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Hindustan Times
12-06-2025
- Hindustan Times
HP OmniBook 5 review: AI laptop that gets the job done
There's a new kind of laptop slowly taking over shelves, and it's not one chasing high refresh rates or RGB. The HP OmniBook 5 is part of the new breed of AI PCs, built around Microsoft's Copilot+ push and AMD's latest Ryzen AI 300 series chips. But don't mistake the sleek, silver slab for a show-off machine. This one's more of a quiet all-rounder. Designed to handle everyday work, media, and light creative tasks with the added benefit of AI smarts baked into the experience. It's not trying to be everything. But if your next laptop needs to be competent, future-ready, and sensible, this might be worth a look. The price starts at ₹78,990, but the final price will depend on the model you choose. At first glance, the OmniBook 5 did not scream for attention, which I found to be a good thing. Its Glacier Silver finish, curved edges, and minimal branding make it look more expensive than it is. The hinge is solid, and the chassis has just enough structure to feel durable without being bulky. But here's the thing: if you're moving up from a 13-inch or 14-inch laptop, the 16-inch form factor takes some getting used to. I shifted to using this from a Dell 14-inch laptop and still found it portable. But the screen real estate adds width, and the slightly deeper keyboard deck might throw off your muscle memory at first. Give it a couple of days, though, and it settles in comfortably as your go-to workstation. You're getting a 16-inch WUXGA (1920×1200) touchscreen here. Not the sharpest panel around, but definitely a usable one. The anti-glare coating is effective, and the taller 16:10 aspect ratio makes multitasking feel more natural. At 300 nits brightness, it's fine for indoor work. Colour coverage sits at 62.5% sRGB, so if you're a designer or editor who needs precise accuracy, this isn't your panel. But for office work, browsing, content creation for the web, or media consumption? It holds up just fine. And yes, the touchscreen works well. Responsiveness is on point. But no stylus in the box and no full 360-degree hinge limit how much you'll actually use it day to day. Under the hood is the Ryzen AI 7 350, AMD's latest chip that blends traditional CPU + GPU performance with a dedicated NPU that can deliver up to 50 TOPS of AI performance. In regular use, Chrome with 20+ tabs, Office apps, light photo editing, and Zoom calls, the laptop stays smooth and quiet. Thermals are managed well, and the fans rarely get loud enough to notice.= You're not going to game on this, nor is it made for 4K rendering. But for productivity, multitasking, and light creative workloads, this thing has more than enough horsepower. And as AI workloads start to ramp up in Windows (things like real-time video filters, local summarisation, noise reduction, etc.), this laptop is already equipped to handle those natively, thanks to that NPU and its Copilot+ integration. Typing on the OmniBook 5 is satisfying. The keys have decent travel, are quiet, and the layout feels natural. Especially with the inclusion of a dedicated number pad. It's clearly built for folks who write, code, crunch numbers, or type for hours. The trackpad is wide, clicky, and responsive. You'll appreciate the size if you're doing gesture-heavy work. Just one thing, coming from a smaller laptop, the palm travel and spacing might throw you off at first. It's more of a mental adjustment than a design flaw. With regular usage like Wi-Fi on, brightness at 60%, mixed apps, I got 6.5 to 7 hours comfortably. It's not the all-day endurance champion, but it's enough to take you through most of your workday. The 59Wh battery supports HP Fast Charge, juicing you up to 50% in about 30 minutes, which is genuinely useful when you forget to plug in before a meeting. HP isn't overhyping the AI features, and that's a good thing. The Copilot key sits where the right Ctrl usually is (you'll adjust fast), and opens Microsoft's AI assistant which is now more context-aware, and integrated across apps like Edge, Office, and the Start menu. The HP AI Companion app also offers system tuning, noise cancellation, and battery optimisation with a neat, user-friendly interface. Think of it as quiet AI, not flashy, but functional. No dongles needed here. You get: The HP OmniBook 5 doesn't try to punch above its weight, it just nails the core experience for everyday work, light creation, and the coming wave of local AI features. It's well-built, comfortable to use, and refreshingly clutter-free. It's not a creative powerhouse or gaming machine. But for those who want a future-ready laptop with AI capability baked in, a practical display, and reliable performance, this machine is surprisingly easy to recommend. Just be ready to adapt to the size if you're coming from something smaller.


WIRED
20-04-2025
- WIRED
The Framework Laptop 13 Proves Upgradable Laptops Are the Future
The Ryzen AI 7 350 is on par with the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus or Intel Core Ultra 7 256V, give or take. It's slightly behind in single-core performance, as measured by Cinebench R24, and a half-step ahead in multi-core. These processors aren't known for being a powerhouse. Rather, the focus is all on efficiency. Here's where the AMD chip is solidly in last place. Battery life on the Framework Laptop 13 is improved from prior models, but it's not as long as what you get on a Snapdragon X or Core Ultra Series 2 PC. The light battery test I ran on the Laptop 13 lasted roughly 11 hours, looping a local video at max display brightness. That's eight to 10 hours behind some of the competition, showing how much Intel, Qualcomm, and Apple have raised the bar in the past year. For my typical workload, real-time battery life sank to around 7 and a half hours. That's around the same as on the original Framework Laptop 13 I tested in 2021. If battery life is your main concern, it may be worth waiting to see if Framework introduces an Intel Core Ultra Series 2 Mainboard. Peripheral Woes There are some aspects of the laptop you'll always be stuck with, namely, the chassis. Laptop designs that take full advantage of the more efficient chips in the future should result in thinner laptops without losing performance. We're already seeing this in effect with thinner gaming laptops than ever. Photograph: Luke Larsen But it's also worth noting that some of the other components are somewhat outdated as they are right now. The webcam is a good example. In 2021, when this laptop was first designed, 2-MP webcams at 1080p were a good resolution to expect. Many PCs are moving to 1440p or higher, like the recent M4 MacBook Air. Apple has been upgrading the webcam from 720p in 2020 to 1080p in 2022, and now to 12-MP in 2025. The MacBook Air today costs the same as the MacBook Air from 2020. The lower-resolution screen in the starting configuration is outdated compared to the competition as well. My unit has a higher-resolution 2,880 x 1,920 IPS panel with a 120-Hz refresh rate, which is more than sharp, fast, and color-accurate enough. The matte finish is great for deflecting glare. But that's in a configuration that costs over $1,500. For that price, many laptops offer even sharper OLED panels with significantly higher contrast, and maybe even a touchscreen. The good news is that there's a strong chance Framework will offer newer components to reflect the current standard. The company sells webcam modules, speaker upgrades, and display kits for older machines, and there's no reason to expect there won't be newer versions soon. But those upgrades will cost extra, and once again, you're putting your faith in Framework to deliver. Fortunately, the Framework Laptop 13 is still a great starting place, and it'll be many more years before it feels truly outdated. Today, it's more than just a practical answer to the problem of electronic waste. It's a truly one-of-a-kind laptop.