HP Omen packs gaming-PC hardware into ultrabook shell
The HP Omen fits a lot into a little, but does the price justify this careful balance?
The HP Omen fits a lot into a little, but does the price justify this careful balance?
Hewlett-Packard released the Omen, a $1,500 15.6-inch gaming laptop that could match offerings from Alienware, Razer and other gaming PC companies.
The news comes in light of HP鈥檚 recent commitment to split into two public companies. The decision might clearly distinguish its two markets: the corporate-oriented hardware and services operations and its consumer-oriented computer and printer business.
HP is encroaching on a weight-conscious market this time: the Omen weighs in at 4.68 pounds and measures 0.78 inches trick, which puts it squarely between the thin, light, and relatively under-powered ultrabook category (such as the MacBook Air, Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga, Asus Zenbook) and brickier laptops built for gaming performance.
The laptop features an Intel i7 4710HQ CPU with 8 GB of RAM, a 128 GB solid-state drive, and an Nvidia GeForce 860M graphics card with 2 GB of VRAM. The hardware specs and price point might make the Omen a tough sell, especially among more well-known competing brands and models in the market, such as聽Alienware鈥檚 13, which retails at a base $999, and a heftier Lenovo鈥檚 Y50 laptop, at $1,050.
The Omen鈥檚 lightness, given its 15.6-inch screen size, might explain the price difference, as well as the fact that it鈥檚 a touchscreen. The display resolution, however, might disappoint some looking for a little more oomph, considering the cost.
Mike Nash, HP鈥檚 vice president of product management, tells tech news site PCWorld that "Gamers care about frame rates.鈥 While both display and performance are important in the PC market, a few regularly chopped frames while playing a game can significantly sour the experience.
鈥淚n other words: If you really care about gaming performance, you鈥檒l take 30-plus fps on a 鈥榣ow鈥 resolution over slower frame rates on a trendy 4K display,鈥 Mr. Nash says.
The price point and branding hearkens back to VoodooPC, a luxury personal computer company that HP bought out in 2006 to expand its gaming division. Voodoo鈥檚 image had lain dormant since 2008 with intermittent collaborations with HP, such as the Blackbird 002 desktop PC, which was similar in price and style to products that Voodoo released in the past. But that model lacked the company鈥檚 signature branding, and it was almost certain the company鈥檚 presence had been lain to rest.
While HP鈥檚 Omen laptop might not have the Voodoo name behind it, its signature logo on the boot screen might be a telltale sign that HP鈥檚 resurrecting its gaming PC marketing efforts.