HP.com has
HP Pavilion Aero 13.3" Laptop (13z-be000) on sale for
$564.99 when you apply coupon code
WINTER5 at checkout.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to community members
Suryasis &
thebeets for finding this deal.
Available options:
- Natural Silver
- Warm Gold
- Pale Rose Gold
Optional Upgrades:- Click here to visit the product page
- Click the 'Customize & Buy' button
- Under Keyboard, choose 'Full-size island-style backlit keyboard +$20'
- Under Networking, choose 'Realtek Wi-Fi 6 (2x2) and Bluetooth 5.2 combo (Supporting Gigabit data rate) +$10'
- Apply coupon code WINTER5 during checkout
- Price after modifications will be $593.99 after coupon discount
About this product (without optional upgrades)
:- 13.3" 1920x1200 400 nits 100% sRGB IPS Display (non-touchscreen)
- Ryzen 5 5600U 2.3 GHz (4.2 GHz Boost) Six-Core / 12 Thread Processor
- 16GB 3200MHz DDR4 RAM (Onboard, soldered)
- 256GB M.2 PCIe Solid State Drive SSD
- Vega 7 Graphics @ 1800 MHz
- Non-Backlit keyboard (upgrade to backlit keyboard available for +$20)
- 802.11ax WiFi 6 (1x2) + Bluetooth 5.2 (upgrade to WiFi 6 2x2 available for +$10)
- 3-Cell 43 WHr Battery
- Windows 11 Pro
- Weight: Less than 2.2 lbs.
- 1-Year Warranty
- Ports:
- 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A
- 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (10 Gbps, Power Delivery 3.0, DisplayPort 1.4)
- 1x HDMI 2.0
- 1x AC-Pin Adapter
- 1x Audio Combo Jack
- 1x Micro SD Card Reader
- Fingerprint Reader
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Top Comments
I have been eyeing the 5800u version, but HP is charging a ridiculous +140 for that processor over the 5600u (+70 if you can stomach removing 8GB ram).
I WILL, however, say that the +$30 adder for the upgrade to the WQXGA (2560x1600) screen is compelling. Then again, this is a 13.3" screen and might not be very useful for daily operations. I be it looks crisp though. I do wonder how it affects battery life though as it takes more processing power to drive higher resolutions.
If your work requires document typing, coding, reading articles than the 16:10 aspect of this laptop is comparatively better than XPS'. If you're someone who's out on the go often then the feather like weight of this laptop would suit you.
But if you're more in to media consumption then the 16:9 aspect of XPS would suit you more; the speakers on the XPS are also much better.
That being said, this laptop's keyboard isn't something to rave about. It's just fine, the keys feel spongy but it's still fine for typing. XPS however is Dell's premium lineup so their keyboards and touchpads are pretty good.
Another important thing to mention, XPS only has 8gb of soldered ram whereas this one has 16gb which translates to more longevity of this laptop.
Last but not the least, since this is AMD ridden, there's no thunderbolt 4 but there's an HDMI port. XPS has thunderbolt 4 but no HDMI.
Screen on both the laptops is spectacular.
56 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Traida2
I have been eyeing the 5800u version, but HP is charging a ridiculous +140 for that processor over the 5600u (+70 if you can stomach removing 8GB ram).
I WILL, however, say that the +$30 adder for the upgrade to the WQXGA (2560x1600) screen is compelling. Then again, this is a 13.3" screen and might not be very useful for daily operations. I be it looks crisp though. I do wonder how it affects battery life though as it takes more processing power to drive higher resolutions.
I have been eyeing the 5800u version, but HP is charging a ridiculous +140 for that processor over the 5600u (+70 if you can stomach removing 8GB ram).
I WILL, however, say that the +$30 adder for the upgrade to the WQXGA (2560x1600) screen is compelling. Then again, this is a 13.3" screen and might not be very useful for daily operations. I be it looks crisp though. I do wonder how it affects battery life though as it takes more processing power to drive higher resolutions.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Dr.W
If your work requires document typing, coding, reading articles than the 16:10 aspect of this laptop is comparatively better than XPS'. If you're someone who's out on the go often then the feather like weight of this laptop would suit you.
But if you're more in to media consumption then the 16:9 aspect of XPS would suit you more; the speakers on the XPS are also much better.
That being said, this laptop's keyboard isn't something to rave about. It's just fine, the keys feel spongy but it's still fine for typing. XPS however is Dell's premium lineup so their keyboards and touchpads are pretty good.
Another important thing to mention, XPS only has 8gb of soldered ram whereas this one has 16gb which translates to more longevity of this laptop.
Last but not the least, since this is AMD ridden, there's no thunderbolt 4 but there's an HDMI port. XPS has thunderbolt 4 but no HDMI.
Screen on both the laptops is spectacular.
If your work requires document typing, coding, reading articles than the 3:2 aspect of this laptop is God sent. If you're someone who's out on the go often then the feather like weight of this laptop would suit you.
But if you're more in to media consumption then the 16:9 aspect of XPS would suit you more; the speakers on the XPS are also much better.
That being said, this laptop's keyboard isn't something to rave about. It's just fine, the keys feel spongy but it's still fine for typing. XPS however is Dell's premium lineup so their keyboards and touchpads are pretty good.
Another important thing to mention, XPS only has 8gb of soldered ram whereas this one has 16gb which translates to more longevity of this laptop.
Last but not the least, since this is AMD ridden, there's no thunderbolt 4 but there's an HDMI port. XPS has thunderbolt 4 but no HDMI.
Screen on both the laptops is spectacular.
This sounds like it would be a great fit with that keyboard upgrade.
I think I'll pull the trigger.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Suryasis
Regarding Battery life, despite having smaller battery and more powerful 6 Core CPU, it still provides similar battery life due to having efficient Ryzen based Zen 3 design compared to Intel's Tiger Lake.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Suryasis
If your work requires document typing, coding, reading articles than the 3:2 aspect of this laptop is God sent. If you're someone who's out on the go often then the feather like weight of this laptop would suit you.
But if you're more in to media consumption then the 16:9 aspect of XPS would suit you more; the speakers on the XPS are also much better.
That being said, this laptop's keyboard isn't something to rave about. It's just fine, the keys feel spongy but it's still fine for typing. XPS however is Dell's premium lineup so their keyboards and touchpads are pretty good.
Another important thing to mention, XPS only has 8gb of soldered ram whereas this one has 16gb which translates to more longevity of this laptop.
Last but not the least, since this is AMD ridden, there's no thunderbolt 4 but there's an HDMI port. XPS has thunderbolt 4 but no HDMI.
Screen on both the laptops is spectacular.
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