The HP OmniBook 7 Laptop 17.3″ Touch screen with Core Ultra 5, 16GB RAM is marked down to $599.99, which is $550 off the regular price, or 47% off. For that price, you are getting a big 17.3 inch full HD touch screen, a current Intel Core Ultra 5 processor, 16GB of memory, and a 512GB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD. This is the kind of setup that usually costs closer to four figures, especially from a major brand like HP. If your current laptop feels slow with lots of tabs open, or you are tired of squinting at a 13 or 14 inch screen, this deal gives you a larger touch display and enough power to handle school work, office work, streaming, and light creative tasks without the usual price jump.
You also get Windows 11 Home, so you are ready to go out of the box for normal home or student use. The Intel Core Ultra 5 226V chip and Intel Arc 130V GPU with 8GB video memory mean you can handle photo work, casual gaming, and video streaming without trouble. Paired with 16GB of onboard RAM, you should be able to keep many browser tabs and apps open at once without the system feeling bogged down. The 512GB SSD gives you quick boot times and fast file access, with enough room for a good number of apps, documents, and some games. If you ever move to a different config in this line, there are options with 1TB or 2TB SSDs, and even higher Core Ultra 7 chips and stronger GPUs, but for $599.99 this setup hits a nice balance for most people.
The display is a 17.3 inch full HD (1920 x 1080) panel with touch support, IPS viewing angles, edge‑to‑edge glass, and 400 nits brightness. That means it will look sharp for movies, simple design work, and spreadsheets, and you can tap and swipe on the screen like a big tablet. The 86% screen‑to‑body ratio also means the bezels are fairly slim, so even though it is a large laptop, it will not feel as bulky as older 17 inch machines. If you do any kind of side‑by‑side work, like a browser next to Word, or timeline editing in a basic video editor, the extra space makes it a lot more comfortable than a small notebook.
If you need a main home laptop that can double as a work or school machine, this HP OmniBook 7 deal is worth a look. You are paying mid‑range money for parts that are usually in higher tier systems: a recent Intel Ultra chip, 16GB RAM, a fast NVMe SSD, and a large touch screen. The Intel integrated SoC design keeps things more power‑friendly than old gaming rigs, but you still get the Arc 130V GPU with dedicated video memory for smoother graphics. At $599.99, with $550 off the regular price, this is the kind of discount that makes sense if you were already thinking about replacing an aging laptop and want something that will feel current for several years.



