 HP's Spectre laptops are one of a kind when it comes to design. While the American company is famous for its chassis sharing, the Spectre is the only line-up to feature cut-out corners. The Spectre X360 14 is the latest in the family with Alder Lake hardware and a crisp display. The laptop has a stealthy black chassis, which is entirely made from metal. The edges of the laptop are now curved with a silver line in the middle. The black and silver combo does look quite good, including the HP logo on the lid. Durability is fantastic as the lid and base provide a lot of flex resistance. The hinges on the lid are quite stiff, as they should be since they will take their fair share of abuse. Still, it opens with one hand, revealing the base. There we can see the input devices. The keyboard has black keycaps with good size, long key travel and clicky feedback. The pad is massive and the glass surface is really smooth. The accuracy and responsiveness, however, while good weren't as good as some of the Spectre X360 14's competitors. The I.O. on the Spectre is limited, offering a single 10 gigabit full-sized USB port and an audio jack on the left, along with two Thunderbolt 4 ports and a microSD card slot on the right. Interestingly, the Spectre X360 14 is equipped with a 13.5-inch OLED panel with a 3000x2000p resolution. The panel is excellent for all types of work, showing comfortable viewing angles, a peak brightness of 412 nits, and full sRGB and DCI-P3 coverage. The color accuracy is exceptional as well thanks to our design and gaming profile, which lowers the Delta E value to 1.5. The display shows PWM usage up to 100 nits, which is easily fixable with our health guard profile. We'll have links to all of our profiles in the description below. With a 66-watt-hour battery pack and a Core i7-1255U inside, the laptop lasts for 11 hours and 40 minutes of web browsing, or 10 hours and 9 minutes of video playback, which means you'll be fine for a day without a charger. Only 2 per 100 people watching this video are subscribers. If you decide to just start following us, we'll be able to reinvest more in our laboratory, thus making even more helpful videos for you. Thank you, you're awesome. The Core i7-1255U is great for short bursts like 2D rendering and image editing with Photoshop. However, in 3D rendering, it's nowhere close to the Ryzen 7 6800U from AMD. The cooling setup inside is quite good for a 15-watt chip, with 3 heat pipes and 2 fans. It's safe to say that the CPU is working hard, showing 3.03 GHz on the P-cores while running at 90°C. Comfort is great, as the 2 fans can't make that much noise despite their best efforts. As for the hotspot on the keyboard, it only reaches 36°C, 5°C, which is more than comfortable. Upgradability isn't that good, which is fine considering the small stature of the laptop. You can outfit the laptop with up to 32GB of LPDDR4X soldered memory while there's one M2 slot for storage. We have a detailed teardown video for you to check out, which shows how to access the inside of the Spectre X 360 14. The Spectre X 360 14 is a fantastic small device that comes with the traditional drawbacks of smaller laptops, mainly the lack of upgradeability. Everything else about it, from the design to performance to even battery life and cooling, is exceptional. To find out more about this machine, we will place a link in the description to our web page.