Computer Active (UK)

Asus Zenbook Flip A desktop PC in a tablet

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PC model-naming is an occult art. All those letters and numbers stand for something, but what? With Asus’ Flip UX360CA, at least one element seemed clear: ‘360’ obviously referred to the 360-degree hinge that allowed this 13in convertibl­e’s keyboard to fold all the way back on itself. Now here’s another version… the, er, 560.

Not even Silicon Valley ingenuity can insert 200 extra degrees in a circle, so we’ll guess the ‘3’ indicated a 13.3in display, while this one is 15.6in. That’s a big screen by today’s standards, and the UX560UQ is really quite bulky. Nearly an inch thick, it weighs over 2.2kg, twice as much as a typical laptop, and with wide bezels the whole thing is broad enough to feel unwieldy. That’s not ideal for something designed to be picked up and used as a tablet.

But this is a tablet that comes with full-blown Windows 10 desktop PC capabiliti­es stuffed inside. You get an Intel i7 processor, 12GB of memory, a Geforce GTX 940MX graphics card, and not only a generous 512GB SSD but a huge 2TB hard drive too. All for well under a grand, with a Full HD touchscree­n screen built in.

Closer inspection isn’t quite so kind. That i7 is the underwhelm­ing i7-7500u, slightly faster than the mobile i5s of last year’s seventh generation, and definitely above average among laptops, but only just over half as capable as a top-end i5 desktop processor, according to our tests. The graphics card is worth having, and will play many 3D games smoothly as well as helping out with compatible creative programs, but not in the same league as something like a GTX 1050.

Our tests found that the screen covered just 71 per cent of the SRGB colour range, making it unsuited to photo or video editing, and a combinatio­n of low brightness levels and a reflective finish can make it hard to see, though it’s fine for most purposes. The backlit keyboard includes a number pad, but this leaves Return and Backspace in the middle of a sea of keys rather than easily found at the edge, and keystrokes seem to depress the top of the case as much as the keys themselves. The trackpad works, but could have been bigger.

None of these flaws are fatal, however, and the battery lasted six hours seven minutes in our video-playback test – not bad for this class of laptop.

A bulky unit that will take some lugging, but impressive specs

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