HP Wave Review: Good Looking, Great Sounding Home Theater PC

A package from HP arrived and inside is a very interesting looking-computer with a very familiar logo.

Bang and Olufsen Logo

That logo is Bang and Olufsen and if you aren’t familiar they’re known for their high-end audio equipment which tells you that this compact little desktop probably has a focus on audio. Which it does.

Head here to get the least expensive HP Wave I mentioned in the video.

This video was sponsored by HP but all opinions are my actual opinions, and I would never do a sponsored video on a product/service if I myself didn’t truly think it was something I’d actually recommend. I hope you enjoy regardless of the sponsorship and if you have any questions about advertising on my site, check out my advertising policy and feel free to reach out to me personally here. Thanks!

The Specs

The HP Pavilion Wave has a unique top-facing speaker that aims at a parabolic reflector that projects the audio in 360 degrees. And, it sounds good. Loud, crisp, not a lot of bass but overall really good actually.

Top Speaker

Besides sounding good, this thing is also quite the looker.

HP Wave

The chassis is super clean and compact and has all of its ports neatly arranged around the back in a column.

These ports include an SD card slot, a USB 3.1 Type-C port, 2x USB 3.0 ports, a DisplayPort, HDMI, Gigabit Ethernet, the AC power port and a Kensington lock slot (which is used to lock the computer down to an desk, for example, using a special chain).

HP Wave Ports

Around the front there’s a solitary USB 3.0 port and a headphone jack for easy access.

The entire computer is covered in this threaded material that, combined with the unique triangular shape give it a unique aestetic that frankly I wouldn’t mind displaying on a desk instead of my usual under it.

Inside this model I have here is a quad-core Intel i5 processor, 8GBs of RAM, an Intel HD 630 GPU, and it has a 128GB SSD coupled with a 1TB hard drive inside.

HP Wave Specs

It also comes with an equally pretty wireless keyboard, with good clicky buttons, that you recharge via the included USB cable and an ambidextrous mouse that comes with two AAA batteries.

The only thing you need to be up and running is some type of monitor and you’re good to go.

The computer also has dual mics with noise cancellation making it great for video calls (if you buy a webcam) and also it’s pretty good at hearing Cortana commands from a distance.

Who Should Buy The HP Wave

Now, thanks to that integrated GPU, this isn’t a gaming PC. Any serious game won’t work, but it’ll run basic games like Minecraft just fine. But I don’t think HP had gaming in mind for this guy, I personally think it’d be a great media device.

Here’s why:

  • The latest processors combined with the RAM and integrated graphics means it’ll stream or playback any 4K videos no problem.
  • Awesome integrated speaker you don’t need external ones for watching those videos or listening to music.
  • You can use Cortana and the dual-microphones I mentioned to issue media controls from across the room with your voice or the included wireless mouse and keyboard to use it from the couch.
  • It doesn’t come with a monitor, which you might think is a downside, but it’s fine if you plan to connect it to, say, your TV.
  • The large 1TB drive means plenty of storage for your media.
  • Because it looks so good, you wouldn’t mind putting it in plain view in your living room.
  • And price-wise, if you go for the i3 processor model which still has the same RAM and 1TB hard drive, it’s under $500 for everything.

All in all I have to praise HP for doing something different. I’m a big fan of when a company takes as much time focusing on the design of a product as much as they do the engineering behind it and the Wave is a unique and clever take on what a desktop can be.

Let me know what you guys think of the Wave and this review in the comments below always love hearing from you guys!

Related Items: , , ,

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.