![]() The audio on the HP Pavilion Plus 14 is suitable for watching movies and TV and less desirable for listening to music. Audio on the HP Pavilion Plus (14-eh0097nr) There’s also a fingerprint scanner to the right of the touchpad that worked effectively for me to sign into Windows 11. With it, I executed gestures comfortably, and the clicking mechanism gave me no issues. I love how spacious the touchpad is, as well as the shiny silver lining that borders it. That’s in the ballpark of the 65 WPM and 95.86% accuracy I got on the Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1. When I tested my typing skills on 10fastfingers, I scored 58 words per minute with a 97.32% accuracy. I also appreciate the backlighting and the placement of the home, pg up, pg down, and end keys along the right side of the keyboard. The full-size keyboard on the HP Pavilion Plus feels clicky and responsive, which made my typing experience easy and enjoyable. Keyboard and Touchpad on the HP Pavilion Plus (14-eh0097nr) The Pavilion 14 also was the brightest at 381.8 nits, with the Asus ZenBook 13 OLED being the only rival bright enough to compete, at 321 nits. The Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7 Carbon was the only one of the competitors to rival the Pavilion’s numbers with 139.3% of the DCI-P3 color gamut and 197% of the sRGB gamut. The HP Pavilion 14’s panel covers 137.5% of the DCI-P3 color gamut and 194% of the sRGB gamut. ![]() ![]() It’s very distracting and takes away from the otherwise great display. Unfortunately, the screen has no anti-glare treatment (or if it’s there, it doesn’t work), so a lot of light and background images reflect off the screen. True blacks are captured well during moments in the clinical Umbrella Company headquarters, especially when the dark dwellings contrast with the fluorescent lights on the ceiling. As Jade ran around a burning compound during the second episode, I appreciated how great the vermillion red of the fire illuminated the darkness of the scene. When I was watching the latest Resident Evil series, I was impressed by how well the display captured color. The display on our configuration of the HP Pavilion 14, a 14-inch, 2880 x 1800 90 Hz OLED panel, is excellent for the most part. ![]() The IdeaPad and ZenBook practically tied at around 8 minutes, with the Inspiron taking the longest at 9:59. The Pavilion performed this task in 7 minutes and 19 seconds, the fastest of the bunch. On our Handbrake test, we have laptops transcode a test video from 4K to 1080p. The Zenbook S 13 blew all three out of the water, though, with a rate of 1,543.86Mbps. The Inspiron was a bit further ahead at 404.86MBps, while the IdeaPad Slim 7 was much faster at 799.9Mbps. On the other hand, the Pavilion’s SSD was the slowest to duplicate 25GB of test files, at a rate of 373.84MBps. The Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED’s Ryzen 7 6800U had similar performance, albeit with a slightly better multi-core score. The Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1 and its Intel Core i7-1255U (1,693/6,527) scored around the same ballpark. The Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7 Carbon (Ryzen 7 5800U) had a 1,446 single-core score and a 6,241 multi-core score. Despite being the cheapest among its competitors, the HP scored the best here. On Geekbench 5, an overall performance benchmark with heavy CPU focus, the Pavilion Plus 14 notched a single-core score of 1,698 and a multi-core score of 9,349.
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