The rest of the display's color performance can be calibrated to a level that is perfect for creative professionals or those that require an accurate display. Unfortunately, this display will never reach 100% sRGB coverage, but only high-saturation greens are truly affected by this issue. The good news is that with SpectraCAL's CALMAN 5 software, I was able to calibrate this display to excellent levels of accuracy. General color performance isn't particularly accurate, in fact the Spectre x360 falls quite a bit behind the standard Spectre, which was calibrated quite well by default. Calibration out of the box is average, and while a color temperature of around 6800K is better than many blue-tinted laptops, greyscale performance is let down by a gamma that exceeds sRGB's 2.2 target. HP doesn't make any claims about the color performance of this display, and in my testing I recorded 93.7% coverage of the sRGB gamut. Brightness levels are slightly above average for an Ultrabook, at around 350 nits, while a contrast ratio above 1200:1 is very good if typical of an IPS panel. This IPS display packs excellent viewing angles, and although the glossy finish does introduce distracting reflections at times, colors really pop through the glass. The 13.3-inch panel offers good detail and is sharp while maintaining readable text at a 125% scaling level. There are no upgrade options, but I believe 1080p is almost the perfect resolution for an ultraportable of this performance, particularly with Windows' recent improvements to display scaling. The Spectre x360's display is a 13.3-inch IPS WLED-backlit LCD with a 1920 x 1080 resolution.
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