![]() PCMark 10 Battery Life: 8 hours and 40 minutesīattery Life (TechRadar movie test): 8 hours and 10 minutes Here's how the HP Envy 14-eb0000na performed in our suite of benchmark tests:ģDMark: Sky Diver: 23,839 Fire Strike: 7,911 Time Spy: 3,408 There's also a full-size HDMI 2.0 port, offering a bit of versatility if you're hot-desking.Īs comfortable as it'll be in your home, and the B&O tuned audio makes it reasonable (if not ideal) as a media laptop, the HP Envy 14 does feel very much like a professional laptop suitable for the office.Īdmittedly the two locations are not mutually exclusive these days, though it's worth noting that its metal chassis makes it reasonably heavy - not enough to stop you carrying it around with ease, but enough to fatigue an outstretched arm and certainly not the single kilo of the LG Gram. Unlike modern Mac laptops, though, the Envy 14 features highly generous ventilation, with a huge grille allowing air in through the bottom of the case, a smaller dust-magnet grille above the keyboard, and a large exhaust hidden behind the screen hinge.Īlso unlike modern Macs, it's aware that you may sometimes want to use still-standard peripherals without a dongle, and features two Type-A USB ports alongside its ludicrously fast USB4 / Thunderbolt 4 / power delivery / DisplayPort Type-C socket. Elsewhere if you're looking to spend that sort of money you may be better off looking at HP's slightly-less-premium Pavilion 14 range, which tends to pack similar if not exactly equivalent hardware for closer to £700/AU$1,000. ![]() We weren't able to find this exact configuration for sale in Australia, though a slightly scaled down version - the eb0007TX, which features a 512GB SSD rather than a full 1TB but matches the specs in other areas - is listed with a price of AU$2,999, again 'discounted' by HP to AU$2,399.ĭial things back, remove the touch screen functionality and opt for on-board graphics and a Core i5 with 8GB RAM, and you can pick up what will still be a very reasonable 14-inch work machine for $999 - though only in the US. Specced as is, the US asking price is $1,749.99, though HP's own website lists it at $1,679.99 after a mysterious discount in the UK, the same spec will set you back £1,399.99. The HP Envy 14 falls into a category we're going to call 'premium but not so premium that your bank manager immediately arranges an intervention' it's not cheap, as such, but it falls far closer to the 13-inch MacBook Pro street than it does the gated community of the ultra-premium 16-inch MacBook Pro. ![]() ![]() Ports: 1 x USB4/Thunderbolt 4 Type-C port, 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports, 1 x HDMI 2.0, combo audio jack, microSD readerĬonnectivity: Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201 (2x2), Bluetooth 5 Screen: 14-inch 1920 x 1200 (16:10 ratio) IPS micro-edge display with multi-touch Graphics: Max-Q Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Ti (4GB GDDR5 RAM). Here is the HP Envy 14-eb0000na configuration sent to TechRadar for review:ĬPU: 2.8GHz Intel Core i7-1165G7 (quad-core, 12MB Smart Cache, 4.7GHz boost clock) ![]()
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