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HP OmniBook X 14 review

The OmniBook X 14 is a big deal for HP, representing the first entry in its revived OmniBook brand since 2002, and its first Qualcomm Snapdragon X-powered Copilot+ PC. This isn’t the first HP laptop to use Qualcomm’s tech – you may remember the innovative faux-leather bound EliteBook Folio that launched back in 2021 – but the OmniBook X 14 is a far more mainstream proposition. And with the OmniBook line replacing HP’s existing Pavilion and Envy laptop lines, it needs to be; like the Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 this is an AI-enhanced small business and consumer laptop, targeting much the same audience as Apple’s M3-powered MacBook Air.

If so, the OmniBook X 14 is competitively priced. At £1199, The base 14-fe0001na version is £150 more expensive than the entry-level 13.8in Surface Laptop 7, but it uses the 12-core Snapdragon X Elite XE78100 processor rather than the 10-core Snapdragon X Plus, and has double the 256GB of SSD storage. A similarly configured Surface Laptop 7 would set you back £1449. Meanwhile, the equivalent MacBook Air, with an 8-Core CPU, 10-Core GPU, and 512GB SSD would cost you £1299, plus an extra £200 to upgrade the 8GB of RAM to 16GB. With a 1TB SSD and 16GB, our 14-fe0000na test sample comes in at £1299. As a value proposition, the OmniBook X 14 looks very tempting indeed.   

HP OmniBook X 14: Design




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