This is a tech demo for a remarkable display panel
One of the neat things about seeing fancy features spread across high-end laptops is the hope that those features will, one day, appear in affordable laptops as well. This year has been the year of the cheap OLED screen in that respect â at least when you look at Asus. The company has been plonking truly incredible screens onto otherwise-unremarkable budget laptops for years, and the new Vivobook S 14X OLED is no exception.
This new, $1,099 Vivobook targets a more price-conscious audience than Asusâ high-end Zenbook line, with a more utilitarian chassis and a heavier build. The panel is what sets it apart from the sea of identical black notebooks that litter the midrange market. Asus is touting it as the âworldâs first 14.5-inch 120Hz 2.8K OLED panel,â which is one of those hilariously specific accolades that Asus loves to crown itself with. But the significant kernel of verisimilitude in there is that this is the closest to a MacBook Pro 14 viewing experience youâre likely to find at this price point.
Now, there is not too much else to say about this laptop. Compromises were certainly made throughout the rest of the chassis in order to hit this price, and the high resolution has its downsides in the battery life department. But the $1,099 tag (and thereâs an $899 model as well, with the same display) is this Vivobookâs saving grace. It has many of the same flaws that we see on other premium OLED machines with powerful processors (quintessentially, Dellâs XPS 13 Plus). But at this price, that package is a lot more reasonable â for a very specific user.
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This display has everything youâd want. Itâs a 16:10 OLED with 2880 x 1800 resolution and a 0.2ms response time. That, alone, makes for an excellent viewing experience with deep blacks and uniform brightness. Details were crisp, and colors popped (the panel covers 100 percent of the sRGB gamut, 98 percent of Adobe RGB, and 100 percent of P3).
Whatâs more, the 120Hz refresh rate makes for an exceptionally smooth scroll. Weâre starting to see more 90Hz OLED panels, but 120Hz is still highly unusual â in fact, I donât know of any 14-incher with a 120Hz OLED panel currently on the market that Asus doesnât make.
Peak brightness, in my testing, was a reasonable 379 nits (OLED panels tend to run a bit dimmer than LCDs). I saw very little glare on my windows, even working with brightness fairly low. Itâs a delightful screen to look at. Asus even claims that it emits less harmful blue light than other laptop screens do. The science behind the dangers of blue light is dodgy to begin with, but whatever, itâs there if you care about it.
This will save your eyes, Asus says.
Hereâs what this screen comes attached to. The Vivobook has a fairly standard black chassis. The branding on the lid isnât obnoxious (which⌠some Asus branding is) â just an unobtrusive nameplate with âAsus Vivobookâ on it and some other words that nobodyâs going to be able to see.
The build is sturdy (and unlike many Asus devices, this one doesnât have the âErgolift hingeâ that folds under the keyboard and digs into your lap). The lid and deck have a bit of flex and a plasticky feel (especially the bezels around the screen), but the overall package is solid.
Not an eyesore, this one.
Youâll notice that the webcam (which unfortunately doesnât support Windows Hello) also has a physical privacy shield. These things are often a tiny, invisible switch thatâs a pain to find and move, but this one is large and easily thumb-operable. And the keyboard has some nice decorations, including a bright red Esc key, a striped strip across Enter, and a little âReady to Exploreâ emblazoned across the bottom edge. Thereâs a fingerprint sensor in the power button, which works just fine.
One lonely port on the left side.
And then there are a bunch of compromises. You must care about all of these things less than the screen if you are buying this Vivobook (and I know some of you do â power to you). First, one of the USB Type-A ports (there are two, in addition to two USB-C, an HDMI, and a headphone jack) is only USB 2.0, while the other is USB 3.2 Gen 1. This isnât going to impact everyone, but itâs something for owners of certain modern accessories to be aware of.
This was taken before I got fingerprints all over it.
Second, the chassis is a fingerprint magnet. The touchpad is quite spacious (53 percent larger than that of its predecessor Vivobook, Asus says), but after just a few days of use, it was smudged up and down.
While the touchpad was the most extreme example, this was an issue all over the thing. After a week of use, there are fingerprints all over the Vivobookâs deck, including the keyboard and palm rests. The lid is, at this point, a mosaic of fingerprints and other smudges. Now, I am guilty of battering my review units around â they spend time in my backpack with a bunch of other electronics as I romp around New York every day, they spend a lot of time on different desks, lap desks, tables, and rugs, and they sometimes have things stacked on top of them. But I put a lot of laptops through these trials and tribulations, and most of them weather it just fine. This lid is already looking worse for wear.
Little splash of color on the keyboard.
Finally, itâs just clunky. Itâs 0.7 inches thick and 3.5 pounds. For context, the also-powerful and also-OLED Dell XPS 13 Plus is only 2.7 pounds. Thatâs not horrifically heavy for this size, but as a person of average strength, I found it a pain to carry around with one hand.
