The HP Scuderia Ferrari AI PC is officially here as a limited-run masterpiece priced at an eye-watering **$5,699** (€140 euros), arriving June twelfth β€” the same day as this year's Monaco Grand Prix β€” in select countries including the US, UK, Italy, and Japan. After two years of collaboration between HP and Ferrari, they've finally answered their own 2004 laptop venture with something that actually belongs on a desk next to a car: vivid Rosso Magma finish inspired by Ferrari's Icona Daytona SP3 (complete with lenticular palm rest conveying motion blur), anodized aluminum body with CNC-machined precision, and yes β€” a proper supercar-style carbon fiber underside. But the real star is that transparent segment on top dubbed the "engine bay," which you can peer through to admire both processor and cooling system while simultaneously tracking down your own individual laser-etched number among just 4,999 units worldwide (Gorilla Glass panel with precisely two-thousand drilled holes adds gorgeous texture if you look closely).

Under the hood this isn't purely a design exercise either: Intel Core Ultra X7 processor paired with integrated Arc graphics running on sixty-four gigabytes of memory and one terabyte solid-state storage, all backed by HP's ZBook reliability DNA. The fourteen-inch 3K OLED screen supports full touch input while every single keyboard key carries its own RGB lighting in Ferrari-typeface for customizable illumination (pre-programmed cycles included if you're feeling especially flamboyant). Even the hinge draws from the F76 digital hypercar with concentric louvers actively channeling airflow, and when open that trackpad becomes nearly invisible β€” just a slender lit line below keys signaling its presence like "eyes on the road" would suggest. Connectivity covers two Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports plus regular 10-gigabit-USB-C, legacy-A slot, HDMI port, and headphone jack because they know serious enthusiasts don't want to choose between speed and convenience in this price bracket alone (though $570 euros feels almost like a deal if you compare with real supercars).

I'm genuinely blown by how Ferrari turned laptop design into something approaching automotive sculpture β€” the fact that your purchase arrives wrapped properly alongside both USB charging brick AND Poltrona-Frau leather sleeve (the EXACT same material used in actual Ferrari car interiors, making it almost as desirable) is peak luxury. HP has essentially created what amounts to a limited-edition automobile for desktop users and I can see why diehard Tifosi would drool over this; you don't just use the thing β€” you display it with purpose because every inch from carbon fiber bottom through Gorilla Glass engine bay screams "yes, mine is one of five thousand." **Source: https://www.engadget.com/2183324/hp-scuderia-ferrari-ai-pc-first-look-specs-price/**