![]() With 1.5 mm of travel and 71 grams of force required to actuate, the keys on the Spectre x360 aren’t as clicky as I would like, but I never bottomed out. It covered 157 percent of the sRGB color gamut, beyond the average (118 percent), though the XPS and ThinkPad X1 both had even more vivid 4K displays. ![]() That being said, the screen does well with color. ![]() The Spectre’s display measured an average of 247 nits on our light meter, lower than the premium laptop average (328 nits) as well as the XPS 15, ThinkPad X1 Extreme and ZenBook Pro 15. During this test, the CPU ran at an average clock speed of 3.1 GHz and measured an average temperature of 87.1 degrees Celsius (188.8 degrees Fahrenheit). There was, however, a dip between runs 3 and 4, where it fell below 1,000 but then stabilized for the duration of the stress test. It had a mostly steady decline from its initial score of 1,059.6 to a score of 1,038.1 on its last run. To stress test the Spectre, we ran Cinebench R15 10 times on a loop. That’s way faster than the premium laptop average (21:45) but slower than both the XPS 15 (10:12) and ThinkPad X1 Extreme (10:03). On our Handbrake video editing test, it took the Spectre 10 minutes and 45 seconds to transcode a 4K video to 1080p. That’s faster than average (542.8 MBps) but slower than the ThinkPad X1 Extreme (a blazing 1,017 MBps). The Spectre copied 4.97GB of files in 9 seconds, a rate of 565.5 MBps. On Geekbench 4.1, the Spectre earned a score of 21,889, not only far higher than the premium laptop average (13,338) but also the XPS 15 and ZenBook.
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