While HP’s Spectre lineup is what HP would probably consider their top-tier brand, the ENVY series has quietly become a very potent competitor, with premium-grade materials, and even discrete graphics, while still coming in sometimes hundreds of dollars less than the Spectre models. For 2020, HP is ramping up the ENVY lineup, refreshing all of the models, but the company has put special focus on the 15.6-inch ENVY 15 for this year.

ENVY 15

The creator market has become one of the new battlegrounds in the PC space, and for 2020 HP is clearly focusing the ENVY 15 on that market. The new ENVY 15 is the powerhouse in the ENVY lineup, with Intel’s H-Series processors coupled with NVIDIA graphics. Offering up to a Core i9 with 8 cores and sixteen threads, coupled with NVIDIA GPUs up to the RTX 2060 Max-Q gives the new ENVY 15 some serious performance for creative workflows like Lightroom, or video rendering. The ENVY 15 is also a member of the NVIDIA Studio program, meaning it offers the Studio drivers. You can pick up the ENVY 15 with up to 32 GB of RAM and 2 TB of PCIe storage in RAID if needed.

One of the standout features on the new ENVY 15 is the 15.6-inch UHD OLED display, offering 100% P3 gamut coverage, and factory calibrated for a Delta E < 2. The OLED display is certified for VESA DisplayHDR 400 TrueBlack, thanks to the incredible contrast OLED provides, and the display is rated for up to 600 nits of brightness as well.

Packing this much performance into a thin and light chassis is always going to push the cooling to the limits, and HP has outfitted it with a new vapor chamber cooling which they say offers 33% more processing power than traditional heatpipe designs, and HP offers DynamicPower to allocate TDP between the CPU and GPU to balance workloads.

Creators also require connectivity, and HP provides two Thunderbolt 3 ports, as well as two USB 3 ports, HDMI, and a multi-format media reader. Wi-Fi 6 is available as well, and HP has a new QuickDrop app which allows you to directly transfer files from your iOS or Android smartphone directly to the laptop via Wi-Fi. HP rates the ENVY 15 at up to 16.5 hours of battery life, so despite the performance under the hood, the 4.74 lb laptop should be able to last all day on a charge when needed.

The new ENVY 15 will be available in June starting at $1349.99.

ENVY 13

HP’s ENVY 13 is one of the company’s gems, offering a thin and light Ultrabook built with premium materials for a very good price. For 2020 the refresh moves to Ice Lake processors up to the Core i7-1065G7, and optional NVIDIA MX330 graphics. The laptop offers an 88% screen-to-body ratio, optional UHD display, and up to 19.5 hours of battery life. It will be available in May starting at $999.

ENVY x360 13

The convertible version of the ENVY 13 offers the same 88% screen-to-body ratio, but moves to AMD’s new 4000 series APU, with up to 17.5 hours of battery life. It will be available early May starting at $699.99.

ENVY x360 15

The larger convertible offers a choice of 10th gen Intel Core coupled with NVIDIA MX330 graphics, or the AMD Ryzen 4000 APU. Buyers can also opt for the OLED UHD display, and this model is rated for up to 18.5 hours of battery life. Unlike the non-convertible ENVY 15, this model will be the 15-Watt range of CPUs. It will be available early Mat starting at $699.99.

 

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  • neuen - Saturday, April 18, 2020 - link

    As a matter of fact, per the specs screenshot it's a regular DDR4. That's why I'm hopeful it's not soldered even though energy-wise it's not the best choice (but hey, $699...).
  • Alistair - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    Would love to see a 120hz OLED in a notebook. Any?
  • Valantar - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    Don't think there are any 120-Hz capable OLED panels available in those sizes.
  • yetanotherhuman - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    " For 2020 the refresh moves to Ice Lake processors up to the Core i7-1065G7, and optional NVIDIA MX330 graphics"

    Wrong. Renoir is the only thing that will interest me these days.
  • yetanotherhuman - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    To be fair I dislike HP products anyway, so I'd rather buy a Dell, but the point is still true.
  • morello159 - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    Envy X360 13 has my name on it if Dell does put Ryzen 4000 in the XPS 13 this year. I'd love the 16:10 screen but I want that 4800U sweetness too.
  • riklaunim - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    ENVY x360 13 or the 15 look tempting if they won't be throttling with an 8-core Ryzen there.

    What to pick now... either go x360 as a day to day use laptop and some codding on Linux (Kubernetes/Docker - they do like cores, not sure how they react to U-series lower clocks)

    ...or just got full DTR laptop - like that Clevo with desktop Ryzen (3900 + RTX) which would handle Linux side as well as Windows gaming but with locking to Turing (will loose value when Ampere/laptop Ampere launches) and not always taking it with me due to size/weight. But the pricing is really good.

    There are lighter like that envy 15 but with that Intel + Nvidia it will have a loud cooling (and loud annoys me).
  • SirKronan - Saturday, April 18, 2020 - link

    Received word from HP. They expect the new 2020 HP Spectre x360 15 inch models to drop end of this month or beginning of May. Can't wait!!

    I really hope they have addressed the serious backlighting issue that plagues current models of Spectre:

    https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Notebook-Boot-and-Lo...

    I also hope the new Envy does not suffer this same issue. Previous models of Spectre had advanced options in BIOS to configure backlighting to properly fit your usage scenario. Current models have these options removed.
  • damianrobertjones - Friday, April 24, 2020 - link

    Is there any real point to having a NVIDIA MX330 graphics in these? (When compared to the intel iGPU)

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