HP’s Omnibook Ultra Flip 14-inch is its first 2-in-1 AI PC
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On Tuesday, HP introduced its first 2-in-1 AI PC, the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14-inch. The device features Intel’s 200V Core Ultra series processors with a 3K OLED display, haptic touchpad, and dedicated AI engine. In late November, the PC will get Microsoft’s Copilot+ capabilities as an update.
The OmniBook Ultra Flip 14-inch has a 2,880 x 1,800 touch-sensitive OLED display with a maximum 120Hz variable refresh rate. With a 90 percent screen-to-body ratio, the PC is just 0.59 inches (15mm) thick and weighs 2.97 pounds (1.35 kg).
Storage on the OmniBook Ultra Flip 14-inch starts at 512GB, with 1TB and 2TB options also available. 16GB of RAM is standard, but more expensive tiers will bump that up to 32GB. The 2-in-1 has up to 20 hours of battery life and can fast-charge to about 50 percent in 45 minutes using its bundled 65W USB-C adapter. Its Intel AI processor can be configured with anything from Ultra 5 226V to Ultra 9 288V.
The device includes a 9MP camera with hardware-level low-light adjustment and Auto Switch HDR, which determines when HDR is needed (based on lighting conditions) and switches instantly.
Onboard AI features using the Intel chip’s NPU include hand gesture support for scrolling through documents or webpages, adjusting volume levels, and controlling media playback. The PC automatically locks when you leave and wakes up when you return.
Once the Copilot+ update is available for Intel PCs, features like AI image generation and editing tools, Live Caption, Windows Studio effects, and Recall will be added.
The HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14-inch is available today on HP’s website. It starts at $1,450.
Like its siblings, the S25 Ultra has a customized version of the Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, which lets all three phones process their AI experiences on-device. Of course, that’s better for privacy.
While the tradition of including an S Pen in a phone continues (it’s now essentially the long-retired Galaxy Note), Air Commands — which bridged the gap between the two — is now gone. Samsung told Engadget in a briefing that less than one percent of S Pen-toting customers used the feature. And of those who did, most used it as a camera shutter, which can easily be replicated in other ways. Samsung says removing it reduced some weight and increased the durability of the S Pen.
Sam Rutherford of Engadget got an early experience with the Galaxy S25 Ultra and said it “feels like a good phone” and called Samsung’s AI suite “much more consistent and easier to use”, but also felt the company “could have done more for its most expensive non-folding phone.”