Hewlett-Packard is banking on "convertible" tablets to power its consumer holiday sales, CEO Meg Whitman said Tuesday.
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HP reported better-than-expected earnings on Tuesday.
Whitman said demand won't be known until after the holidays.
Though Whitman used the term convertible to generally describe its hybrid devices, the Spectre x2 and Pavilion x2 are technically detachables. That is, the display portion can be detached from the keyboard base and be used as a standalone Windows 8.1 tablet.
Convertibles, like HP's EliteBook Revolve, generally have touch displays that remain attached but can swivel.
Specs are pretty impressive for the Spectre x2. It sports a 13.3-inch 1,920x1,080 display, a 128GB solid-state drive, Intel HD 4200 graphics, USB 3.0 and HDMI ports, and an extra battery in the keyboard base for up to 9 hours of combined battery life, HP says.
And it's one of the first fanless products to use a mainstream Intel Core processor. In this case, a Core i5 4202Y processor, Intel's most power efficient mainstream Core chip. Typically, all laptops powered by Core i3, i5, or i7 processors require a fan to keep the chip cool.
At the Microsoft Store, it's priced at $999.
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