HP is positioning the OmniBook X 17 as a large-screen laptop that still tries to avoid the bulk usually tied to this class. The device pairs a 17.3-inch display with a body that is only 15 mm thick, a combination aimed at users who want more room for work without giving up portability.
The pitch is straightforward: a premium machine for multitasking, creative tasks, and everyday productivity, built around a wide screen and modern Intel hardware. In global markets, the starting price sits at a premium level, beginning at around Rp23 jutaan.
A 17.3-inch panel in a slim frame
The OmniBook X 17 uses a 17.3-inch IPS touchscreen with a 1080p resolution and a 16:9 aspect ratio. HP also specifies 400 nits of brightness and 100 percent sRGB coverage, which makes the panel suitable for extended work sessions and heavy multitasking.
Touch support remains part of the package, adding flexibility for navigation and presentations. That detail helps position the laptop as more than a large display machine, especially for users who interact directly with on-screen content.
Intel Arc B390 becomes the main attraction
The most notable hardware option is Intel Arc B390, which HP places on variants powered by the Core Ultra X7 358H or Core Ultra X9 388H. In the testing mentioned, that integrated graphics solution is said to compete with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 in some scenarios.
That claim gives the OmniBook X 17 a stronger appeal for users who handle light photo and video work. It also separates the laptop from more conventional productivity models that usually prioritize efficiency over graphics capability.
Other configurations use integrated graphics with 4 Xe3 cores. Those versions are still designed for daily productivity and are intended to keep performance smooth and efficient.
Built for heavy multitasking
HP equips the laptop with LPDDR5X 8533 MHz memory in 24 GB or 32 GB capacities. That amount of memory gives the system more room for large browser workloads, office applications, and demanding multitasking use.
Storage goes up to a PCIe Gen 5 SSD with 2 TB of capacity. HP also includes a 76 Wh battery to support users who need a large-screen device that can still move with them.
The overall hardware mix shows a clear direction. HP is trying to make the OmniBook X 17 a premium work laptop that combines a big display, strong specs, and a more restrained form factor.
Thin, but not light
Despite the size of its panel, the chassis remains slim at 15 mm. The laptop weighs 2.39 kg, which keeps it within a portable range for a 17-inch model even if it is not among the lightest options available.
That balance appears aimed at professionals who want a large screen without carrying a machine that feels overly thick. The design language supports that goal by focusing on a premium look and a compact profile for the category.
Pricing and launch configurations
In the United States, the starting price is set at around Rp23 jutaan or 1,499 US dollars for a version with the Core Ultra 5 325, 16 GB of RAM, and a 512 GB SSD. In Canada, the starting point is around Rp25 jutaan or 2,199 Canadian dollars for a Core Ultra 7 355 variant.
Europe gets a higher-end starting configuration, priced from Rp35 jutaan or 2,099 euros with 32 GB of RAM, a 1 TB SSD, and Arc B390 graphics. HP is also said to be preparing a model with Nvidia GeForce RTX 5050 for 2026.
For now, the Intel Panther Lake versions with Arc B390 stand out as the most interesting options in the lineup. They combine a large touchscreen, thin body, and graphics performance that goes beyond the usual expectations for a laptop focused on productivity.
