

There’s no pairing process to worry about, just snap it on for a few minutes, get it juiced up, and get to your digital scribbling. The pen snaps to the side of the laptop to charge and, well, just works. This mode is also the best to make use of the included digital pen. The fingerprint scanner still works though, which is a nice touch, so you still have secure, easy login. Pop the display right the way around and the hardware keyboard turns off and you have yourself a large tablet. ChromeOS still isn’t perfect in its touch-optimized mode, but it’s probably less frustrating than Windows 11. The bezels on the display are slim, but not too slim, for being convertible you need a bit of something to grasp when using the Dragonfly as a tablet. This is arguably the best-looking Chromebook right now. HP took all the guesswork out of which color to buy and just made the Dragonfly in the best one. It only comes in one color, blue, which is fine because it’s gorgeous.

It’s still there, but it’s subtle and small. For one, it doesn’t have that screaming Chromebook logo on the lid like so many others. The visual aspects of the design are striking, too.
#Safe gimp 2.8.22 upgrade
