A:AnswerANY WORKING printer you can find will work with this laptop, usually straight out of the box. Advanced features (like those for an AIO) may require installation of drivers.
A:AnswerYes, but it will probably work best with an HP branded model. Also, don't expect a docking station to suddenly give you connection types that aren't inherent in the laptop itself.
A:AnswerAsked and answered. If you had taken five minutes to read the listing, or search Questions, you could have bought this five months ago, when it was probably on sale for even less.
A:AnswerNo laptop has a a removable keyboard (unless you mean one that can be removed by a knowledgeable, licensed technician).
This unit has a 14" screen. To include a 10-key, it would have to have the keyboard so small and the keys packed together so tightly it would be virtually unusable.
A:AnswerMcAfee antivirus comes pre-installed but with a free trial for 30 or 60 days, you will be asked to pay for subscription after trial expires. I ended up uninstalling to avoid the frequent prompts for paid subscription
A:AnswerAhh, the eternal questions: Is there a God? Are we alone in the universe? What is the meaning of life?
Yes, there is WiFi in this universe, in this time you are fortunate to exist in.
But to answer what is your plebeian, poorly worded question: read the Specs.
A:AnswerI don't disbelieve you on this point.
I do disbelieve that you haven't read a newspaper or watched a newscast in the past 3 months and change.
It's called INFLATION. It is caused by several major factors, probably including the Trump tariffs, but in this case I don't think you can lay most of the blame to him, but rather on the AI competition, where so many companies are snapping up two of the most necessary computer components: RAM and drives (both solid state and platter). Both have jumped up by 100% to over 300% since late-2025. Prices for mainstream DDR5 memory have soared. A 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 RAM kit that sold for $100-$200 then is now a MINIMUM of $350 to $375. A 32GB DDR4 kit has tripled, jumping from a historical low range of $60 to $90, to $150 to $193. SSD manufacturing costs have gone up 246% for the raw wafer, the highest in DECADES. Consumer NVMe Drives like a 512GB NVMe Gen4 SSD spiked 54% in a single quarter, and UFS flash over 100%.
Tech manufacturing companies have decided to pass these costs to all consumers (surprise!), rather than taking the easy path of just shutting down and going out of business. Apple officially raised prices across its entire MacBook and iPad lineups by up to $500 per device, specifically citing "unsustainable" memory costs. Microsoft raised the price of Xbox Series X/S consoles by $100 to $150 and have stopped production of the 2TB model to focus on the more profitable 1TB. This has also affected cellphones; 4x price increases in RAM have now made that component 50% of the overall price on mid-range models. Don't expect any price reduction for at least 2 years, which is when the newest plants, currently under production, MIGHT be online and providing some relief (although it is possible that PRC will rank up production of RAM (at least) to help in the interim). In fact, current forecasts predict an additional 40% to 50% price increase on these key parts through the end of the year, and another 40% year-on-year surge is projected for 2027. Analysts warn that if these trends hold, sub-$500 entry-level PCs will effectively disappear from store shelves by 2028 because memory margins are eating up all profit.
So either hold your nose and pay, or wait, or look for some deals from those who are upgrading and selling their current models.
A:AnswerAbsolute, but you realize, don't you, that that means you are paying for something, then effectively throwing it away. Consider getting a non-flip (2-in-1) type, or one without a touchscreen at all instead.