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Boardroom to gaming: Why the OmniBook X Flip is the only device you need

New York Post Shopping for a 2-in-1 laptop is usually an exercise in managed expectations.

You want the power of a workstation but the portability of a clipboard, and often you end up with a device that does both just adequately enough to keep you from returning it. However, as AI integration becomes standard, the secret sauce for these convertibles is shifting toward how well they adapt to your specific workflow.

If you are currently in the market for a device that flips, folds and thinks for itself, HP’s OmniBook X Flip provides a useful blueprint for what to prioritize. Built around the idea that your computer should adapt to your day, it bridges work, creative flow, and personal downtime in a single device, without compromising between performance and flexibility.

Most of us use our laptops for multiple things, and most buyers need a device that transitions as quickly as they do. While HP offers a range of devices, from the powerhouse OmniBook Ultra to the student-focused OmniBook 7, the OmniBook X Flip is designed specifically as the crossover solution.

It is built for the person who is a professional at 10:00 a.m. and a digital creator or gamer at 8:00 p.m. Instead of choosing a device based on your most intense task, look for one that removes the friction between all of them.

When evaluating a 2-in-1 in 2026, the traditional spec sheet has a new metric: TOPS (Trillions of Operations Per Second). This measures how effectively the PC handles AI tasks locally.

The OmniBook X Flip offers 48 NPUs, which makes it ultra-fast and capable of handling real-world tasks:

In a convertible laptop, the screen is your primary interface, and its quality dictates your productivity and your relaxation. The OmniBook X Flip features a 3K OLED touchscreen because the goal is versatility. Here’s a breakdown:

A great 2-in-1 laptop should feel like it’s anticipating your next move. The OmniBook X Flip leverages its IR camera for features that make the tablet experience totally functional. Here are two highlights:

Another area the HP OmniBook X Flip excels in is its battery life. Designed to carry you through the workday with ease, it offers up to 22 hours of continuous use. It can hit 50% battery in about 45 minutes, meaning that in the unlikely event you’re running low on juice, you can be up and writing that report or streaming your favorite show in less than an hour without being connected to the charger.

HP For the professional who travels or the student who lives in a dorm, the OmniBook X Flip removes the need to carry both a laptop and a tablet. It isn’t just “two devices in one”— it’s one device that doesn’t force you to choose which persona you’re going to be today. Alone, it fills three distinct roles:

This 2-in-1 no longer requires you to sacrifice power for a hinge. The HP OmniBook X Flip proves that the most professional thing a device can do is be flexible. By combining Series 3 processing power with an interface that responds to your gestures and a screen that transitions from a high-end monitor to a cinema display, it hits every high-performance mark.

If you’re on the fence, the real question isn’t whether a 2-in-1 can replace a laptop; it’s whether you’re ready to stop carrying a device that only does half the job. At the end of the day, for those who live between work and play, the OmniBook X Flip is the answer.

This article was written by Kendall Cornish, New York Post Commerce Editor & Reporter. Kendall, who moonlights as a private chef in the Hamptons for New York elites, lends her expertise to testing and recommending cooking products – for beginners and aspiring sous chefs alike. Simmering and seasoning her way through both jobs, Kendall dishes on everything from the best cookware for your kitchen to chef-approved gourmet meal kits to the full suite of Ninja appliances. Prior to joining the Post’s shopping team in 2023, Kendall previously held positions at Apartment Therapy and at Dotdash Meredith’s Travel + Leisure and Departures magazines.

Read original at New York Post

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