Inside this chassis is some pretty noteworthy power â which, like the screen, comes with battery-related drawbacks. This Vivobook has the Core i7-12700H, which is actually the same processor that powers a number of popular gaming laptops, including Acerâs Predator Triton 500 SE, Lenovoâs Legion 5i Pro, and Alienwareâs X14. This deviceâs CPU chops are no joke, but it also doesnât have a discrete GPU, meaning itâs much graphically weaker than other H-series workstations.
My $1,099 unit includes 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, while the $899 SKU has a Core i5-12500H and 8GB of RAM. Storage and memory are upgradable. To contextualize how good of a deal that is, the cheapest Dell XPS 13 Plus (which has a less powerful processor, less RAM, and a lower-resolution and lower refresh rate OLED screen) is $1,399. The cheapest 512GB M2 MacBook Air, also with less memory and a lower resolution display, would cost $1,399, as well.
This is probably my favorite webcam shutter either (yes, I have a favorite, what of it).
When it comes to performance, this laptop had no problem with day-to-day office tasks (and the screen made them look more pleasant as I did them, as a bonus). Itâs certainly faster than the U-series processors that power many 13-inch and 14-inch laptops, though Iâm not sure itâs a difference a casual Chrome user will notice.
I had trouble not running my hand over this thing constantly.
In benchmark testing, the Vivobook beats the Dell XPS 13 Plus (our XPS unit had the Core i7-1280P, which is a very similar chip to the i7-12700H) in all of the single-core and most of the multicore benchmarks we ran. It was way behind in the graphics benchmarks we ran, however, which could be a reflection of system memory speed or other factors.
Of note: Adobe Premiere Pro crawled on this machine. I felt like I was watching bars forever while projects loaded. The Encoding section of the PugetBench test for Premiere was so slow it was painful to watch. Our five-minute, 33-second 4K export took 29 minutes, whereas it took around seven on the XPS. (This may be on Adobe rather than Asus, but regardless of whose fault it is, the export was hella slow.) Any machine with integrated graphics is going to have some trouble with these tasks, but these would be unacceptable speeds for folks who do video work with any degree of regularity. The discrepancy in graphics results is counterintuitive since the two GPUs both have Iris Xe graphics â Notebookcheck found that it was due to the Vivobookâs asymmetrical RAM configuration, so do with that what you will.
Fans were quite loud during benchmarking. âDamn, that fan,â my coworker Becca Farsace remarked as she walked past my desk this afternoon. This was, of course, while I had the High Performance cooling profile selected â if you pick Whisper Mode, as I did when I wasnât benchmarking, the fans are quiet. The CPU was generally around 90 to 91 degrees during benchmarking, which is a bit hotter than you want it, but at least weâre not in a Dell nightmare cooling situation.
But neither the graphics nor the fan noise is as egregious of a problem as the Vivobookâs battery life. I did my battery runs at medium brightness with battery saver on and the Eye Care color profile selected. I turned the refresh rate down to 60Hz because I know some people donât care about refresh rate (youâre all monsters, by the way), but I wasnât willing to turn down the resolution â if youâre just going to use this laptop at 1080p all the time, itâs an objective waste of your money.
On my standard office workload, which utilizes around a dozen Chrome tabs with Slack, some Spotify streaming, and the occasional Zoom call, I averaged four and a half hours to a charge. You may get a longer lifespan than I do (although most people donât, in my experience), but I would be surprised if this thing lasts anyone a continuous work day.
At a $2,000 price point, any result close to this is unambiguously disqualifying. Itâs a bit less egregious at $1,100. (It also helps that the Vivobook is a fast charger, reaching 60 percent in just over 40 minutes with light Chrome use.) Still, it is not what I would call acceptable â especially since the benefits that workstations with discrete graphics offer in exchange for all-day battery arenât present here. Even the XPS 13 Plus, which has a higher-resolution screen, lasted a bit longer than this one.
This battery life narrows the Vivobookâs audience significantly. As someone who likes to hang out in different places throughout my day, I quickly grew annoyed with how often I had to get up and get the charger. Even if your battery results are more generous than mine, you should expect to have this plugged in a lot if you purchase it.
Mmmmm, screen.
The Vivobook S 14X OLED is notable for one thing: its screen. That such an exceptional screen is available at such a low price is a great thing to see. That itâs being paired with an H-series processor is all the more notable. But I very much question the target audience; how many people who need an H-series processor and are willing to sacrifice portability for its power are content with integrated graphics?
My best shot at labeling this group is: someone who really wants a cheap OLED for media consumption. I guess this might be a great option for a college film studies major. More money for an XPS can get you better speakers, battery life, build quality, and graphics â but if you are very budget-constrained and the screen is your top priority, then sure, get this.
For everyone else, Vivobook is a great proof of concept but less practical as a purchase. Devices that are exceptional in theory should also work in practice. They are not artwork; people use them every day. With battery life this bad, it is not a practical purchase. It is quite cool, though.