The headline feature on this laptop is the 3,480 x 2,400 16:10 OLED display, the first on a 16-inch laptop, ASUS claims. Overall, heat and noise are very well managed. Still, it could be a handy mode if you’re planning to leave the room while doing a render. Fan noise is still reasonable in performance mode unless you’re doing GPU/CPU intensive chores, but the full-speed setting can get very loud indeed. If you need more punch, you can switch to performance mode which boosts power to 95 watts, or up to 135 watts in “full-speed” mode. It does that through the use of dual 102-blade fans, six heat pipes and multiple ducts. 77-inch thickness and 5.28 pound heft, it’s relatively compact - especially considering that it offers “military-grade durability” (MIL-STD 810H), according to ASUS.ĪSUS has developed an “IceCool Pro” thermal solution that’s supposed to boost airflow by up to 16 percent, while keeping noise levels below 40 dbA in standard cooling mode. It has bezels that are reasonably small but not what I’d call thin, and isn’t the lightest or smallest 16-inch laptop out there. To that end, it has a basic black, square-edged body with the only noticeable design touch being the subtle ProArt logo on top. A key feature of all the Studiobook devices is the businesslike looks that are far away from ASUS’s gaming designs.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |