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The model of the laptop is not bad, it can be used, but only at home. There are serious issues with autonomy, I've watched numerous reviews everywhere claiming 6-7 hours, but in reality, opening Chrome with 4 tabs without video and typing a text drains the battery to a maximum of 4 hours in economy mode on a full charge. I understand the processor is power-hungry, but it seems to have a very short lifespan.
It makes a lot of noise, even if you set it to the minimum noise mode in the proprietary ASUS app, it still buzzes, and when it's not buzzing, it's unpleasant to use due to the temperature of the body.
So, if you need a relatively powerful laptop to occasionally carry around and connect to a display (yes, you'll need a monitor for it—even though the native one displays colors beautifully, you'll have to adjust a bunch of settings to prevent burn-in, which degrades the picture quality and makes it less pleasant to work on), this laptop would be a decent option.
But if you want a more autonomous device that is pleasant to work on away from an outlet, I wouldn't recommend it.
The choice was between the ZenBook OLED, and I thought it would have cooling problems due to its thickness, even with a slightly less productive processor. I think it's a better option for the same price compared to this laptop.
In the future (soon), when the screen burns out, I think I'll go back to Lenovo; somehow, they feel more reliable.
- Decent trackpad, large and convenient, in principle, you can do without a mouse - Comfortable keyboard Good sound, not amazing, but quite good compared to my previous ThinkBook. Screen (good color reproduction)
Fan noise Processor temperature Screen (due to fear of burn-in and settings to prevent it, it is in this section)
Andrii Puliak: use Asus Vivobook S 14X OLED S5402ZA less than month
It makes a lot of noise, even if you set it to the minimum noise mode in the proprietary ASUS app, it still buzzes, and when it's not buzzing, it's unpleasant to use due to the temperature of the body.
So, if you need a relatively powerful laptop to occasionally carry around and connect to a display (yes, you'll need a monitor for it—even though the native one displays colors beautifully, you'll have to adjust a bunch of settings to prevent burn-in, which degrades the picture quality and makes it less pleasant to work on), this laptop would be a decent option.
But if you want a more autonomous device that is pleasant to work on away from an outlet, I wouldn't recommend it.
The choice was between the ZenBook OLED, and I thought it would have cooling problems due to its thickness, even with a slightly less productive processor. I think it's a better option for the same price compared to this laptop.
In the future (soon), when the screen burns out, I think I'll go back to Lenovo; somehow, they feel more reliable.