![]() ![]() ![]() It’s not the thinnest or lightest 14-inch laptop, but it remains quite portable. It’s just 0.67 inches thick and weighs a reasonable 3.06 pounds. The ZenBook 14 OLED’s display bezels aren’t the smallest around, but it still manages to be nicely sized. But it’s also much less expensive, and indeed, it’s a quality build for the price. The display is a little bendable if you exert enough force, which makes it slightly less rigid than, say, the Dell XPS 13 Plus. It’s also built fairly well, with an all-aluminum alloy chassis that resists flexing on the bottom and the keyboard deck. Asus has pretty much abandoned the once-iconic concentric circles on the lid, and the Zenbook 14 OLED has a solid black chassis that looks great. Its lines are sleek, its logos are subtle, and the only thing that truly sets the aesthetic apart is a rounded hinge that looks great from the side. The Zenbook 14 OLED follows that philosophy with just a few accents to stand out. There’s no reason to embellish a laptop with a bunch of unnecessary accents. There’s just not a lot of bling on modern machines, and to my eyes, that’s a good thing. Minimalist designs have come to dominate laptops over the last several years. HP Spectre x360 13.5: you can’t go wrongĪ better-than-budget design Mark Coppock/Digital Trends Intel’s 24-core laptop CPU might outclass desktop i9 processorsĪsus ZenBook S 13 Flip vs. The new Asus Zenbook S 13 is like a MacBook, only better ![]()
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