Friday, February 7th 2025
HP EliteBook X G1a "Supports" up to 128 GB LPDDR5X-8533 Memory
At some point this week, HP's North American online store was updated with new high-end EliteBooks that feature AMD Strix Point APUs. Three models appear to support up to 128 GB of LPDDR5X-8533 memory—these curious entries were highlighted by tech enthusiast Hoang Anh Phu (AnhPhuH). The advertised maximum 8533 MT/s transfer rate exceeds Team Red's official reference figure (7500 MT/s) for the EliteBook X G1a's Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 APU. Looking further up in the Team Red "Strix Point" product stack, we spotted their Ryzen AI 9 HX PRO 375 spec sheet boasting a maximum LPDDR5x transfer speed of 8000 MT/s. Press outlets have expressed doubt when analyzing three of HP's EliteBook X G1a SKUs. Theories point to product pages containing possible placeholder information, or inaccuracies.
Working with the belief that the specs are legit, AnhPhuH commented: "this is the first laptop featured with 128 GB LPDDR5x-8533 128-bit memory. That would mean it's using four 256 Gb x32 modules(?!). As far as I know, all three major DRAM manufacturers currently only have 128 Gb x32 modules...the EliteBook X G1a uses Strix Point, not Strix Halo, so it only pairs with four x32 modules (two 64-bit channels)." HP's web shop states that the EliteBook X G1a models are due to launch on March 14. We hope that further clarification and concrete specifications appear online closer to release time. Initial pricing starts at $2749 for the lowliest of the three "128 GB LPDDR5X-8533" equipped models. The agonizingly named flagship "HP EliteBook X G1a 14 inch Notebook Next Gen AI PC Wolf Pro Security Edition" offering comes in at an eye-watering $4299.
Sources:
AnhPhuH Tweet #1, AnhPhuH Tweet #2, Wccftech, TweakTown, HP Shop U.S.
Working with the belief that the specs are legit, AnhPhuH commented: "this is the first laptop featured with 128 GB LPDDR5x-8533 128-bit memory. That would mean it's using four 256 Gb x32 modules(?!). As far as I know, all three major DRAM manufacturers currently only have 128 Gb x32 modules...the EliteBook X G1a uses Strix Point, not Strix Halo, so it only pairs with four x32 modules (two 64-bit channels)." HP's web shop states that the EliteBook X G1a models are due to launch on March 14. We hope that further clarification and concrete specifications appear online closer to release time. Initial pricing starts at $2749 for the lowliest of the three "128 GB LPDDR5X-8533" equipped models. The agonizingly named flagship "HP EliteBook X G1a 14 inch Notebook Next Gen AI PC Wolf Pro Security Edition" offering comes in at an eye-watering $4299.
30 Comments on HP EliteBook X G1a "Supports" up to 128 GB LPDDR5X-8533 Memory
Although it is certainly capable of running gamz, it is primarily designed as a work machine, like the earlier model I work on everyday that contains 64GB of ram, which btw, will surely be replaced by this new model as soon as they are available.. :D
www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1877071-REG/asus_gz302ea_xs96_13_4_republic_of_gamers.html
senpaielitegamebook by night?Surely there is room? I mean my repurposed HP 830 G5 with its pitiful UHD 620 is still capable of running some casual/indie games.
Don’t get me wrong, gaming is cool and all, but rasterization has stagnated. I’d love to see articles exploring the areas of growth that the hardware makers are actually targeting. Local LLMs, Generative AI, you name it. nVidia’s RTX 50 series is supposed to bring more than double AI TOPS compared to RTX 40. Notebook CPUs now have NPUs which promise to accelerate AI. AMD fired shots at the 4090 in regards to DeepSeek performance just a couple of weeks ago. AI is where the technology is heading.
If only there was a trusted tech publication willing to do such an investigation…
Although I have not seen any plans for a model that has 128 GB of LPDDR5x RAM.
I'm going for the ASUS ROG Flow Z13 so I can use it for both play and work. And apparently (and ironicly) it's cheaper than this HP EliteBook X G1a, $2,700 vs $4,300.
Had a client just a week ago, who's a backend dev for some outsourcing company. He wanted to put 128GB of DDR5 in his XPS laptop, but all we could find locally is a 64GB kit, so he had to settle for that.
3D scanning (or more specifically editing point-clouds) is very memory-hungry. Built a workstation for my friend with 128GB RAM. But if you, let's say, do scans on the go, then you can do editing on the same machine as well. The thing itself isnt't really that CPU or GPU hungry, just needs a lo-o-o-o-ot of memory.
Looking at the base model: at $2800 it's pricey, but still reasonable. I'm definitely not the buyer, but I see the target audience for it. Just looked up the spec for both "base" and "wolf pro" {awooooo} and as far as I can see, the only difference is $1500 for extra 2 years of warranty... which you can tick during purchase for $167 extra.:banghead:
And that's at the same time as they still offer 3 year warranty for their lower-tier ProBooks and EliteBooks...
Another thing that made me a bit :kookoo:, is that a human support costs less than their "Automated AI powered predictive" crap... I'm really confused.
selling laptops with 16GB ram is pathetic in 2025
I suspect that we're looking at placeholder material.
128gb is a lot but 64gb is for sure seeing it's days - or maybe it's just me who doesn't know how to close a program :D
HP adopted Thunderbolt for AMD platform since long time
i used Elitebook G10, G11, Zbook Power G11 , Thunderbolt 4 worked great
Some would even say this is preferrable, as the business line is built substantially better than any consumer model. Magnesium reinforcement for the hinges and lower body, better access to spare parts, ece.
I remember trying to find out if there was a better screen out there to mod my 830 but then these HPs dont have a large of a modding community as Thinkpads do
IDK which, I refuse to buy HP out of principal most of the time. Usually I have thinkpads or dell latitudes. This would require 2 CAMM2 modules for the 256 bit bus, which would work against the very size benefits of camm2. That and camm2 doesnt have LPDDR5x so far. Camm2 seems to go up to 7800mhz, which is good, but its not 8533.
Maybe there will be better luck with DDR6.