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Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro 360 review

On first impressions, the Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro is, almost incredible: a 16in laptop with a gorgeous display in a body less than half an inch thick. It packs in one of Intel’s new Lunar Lake processors, giving you significant built-in GPU and AI performance, along with a spacious keyboard with a dedicated numeric pad. Without wishing to spoil the rest of the review, performance is solid and battery life is off the chart. It’s one of the most elegant big-screen laptops that we’ve reviewed this year. Yet much as we think Samsung’s latest has a lot to offer business users, it’s also frustrating as it gets most of the big things right, only to fumble in one key area.

Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro 360: Design

Like LG with its Gram range, Samsung seems to have mastered how to make a big screen laptop without the attendant weight and bulk. The Galaxy Book 5 Pro 360 has a 355 x 252mm footprint that’s not a whole lot bigger than its 16-inch screen. It’s 12.8mm thick and 1.69Kg in weight, yet the alloy chassis feels incredibly solid, with barely noticeable seams and almost no flex in the lid. It looks fantastic with its dark grey metallic finish and works as comfortably on the lap as on the desk. Only when the hardware is pushed hard does it emanate the slightest bit of noise or heat, and even then we’re talking a little surface warmth and not much of a racket.

What’s more, the design is versatile. As the name suggests, the Book 5 Pro 360 has a 360-degree hinge, enabling you to push the back of the screen against the base and use it as an oversized tablet, or in a tent configuration as a smart screen or compact all-in-one PC. Samsung has even provided an S-Pen stylus for making notes or freehand sketching. There’s no garage to stow it away in, only a magnetic area on the lid, but it’s a useful addition for a laptop of this type.

(Image credit: Future)

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