Final Words

HP has delivered a unique laptop in the Spectre Folio, offering not only the first bonded leather exterior, but also a different take on the convertible as well. Yet they haven’t sacrificed quality to achieve these goals. The HP Spectre Folio really is in a category of its own.

That category would almost certainly be a companion device where someone requires great mobility, battery life, and flexibility. The excellent styling and the fantastic feel of the leather exterior only elevate the Spectre Folio from there.

There’s a few downsides, as there tends to be with any notebook. When Core M launched in 2015, it could offer similar performance to U series devices in short workloads, and while the latest Core i7-8500Y ratchets up that performance compared to the original Core M, the performance gap between Y and U is much greater now that Intel offers quad-core in their U range. Still, the Spectre Folio can easily handle any light task thrown at it without any issues at all. App launches are still fast, and the system doesn’t feel sluggish under most office type tasks, and it’s really only in high-demand situations where the lowered TDP is going to be noticed the most.

HP, despite the leather exterior, still had no issues dealing with the processor even in a fanless design, and the work that the company has done with Intel to not only shrink the motherboard to provide more room for battery, but also to address power consumption is dramatic. HP’s battery life in the Spectre Folio was outstanding, easily topping our charts in some of our tests. The low-power display and attention to detail in the motherboard design has paid dividends here.

It would have been nice to see HP go with a taller aspect ratio display, because convertibles that are 16:9 are best used in landscape mode. They tend to feel awkward when rotated to portrait, and the large chin at the bottom of the display begs to be filled with more screen real estate. 3:2 works so well in convertibles that it’s a shame it wasn’t used here. Even if sourcing a 3:2 1W display would be difficult, a company the size of HP can certainly handle that.

The convertible design where the screen folds forward is another one of the unique features of the Spectre Folio, and it certainly has advantages. HP uses strong magnets to hold it in position as well, which makes it incredibly sturdy. Switching from one mode to another is not quite as easy as a 360° hinge, but it still works well and provides the added benefit of the keyboard being protected when in tablet mode. It still provides all the extra functionality you’d expect, but like the leather exterior, it’s just a bit different.

HP outfits the Spectre Folio with plenty of expansion, with two USB-C Thunderbolt 3 ports, as well as a third USB-C connector, and you can charge the laptop on any of them. We’re not quite in a world where Type-A can be completely abandoned though, so it’s nice to see HP also ship an adapter with the laptop.

HP has delivered an incredibly well-built, stylish, and usable notebook in the Spectre Folio, and they’ve done it with a design that is unmatched in the industry. The addition of offering LTE adds another dimension, and coupled with the incredibly good battery life, really provides a fantastic computer for working on the go. The convertible nature provides a great writing surface as well, and HP offers a stylus for just that reason. HP offers a great amount of customization, with plenty of choices for specifications as well as a couple of color options. Pricing is high, as expected, but the base model is completely usable, offering 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage, unlike some Ultrabooks that perhaps start with a lower price, but it only offers 4 GB / 128 GB and really isn’t very usable. The Spectre Folio isn’t inexpensive, and it isn’t the fastest notebook around, but the all-leather exterior makes a statement that no other machine on the market can match.

Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • peevee - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    What 5V/9V? Seriously, dude, stop posting the nonsense and go see a psychiatrist.
  • wilsonkf - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Maybe he means USB-C power output? :P
  • HStewart - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Please research before you post - Intel change the voltage on Y models from 5V to 9V. But this could also because WIFI 6 integrated in chip in addition Thunderbolt 3
  • HStewart - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    https://www.anandtech.com/show/14436/intel-10th-ge...
  • bubblyboo - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Christ you're dumb. You mean 5W to 9W TDP, not 5V/9V. And it won't mean jack shit since Intel never has correct TDP either. It only means 10nm is a power hog as predicted.
  • Hifihedgehog - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    HStewart really started to lose his marbles ever since the time Ryzen 3000 was unveiled at Computex. I truly pity him.

    That said, I am not very hopeful that Ice Lake will be a very good performer at lower power. As Ian found with his review of the Cannon Lake based NUC, the silicon draws more power at a given frequency than previous generations. That leads me to believe their 10nm manufacturing process is particularly leaky. That would naturally explain why they had to raise the power rating on their Y-class/Core M products to a 9W TDP. Even with all the tweaks and workarounds they may have done at the logic level to ease the brunt of their broken process at the silicon level, power draw potentially remains as a serious issue.
  • Korguz - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    hstewart.. please do your own research before YOU post.. its watts NOT voltage... as bubblyboo said.. intels cpus rarely run at the TDP they say.. these 5 WATT and 9 WATT cpus will probably run higher then that...
  • Hifihedgehog - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    Watts, not volts, dude.

    Thunderbolt is not always active and therefore it and the other features that got pulled into the CPU die shouldn't be contributing to such a high TDP. I am quite skeptical and wary of Ice Lake and I am thinking that their 10nm manufacturing process is leaky just like Cannon Lake was which contributed to its unusually high power draw.
  • Korguz - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    HStewart... are you ok ?? did you fall on your head ?? do you have ANY idea what would happen if you put 5 or 9 VOLTS of power into a cpu ?? it would probably fry and die in a firery death... is your blind fan boyism so bad now you can think straight
  • AshlayW - Friday, June 7, 2019 - link

    To be fair, and old calculator contains a lot less complex technology than an Ultrathin notebook. So...

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