HP is giving its Spectre 13 ultrabook a business-friendly makeover. The HP Spectre 13 Pro is a thin and light laptop with an Intel Haswell processor, a choice of a 13.3 inch 1080p or 2560 x 1440 pixel touchscreen display, up to 8GB of RAM and up to 512GB of solid state storage.

But unlike most consumer-oriented ultrabooks, the HP Spectre 13 Pro is easy to upgrade. Remove the bottom cover and you can remove the battery and solid state drive.

HP hasn’t officially launched the Spectre 13 Pro yet, but a few documents on the HP website give us an idea of what to expect.

HP Spectre 13 Pro

Theoretically you could upgrade the components on many ultrabooks — but since this is a model aimed at business and enterprise customers, not only is this not necessarily a warranty-voiding activity, but the HP Spectre Pro user manual actually provides instructions for opening the case and repairing or replacing components.

There are even instructions for replacing the display assembly.

spectre 13 pro remove cover

 

Unfortunately not everything is easy to upgrade. The RAM is soldered to the motherboard, so if you buy a model with 4GB of memory, that’s all you’re going to be able to use. Fortunately you can opt for an 8GB model.

The HP Spectre 13 Pro is available with either a Core i5-4200U or Core i7-4500U processor and Intel HD 4400 graphics. The laptop features stereo speakers with beats Audio, a full HD webcam, dual-array microphone, HDMI, Mini DisplayPort, Intel WiDi and Miracast support, an SDXC card slot, 2 USB 3.0 ports, and a headset jack. It has a 4 cell, 51 Whr battery.

Like the original HP Spectre 13, the Pro model has a wide touchpad below the keyboard with support for multi-touch gestures. There are also physical touchpad buttons, but they’re on the left and right sides of the touch surface instead of below it.

HP hasn’t announced the price or release date for the Spectre 13 Pro. It’s listed as “coming soon,” on one HP web page, where it’s also described as measuring about 0.6 inches thick and weighing 3.3 pounds. The user manual, interestingly, says the laptop is 1.4 inches thick and weighs 3.56 pounds — so maybe we should take some of the listed specs with a grain of salt until the notebook goes on sale. 

via TechBlog.gr

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3 replies on “HP Spectre 13 Pro ultrabook means business”

  1. I just can’t wait to get my hands on this $1500-$2500 beauty which will NOT allow me to do all the security things I need the NON-EXISTENT internet port for.
    But I forget: all you beautiful people need only be seen with one of these; not do any real work.

  2. I just left a scathing comment about HP concering their Slate 8 Pro business. To be fair, the Spectre 13 looks like a winner, a really solid elegant machine. kind of a MB Pro/Air knockoff for Windows users – but that’s a good thing. Don’t know why it’s taken so many years to just see that Apple makes the most elegant laptops, just admit it and emulate that.

    Also tremendously relieved that a 13″ screen is not even offered at the habitual, refused-to-die, crap resolution of 1366×768. Please computer makers, kill those poor things off ASAP and good riddance.

    I could carp about the soldered on RAM, but I already have a Sony with that ‘feature’ so I guess I give in. Just get the 8GB model and never mind, is what I did.

    1. I’ve got a Dell 15z (original model, not the newer one with the same name) with a 15″ 1366×768 screen, and I’ve never felt like I needed more pixels. I probably wouldn’t turn down something with a higher resolution, but I don’t know that having a non-HD screen is as big of an issue as some people make it out to be.

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