unfortunately, the review unit didn’t come with the stylus so I can’t compare it to a Surface Pen or Apple Pencil at this time.

One of the most unique aspects of the Spectre Folio is how it changes from a laptop to a tablet, and the various states in-between. Generally, convertibles tend to fall into two categories. Either it’s a detachable display, or a keyboard that flips around. HP has followed in the footsteps of Acer’s Aspire R13 design from 2015 where the display flips up and then can be set on top of the keys. Unlike Acer which used a U-Frame though, HP’s hinge mechanism is across the back of laptop in the middle and runs the entire width of the display.

It’s a unique take that offers some advantages over the style that Lenovo brought to the mainstream with the Yoga. The main one being that the keyboard is never on the bottom, so you’d never have to set the keyboard on anything, or hold the keyboard like you would with a Yoga-style laptop in tablet mode. It also brings the benefit of being able to use the notebook in an easel mode where you’d still have access to the trackpad if required.

HP uses strong magnets to hold the display in place in both the notebook mode and the easel mode, which means when using the laptop with touch or stylus with the display tipped forward, it’s very sturdy offering no movement at all.

The disadvantage over a Yoga-style 360° laptop is that switching from one mode to another is a bit more finicky than just rotating the laptop, and the hinge perhaps somewhat accounts for the added weight for the Spectre Folio, which tips the scales at 1.49 kg / 3.28 lbs. That doesn’t sound that heavy, but it’s almost half a pound heavier than a 13-inch HP Spectre x360.

Overall, the design is unique, and sets the Spectre Folio apart from every other laptop on the market today. The leather works really well as an external material, offering a great in-hand feel, and it’s a material that should hide any scuffs or nicks a bit better than aluminum would. The different take on the convertible also offers some benefits, and provides an incredibly solid foundation especially in the easel mode.

Introduction System Performance
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  • peevee - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    5W for 2 cores at 1.3GHz.

    Apple A12 is ~5W for 2 similarly fast (in terms of IPC) cores at ~2.5GHz + 4 slow efficient cores.
    10nm fiasco costed Intel a lot.
  • Retycint - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Intel was never really as efficient for mobile (<5W) though, which is why their atom line failed spectacularly. ARM-based processors definitely has the advantage in the low-power field
  • Korguz - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    im sure HStewart will find a way to refute this.. and bash arm based cpus some how...
  • AshlayW - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    I like the idea of a leather covered laptop, leather feels nice to the touch for me. And it makes a nice change I think. I have an HP ENVY X360 with the Ryzen 2500U in it, and it is a really great little machine and was £649 when I bought it. I can manually set the power limit to 30W and disable the skin temperature throttling for maximum sustained performance. It is around 3.1 GHz all core in multi-thread and 3.4-3.5 GHz in single threaded. In games the GPU can boost to 800-900 MHz and easily beats any Ultrathin Intel iGPU. Also I think at stock the 2500U is heavily throttling so it explains why it gets beaten a lot by this device in the review. (yes I am aware that the whole point is that they are efficient, and yes Intel's processor is more efficient, largely helped by the fact that Intel 14nm+++ has vastly superior power and voltage characteristics to GlobalFoundries 14nmLP/P).

    As for 5W, in this power envelope, 10/7nm will really, really help a lot here. I think if AMD can get 7nm low power mobile chips out soon-ish, they can have a really big competitive advantage against these 14nm Intel ones. But that said, Ryzen with onboard graphics is usually an entire cycle behind the desktop CPUs without. 12nm 3000-series APU are uninteresting for me, as it is basically 10% or close to that, more performance than my 2500U at the same power use. But I heard the idle power use is vastly improved. Sorry I typed a huge comment.
  • ikjadoon - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Excellent review.

    This laptop was one of the inspirations for Project Athena, apparently.

    >Though the HP Spectre Folio wasn’t explicitly described as a Project Athena device, it’s representative of the collaboration between Intel and its PC partners.

    https://www.pcworld.com/article/3331244/intel-proj...

    Props to the 1W display. I'd love a deep dive by Anandtech on how 1W (LPDT) panels work. IIRC, they use LTPS backplanes (a-si -> IGZO -> LTPS from worst to best), panel self-refresh, variable refresh rate, more efficient backlights, and some panel microcontroller efficiencies.

    https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/intel-low-...

    So a lot of good technologies on their own brought together into a shipping product.
  • Gc - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    In 2013, the Sony Fit 13A, 14A, 15A "Flip PCs" had screens that can flip down over the keyboard.
    https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/sony-vaio-fli...

    Spun off, Vaio continued with the Vaio Z Flip in 2016.
    https://www.anandtech.com/show/10006/vaio-to-start...
    That model still seems to be sold in Japan.
    https://vaio.com/products/z131/
  • Gc - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    One benefit of the flip-down screen is that it is simpler and quicker to switch between keyboard mode and pen mode for taking notes. Other convertibles require picking up the whole computer, which can disturb your neighbors in a meeting or lecture. A benefit of the leather surfaces might be to quiet any clattering as the pieces fold together.
  • wr3zzz - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    I pre-order the Folio and have been using it as my daily work machine since. I agree with every point in this review.

    One thing to note is that Dell just added fans to its XPS 13 2-in-1 so it looks like the Folio could be the only premium fanless notebook with screen larger than 13" left in the market.
  • ramisingh - Saturday, June 15, 2019 - link

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