HP Pavilion is a line of personal
computers. The laptop is neither extremely slim, nor is it extremely
light-weight. It is thick but not like your regular laptops. The Pavilion x360 plays on the same idea and
brings a spin of "premiumness" with it. The 2-in-1 laptop looks
elegant as it is complimented by a brushed metal look from all sides. The HP
logo comes with a mix of mirror finish and so do the laptop hinges, all of
which look decent when teamed up in a single package. Although negligible, the
power button on the side and the rim enclosing the touchpad also sport the same
shiny metallic look.
The backlit keyboard adopts the same brushed metal appearance, making the
design profile stable across the board. The speaker grille is placed above the
keyboard layout. The laptop is neither extremely slim, nor is it
extremely light-weight. It is thick but not like your regular laptops. The
device weighs 1.32 kg, which is considerably low as compared to some chunky
workstations out there.
HP has made sure that its Pavilion x360 doesn't excise on anything when
it comes to connectivity. Majority of the left side of the Pavilion x360 is
taken by the exhaust grille along with the power button on the corner, 3.5mm
headphone slot and volume controllers. On the right, there is a charging slot,
two USB 3.0 slots, a mini HDMI slot, a USB 2.0 Type-C slot and a card reader,
all of which are used on a daily basis. The review unit we received (HP Pavilion
x360 14-ba073TX) sported a 14-inch display with support for touch for easy use.
The resolution carried here is 1080x1920 pixels (full HD), which in our opinion
is decent enough for a 14-incher. QHD displays do add to the clarity and soar
the pixel density, but for an everyday user full HD seems appropriate.