After careful research, I chose the HP Spectre because of the price and hardware specs. The price seemed too good to be true. It has 4k resolution screen, 16GB of DDR4 memory chips, "5G" Wifi (802.11-AC), 3 USB 3.0 Ports, Thunderbolt 2 connection, full size HDMI port, intel i7 processor, etc. etc. All for about a thousand bucks. I bought this laptop from Best Buy, knowing that HP has a bad rep for selling defective products that break down prematurely. This wasn't the first HP product to fail on me, but after all the superficial blog + amateur reviews, I decided to buy this laptop. I assumed that HP must have improved their manufacturing over the years, but I was wrong. This laptop did not even last me 3 days. I ordered this from Best Buy online and picked it up on a Tues night. By Wednesday night, the laptop had been unusable. Luckily, my defective computer was bad right out the box, and did not fail months later, or just after the warranty expired. The first night I turned on the laptop, the audio did not work. Something was wrong with the corny "Bang & Olufson" audio software and hardware. Later on the night, the 4K screen was starting to go bad. The screen began to display static, (like the old school TVs), and began shutting off frequently. Eventually the whole screen died out. I searched online about these issues and discovered a giant underground scene of defective HP Spectre users that showed up on Google. Apparently there are thousands of unresolved forum posts of people pleading for fixes for their HP Spectres because these issues are apparently very common. During this search, I came across some professional computer reviews that I had not seen before,( PC Mag, Digital Trend, Computer World, etc,) all rank HP as one of the worst manufacturers, especially in consumer laptops. Its been documented by professional sources that HP has the highest failure rate in laptops. Despite what the Best Buy morons say. I had some middle aged sales man (like Euthyphro) insist that HP Spectre was the best thing ever. ... I highly doubt he ever owned one, or needed a CAD certified mobile workstation, to really know what is good in a laptop. Despite being one of the best selling brands of Laptops, HP is documented by professional computer journalists as the company w/ the highest failure rate. This is the reason why I chose to exchange my laptop w/ another brand. The laptop looked nice, and the screen looked great. That was about all there was for my laptop. I returned it on the third day, and got a Lenovo Yoga with the same specs. I do not recommend getting this cheap laptop. If you do get this laptop, be sure to spend $300-$400 bucks for extended warranty and ADC protection. Probably get an additional Geek Squad protection in case HP customer support sucks. When I was in High School, I had an HP laptop sent for diagnostics twice. One of those times took over 6 months... and I lived in Spring, TX about 3 mins from HP's factory. I got Accidental Damage Coverage from Lenovo for less than $25 a year for 3 years. I highly suggest to get some kind of insurance for these "convertible laptops", especially for a brand with terrible reputation like HP.