

With a clever quad-speaker setup by Bang & Olufsen, the Spectre x360 is built to deliver an optimal listening experience in any mode. Still, with an Intel HD Graphics 620 integrated graphics card instead of discrete GPU, the Spectre isn't really meant for full-time gaming. This gives the Spectre enough horsepower to reach a quite playable 40 frames per second at 1920 x 1080 and Medium settings in Dirt 3 Complete Edition.

Its score of 920 on 3DMark's Firestrike benchmark is 14 percent higher than the showing by last year's model.
SPECTOR PRO REVIEWS WINDOWS
MORE: Best Ultrabooks (Thin-and-Light Windows Laptops)Įven the Spectre x360's graphics performance has seen a sizeable increase. When we used OpenOffice to sort 20,000 names and addresses, the Spectre x360 (3:33) finished 30 seconds faster than its closest rival, the Samsung spin 9 (4:05). It's also on a par with more expensive hybrids such as Microsoft's Surface Book (318 MBps).įor people who crunch a lot of numbers, the Spectre x360's time on our spreadsheet test is pretty impressive. That's faster than pretty much all of the device's competitors, including the spin 9 (173 MBps) and Yoga 900 (181 MBps). When asked to copy a DVD's worth of mixed-media files, the SSD posted a transfer speed of 318 megabytes per second. The Spectre's PCIe SSD is also blazing fast. To be fair, though, those models used Intel's last-gen chip.

That also means the Spectre x360 tops almost all of its competitors, including the Samsung Notebook 9 spin (6,948), the Lenovo Yoga 900 (6,264) and the Yoga 900S (5,343). The convertible notched a Geekbench 3 score of 7,933, which means that overall performance increased by 16 percent over last year's model. Multitasking was a breeze, even with 20 or more browser tabs open. With this kind of setup, the Spectre x360 absolutely flies.
