<h1>thinner, faster package</h1> <div class="deck"> <h2>This third generation is a major update to one of our favorite convertible laptops.</h2> </div> <div class="imageContainer580xX"><figure id="page-lede" class="oneUp"><img class="largeImage imgId100686857 " src="http://core3.staticworld.net/images/article/2016/10/hp-spectre-13.3_dancing-100686857-large.jpg" alt="hp spectre 13.3 dancing" /><figcaption><span class="credit">Credit</span></figcaption>HP's Spectre x360 steps out with a major upgrade in its third generation. The latest version of the company’s flagship convertible laptop gets thinner, lighter, and faster, and adds a wealth of check-off features. The new Spectre x360 is expected to go on sale October 12 starting at $1,049. Still made of CNC-aluminum, the Spectre x360 slims down thanks to the use of a “micro-edge bezel” design. This eliminates the massive bezel of the previous version but still keeps the same 13.3-inch, touch-enabled screen. The only screen offered so far is a 1920x1080 IPS panel that uses direct bonding <div class="kioskedCustomVideoContainer"></div> These improvements shave down the width from 12.79 inches to 12.03 inches, and the thickness from 16mm to 13.7mm. Weight drops to 2.85 pounds from 3.17 pounds. <figure class="large "><img src="http://images.techhive.com/images/article/2016/10/hp-spectre-13.3_edgetoedge_screen-100686859-large.jpg" alt="hp spectre 13.3 edgetoedge screen" width="580" height="326" border="0" /> <div class="zoom-icon"></div> <figcaption>The updated Spectre x360 features a “micro-bezel” that is far thinner than its predecessor. </figcaption></figure>HP has announced only one model so far, and it uses Intel’s Core i7-7500U. That’s pretty much the top of the line for Intel’s brand-new 7th-gen chips. From what we’ve seen in our review of the new chip, it's a worthy upgrade unless your current PC is pretty new. Storage options include up to a 512GB M.2 NVME SSD over PCIe. We're especially pleased to see the adoption of Intel's high-speed Thunderbolt 3 external I/O in the Spectre x360. With Thunderbolt 3, HP will also ditch the round-barrel charger and charge the Spectre x360 through one of two USB-C ports. <figure class="large "><img src="http://images.techhive.com/images/article/2016/10/hp-spectre-x360-13.3_bang-olufsen-100686870-large.jpg" alt="hp spectre x360 13.3 bang olufsen" width="580" height="326" border="0" /><small class="credit">HP</small><figcaption>The updated Spectre x360 will feature four speakers that were tuned by Bang & Olufsen. </figcaption></figure>Sure, the bezel used in the Spectre x360 isn’t quite as thin as the one used in its arch-rival, Dell’s XPS 13, but that means HP can fit the webcam along the top instead of in the compromised lower-left corner location Dell uses. The space also accommodates an infrared camera that supports Windows Hello login. The new Spectre x360 will last longer on battery, according to HP: up to 14 hours and 15 minutes. That's thanks to the 57.8 watt-hour lithium polymer battery, compared to the last gen Spectre x360's 56 watt-hour power pack, rated to last for 12 hours. <figure class="large "><img src="http://images.techhive.com/images/article/2016/10/hp-spectre-13.3_floating_open-100686856-large.jpg" alt="hp spectre 13.3 floating open" width="580" height="326" border="0" /></figure>source"cnbc" </figure></div>