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Tom's Guide
22-07-2025
- Tom's Guide
I replaced my MacBook Pro with the best-designed laptop I've ever seen — here's what happened
It's rare (and kind of weird) to call a laptop 'sexy.' But I must admit, opening up and holding the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 did have me feeling some kind of way. Like, I haven't felt like saying 'damn this is gorgeous' about a laptop since the original MacBook Air, and HP's done it again here. So I ditched my M3 Pro MacBook Pro and switched to this as my daily driver for a month, As the saying goes: "looks aren't everything." I ran into many moments where I was wishing for more — watching it drop off the best laptops list in my mind. Let me explain. FYI: The configuration we got weighs in at $1,899 (discounted to $1,449 right now on HP's website). HP just pulled off the 'blue steel' on the entire laptop market of 2025 and proved that utilitarian does not have to mean boring. The aesthetics are seriously eye-catching, from its matte black finish (that is surprisingly fingerprint resistant) to the subtle details like the curved front corners and angular back edges, the design team really pulled it out the bag for this one. And not only that, but the company's managed to make it thin and lightweight all the same. Make no mistake about it — if design is one of your key motivators in buying a laptop, this will show up the rest of your coworkers. The more I pulled this out of my backpack, the more I continued to be blown away by that 3K 120Hz OLED display up top — it's a true visual stunner with fast, responsive multi-touch. And while you'll like using it in tent mode for all your Netflix binging, the standard laptop mode gets a whole lot of love too. For how thin that keyboard is, it feels amazing to type on with nice spacing around the keys and a good tactile thump to each key press. But bonus points have to go to that ocean of a haptic trackpad. It's massive and has an immensely satisfying snap to every click, while being gorgeously smooth for all your sweeping gestures. Three come to mind that I think comes from the decision to focus on making the Ultra Flip 14 look as good as it does. First, the port array is pretty limited. With two Thunderbolt 4, a USB Type-C 3.2 Gen 2 and 3.5mm combo audio jack, you're restricted here in what you can connect without a dongle. Plus, placing two of these on the back corners does look cool, but means you can't slot in any thicker devices like a memory stick without it stopping the screen from unfolding. Second, the amount of bloatware on here is crazy. The way my laptop came alive in a flash flood of notifications from McAfee, HP Smart and many more made my first contact with this quite the frustrating chore of immediately opening up 'add or remove programs' and uninstalling the lot. Then we move to probably my biggest gripe here. For $1,900, I would expect much more performance than what I got — you've got lower-priced machines either matching or exceeding what is possible here. To its defense, that does mean you're getting a decent 12-hour battery life according to our own lab testing, but that's a small benefit when you can get laptops that are nearly $1,000 less that are faster and longer-lasting. Laptop Geekbench 6.4 single-core Geekbench 6.4 multicore Blackmagic Disk Speet test (Write/Read MBps) Handbrake (transcoding 4k video to 1080p mm:ss) HP Omnibook Ultra Flip 14 2638 10877 3400.7 / 4696.2 06:37 13-inch MacBook Air (M4) 3751 14947 1919.7 / 2891.1 05:34 Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition 2531 10711 3297.3 / 3825.2 06:23 Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x 2448 13750 3253.3 / 3652.6 05:16 Asus ProArt PX13 2847 15203 3345.6 / 3586.2 03:36 Not to say it's a slouch, as it can hang with a lot of the competition in the above table. But when the competition is a couple hundred bucks shy of what you're expecting people to pay, that creates a disconnect. To have moments of Photoshop stuttering when editing RAW pictures on a near-$2,000 laptop isn't really kosher in my eyes. Having to wait those frustrating extra seconds for an app to open isn't ideal either. And no matter how really, really ridiculously good-looking the Ultra Flip 14 is, there are better ways to spend your money. So what should you buy instead? Great question! I have a few options tailored to every need you may have. For $150 less than the current sale price of the base-model Flip Ultra 14, you can bag the M4 MacBook Air. With 16GB RAM and a 256GB SSD, there is a compromise in SSD space. But the vast increase in general performance across all your tasks and battery life gains make this more than a worthwhile alternative. For $300 less than the higher spec of the HP 2-in-1 I tested, you can get the Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition with a 15-inch display. There are compromises with less RAM and storage, but to get almost-identical performance for much less is always something to take note of. For $50 less than the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 spec I tried, you can get this absolute monster of a 2-in-1 from ASUS — packing an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chipset alongside a dedicated RTX 4050 GPU, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.


Gizmodo
16-07-2025
- Business
- Gizmodo
HP Wireless Inkjet Printer With 6 Months of Instant Ink Goes for Peanuts, Best Buy's Back-to-School Exclusive
Cluttered desks and last‑minute school forms have a way of turning a simple print job into a small crisis. Running upstairs to find a USB cable, wrestling with a jammed feed tray, and discovering you are out of color ink can all happen before the paper even starts moving. A reliable all‑in‑one printer keeps those hassles to a minimum, and the HP Envy 6165e Wireless model is designed to slide quietly into family life. It prints homework, scans receipts, and copies insurance cards without demanding a tech manual or an engineering degree. Head over to Best Buy to get the HP Envy 6165e Wireless All‑in‑One Inkjet Printer for just $90, down from its usual price of $150. That's a discount of $60 and 40% off. See at Best Buy Setup is refreshingly simple. Plug in the printer, lift your phone, and launch the free HP Smart app. A guided walkthrough handles Wi‑Fi pairing, ink calibration, and a quick test page, so the whole family can send documents from laptops, tablets, and phones in a few minutes. Self‑healing technology keeps the wireless link steady, which means fewer frantic restarts when deadlines loom. Print quality is plenty sharp for everyday needs, turning out homework packets, boarding passes, and borderless photos that freeze vacation memories in bright color. A flatbed scanner on top captures art projects or signed forms, and one‑touch copying makes duplicates while you keep an eye on dinner. The control panel is a small, clean touchscreen, so changing settings feels as familiar as using a phone. HP includes six months of Instant Ink with enrollment, automatically shipping cartridges before levels dip too low. No more emergency runs to the store when the ink light starts blinking. After the trial you can keep the service or cancel anytime, and the printer keeps working either way. A quiet mode tames noise for late‑night study sessions, and the rear tray accommodates envelopes and thicker photo stock for holiday cards. Eco‑conscious users will appreciate that the Envy 6165e is built with recycled plastic and ships in recyclable packaging. Automatic two‑sided printing saves paper without extra taps, and an energy‑saving sleep mode cuts power use between jobs. The footprint is modest, fitting on a bookshelf or small table without dominating the space, and the stylish white finish blends with most décor. The HP Envy 6165e Wireless All‑in‑One Inkjet Printer is still available for $90 at Best Buy, a solid savings compared with the regular $150 price. See at Best Buy


New Indian Express
10-07-2025
- Business
- New Indian Express
HP launches Laser M300 printers
HP has launched the HP Laser M300 Series in India, a range of laser printers tailored for the needs of the country's SMBs, local businesses, and printing service shops. The series includes five models—Laser MFP 323sdnw, 323dnw, 323d, 303dw, and 303d. With print speeds of up to 30 pages per minute (A4) and automatic two-sided printing on all models, the series enables users to handle high-volume workloads with ease. The series uses advanced toner to deliver sharp black text and graphics, and support easy mobile printing through the HP Smart app, HP said. 'The HP Laser M300 Series is purpose-built to deliver fast, high-quality duplex printing with low maintenance, helping support businesses to grow and be resilient in India's dynamic business ecosystem,' said Satish Kumar, Senior Director India Market - Print Category, HP Inc.