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HP Envy Spectre
Ultrabooks are meant to be a premium product, packing top-of-the-line specs into an impossibly thin frame. Here at CES, the HP Envy Spectre epitomizes that definition. This is one cool bit of kit, but it’ll cost you. The Envy Spectre will set you back $1,400 when it goes on sale in the United States on Feb. 8. So what makes this ultrabook so fancy? Where do we start? The Envy Spectre features a scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass chassis and squeezes a 14-inch 1600x900 Radiance Display onto a 13.3-inch frame thanks to its attractive, super-slim bezel. The glass looks great — if you like the look of the iPhone 4 and 4S, you’ll love the Spectre. The top is completely flat, with rounded corners. It's got built-in Beats audio for discerning audiophiles. It uses HP's CoolSense technology to keep things, well, cool. And it even has an NFC chip on the palm rest so you can quickly and easily share URLs from your smartphone browser. This area is (somewhat oddly, aesthetically speaking) covered with still more Gorilla Glass. It looks and feels a bit unusual for a notebook. The Spectre also has several ports, including an Ethernet port that, interestingly, is kept slimmer by the bottom portion of the port being comprised of a mechanical flap. Rounding out the specs, it’s got a Core i5 CPU, 4 or 8GB of RAM and a 128 or 256GB SSD. The HP Envy Spectre is said to run nine hours on a charge. Dimensions are 0.79 inches thin and a hefty (for an ultrabook) 3.79 pounds. — Christina BonningtonPhotos: Wired Photo Staff