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 a big 17.3 inch touch screen laptop with a current Intel Core Ultra 5 226V chip, 16GB of RAM, and a dedicated Intel Arc 130V GPU with 8GB VRAM, that sale price is pretty strong. You are getting a full Windows 11 Home machine with hardware that is fine for daily work, streaming, school, coding, and light to mid gaming. If you have been using a smaller or older laptop, this will feel like a big jump in both screen space and speed without jumping into four-figure pricing.
The main draw here is the screen and the combo of CPU, GPU, and memory. That 17.3 inch FHD (1920 x 1080) IPS touch display gives you more room for side‑by‑side windows, which helps if you like to keep email, a browser, and a document open at once. It hits 400 nits, so you can see it better in bright rooms, and the micro‑edge design keeps the bezels fairly thin, with an 86% screen‑to‑body ratio. The touch feature is nice if you like to scroll, tap, or zoom right on the glass instead of using the trackpad all the time. Under the hood, the Intel Core Ultra 5 226V goes up to 4.5 GHz and has 8 cores and 8 threads, paired with Intel Arc 130V graphics with 8GB of video memory and 16GB of onboard system RAM. That combo is more than enough for office work, web, streaming, photo edits, and some games at 1080p with tuned settings, plus it should hold up fine for a few years.
Storage is handled by a 512GB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD, which keeps boot times and app launches fast compared to old spinning hard drives. For many people, 512GB is a nice middle ground: you have room for Windows, your apps, school or work files, and a good chunk of media. If you know you keep a lot of large games or big video files, HP lists 1TB and 2TB SSDs as alternate builds for this line, but for the price point on this one, 512GB is a fair starting spot. The machine uses an Intel integrated SoC chipset, so parts are built to work together cleanly, and 16GB of RAM is soldered on, which is a common setup now and fine if you want something that just works out of the box without upgrades.
You should look at this deal if you want a large‑screen Windows 11 laptop for home, school, or office work and do not want to spend over a thousand dollars. The big touch screen gives you a desktop‑like feel while still being portable enough to move around the house or take to class. The Core Ultra 5 chip, 16GB RAM, Intel Arc 130V GPU, and SSD give you enough power and speed that you will not feel stuck or slowed down in normal use. At $599.99 with a $550 discount, you are basically getting 17 inch hardware with a better‑than‑basic graphics setup for the price many brands charge for a smaller 15 inch office laptop, so if you have been waiting for a good “do most things” machine on sale, this one fits that box pretty well.



