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One of the most powerful work laptops I've tested this year is not a ThinkPad or MacBook

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fairly easy
HP's first-generation EliteBook X is a 14-inch powerhouse designed for performance in the office, but it has some distinct considerations.
ZDNET's key takeaways HP's 14-inch EliteBook X G1a features AMD's latest Ryzen AI Pro chip, starting at $2,184.

It's a powerful enterprise laptop with lots of I/O, a sleek form factor, and comfortable keyboard.

It's expensive, and can run warm under a heavy workload. $2,184.2 at B&H Photo-Video $2,132.72 at Amazon more buying choices

HP reorganized its laptop lineup last year, renaming its high-performance business devices to the EliteBook X series. The first laptop from this series I've tested is the 14-inch HP EliteBook X G1a, an impressive enterprise laptop with a lot to like, but a few considerations that make it unique.

Also: I tested Lenovo's budget ThinkPad, and it's a no-frills workhorse ready for the workday

There are a few configurations of this laptop, the most premium featuring an AMD Ryzen AI 9 processor -- one of the most cutting-edge chips on the market right now -- and an OLED display, but the one I tested had the AMD Ryzen AI 7 Pro 360 processor, 32GB of RAM, and a 14-inch matte WUXGA IPS display.

This is a business laptop aimed at professionals, and it aims to combine the connectivity of a ThinkPad, the sleek form factor of a MacBook, and HP's signature minimalist, if non-descript, design.

On the surface, it's minimalist and rather corporate-looking, with a matte WUXGA display and an abundant selection of ports. It passes the one-finger test, and opens up to a rather standard display with 400nit brightness and 60Hz refresh rate and a compact and efficient keyboard.

The keyboard is one of its best features. It's utterly silent, with a snappy tactile feel with key travel that (almost) feels mechanical. The keys are spacious and smooth, and the backlighting is effective and well-designed. Similarly, the trackpad is responsive and premium, even if the clicks feel a little on the "heavy" side.

Kyle Kucharski/ZDNET

I do wish it had a haptic trackpad, however, as it would go a long way toward making it more premium, especially as a device…
Kyle Kucharski
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