As part of my work with another outlet, ASUS has sent me eight laptops (and counting) for review consideration over the past few months. One in particular was pretty cool and I thought GeekDad readers might be interested in it: the ZenBook 4K. Or, technically, the UX510UX. I’m not sure I would make full use of a 4K laptop, but the display on this one sure is nice.
While I am constantly working with a wide range of Windows laptops, I’m a Mac guy when it comes to my personal computers. However, the ASUS ZenBook 4K was really a joy to use. Here’s why it made an impression. It’s an attractive laptop.
1. It has a pretty decent (backlit) keyboard and more uncommonly, the touchpad is excellent. So many Windows laptops have a touchpad that’s too small and frustratingly unresponsive. Or sporadically responsive. The ZenBook 4K’s touchpad is glass covered and worked just as well as anything Apple puts out. Which is to say, it consitently worked the way it is supposed to.
ASUS ZenBook 4K review
2. The “Zen” design of circular polished aluminum is attractive, feels solid and well finished and does a good job of not attracting fingerprints.
3. That display. It’s a 15.6-inch LED-backlit display with anti-glare treatment at 3840 x 2160 resolution. That’s 282 ppi, so everything is razor sharp. It also has an ultra-wide color gamut (74% AdobeRGB) and a 178-degree viewing angle. It’s also bright and that— combined with the anti-glare treatment —meant I could actually use it outdoors, during the day. Without squinting. Watching 4K video on the display was simply amazing. Going back to the relatively lousy 2012-era not even Full HD display on my MacBook Air was painful after this one. The only thing is text is virtually unreadable at native resolution, at least for my eyes (ASUS ships it set to 250 percent magnification by default, so I’m not the only one). You can get a lot of text onscreen if you want, and it’s razor sharp, but so, so tiny…
The rest of the specs on my loaner were decent for a mid-range Windows laptop. The latest Core i7 CPU, 16GB of RAM and an Nvidia 950M graphics card with 2GB of video RAM. Storage was a balance between speed and capacity with a 128GB PCIe SSD for zippy operation and 1TB HDD for mass storage. It also has 802.11ac (it better have to stream 4K video) and besides a full complement of ports, there’s USB-C as well. Battery life was in the eight hour range.
You could do some gaming on this laptop, although with the 950M you’re not going to be able to crank the effects. As much as I loved the 4K display, if it were me and I was going to be using it for working as much as for watching video, I’d save a few hundred bucks — and the hassle of constantly switching the screen to 250 percent magnification to actually be able read anything — and go for the Full HD version instead.
But if you want 4K in a laptop, the ASUS ZenBook 4K is worth checking out.
Hi Brad!
How is the Fan noise on this laptop? As a student i wam interested, and was wondering how the fan is when using 8 chrome tabs, spotify open youtube playing and 1 pdf file open?
Hi Georg!
I have this notebook and I can tell you that his fans are very noisy when you are surfing, texting…I suggest you to don’t buy it…I’ll return it today…
P.S. Sorry for grammar errors, this isn’t my first language…
How did you get 8hrs of battery time? I recently bought a brand new Asus ux510ux and when unplugged it says only 2.5 hrs remain why is this happening is it a faulty battery?? Do i need to get a new battery or is it the laptop? I bought it from best buy.
Thanks
twhen i see spesification in https://goo.gl/UhHrNE that use other processor ? what’s true ?
i don’t know thats real use
2.5 hours, that’s got to be faulty, should be getting minimum 6 hours use.