PC Pro

Asus ZenBook UX410UA

Once again, Asus shows other manufactur­ers how to build great quality laptops on a budget

- TIM DANTON

SCORE ✪✪✪✪✪

PRICE £471 (£565 inc VAT) from pcpro.link/280zenbook

Asus’ UX300 series laptops have been our A List choice for “everyday laptops” ever since we introduced the category, with their mix of premium looks and top-quality screens proving a winning mix. With the UX410 series, Asus ups the screen size to 14in but retains the rest of the formula – and with similarly top-quality results.

Let’s start with the premium looks. The brushed aluminium lid would be equally at home on a laptop twice the price, and it’s complement­ed by a sunken touchpad complete with a shiny metal “diamond-cut” edge. To some the UX410 may veer too far into a Trump-like world of bling, particular­ly if you choose the Rose Gold finish, but I’m a fan.

Considerin­g the 14in screen, it’s also surprising­ly light at 1.4kg. That’s not due to plastic, either, with the frame built from aluminium alloy, and it feels suitably well-built. By trimming the bezels to either side of the screen to 6mm, Asus keeps the width down to 323mm, but by modern standards it isn’t particular­ly slim: I measured 19mm from top to bottom with the lid closed.

A larger chassis provides more room for ports, though, and the UX410 is well connected. Along with a combo audio jack, there’s a full-sized HDMI connector plus USB 3.1 and USB-C ports on the left-hand side. An SD card slot and two further USB 2 ports sit on the right. Asus tucks the speakers under the front lip of the laptop, and they’re worthy of the Harman Kardon branding – loud, clear and detailed.

But where Asus truly excels is that screen. For instance, there’s no off-white discolouri­ng that gives away cheaper panels, and as became clear during a sunny train journey, it dynamicall­y adjusts brightness to the ambient conditions.

A resolution of 1,920 x 1,080 makes complete sense on a laptop such as this: there’s enough detail for spreadshee­ts and zooming into photos, but you aren’t paying for a higher resolution that you may not always want (especially when Windows decides to show system text at the smallest possible size).

Colours look punchy, and my first impression­s were backed up by testing back in the lab. Our x-rite i1 Display colorimete­r measured an average Delta E of 0.26 ( see How we test, p51), and the IPS panel proved capable of reproducin­g 94.6% of the sRGB gamut while hitting highs of 354cd/m2 brightness. I can attest that it’s fine in full sunlight too.

It’s tougher to get excited about the keyboard. With the exception of the diminutive cursors, the keys are large and easy to hit (including the power key, which, annoyingly, occupies the top-right position, right next to the Delete key; you can guess what I kept accidental­ly hitting). They don’t have much travel, but it’s a competent, backlit offering.

I’m fonder of the touchpad. This is larger than you might expect, which helps when it comes to Windows gestures. You can also press down anywhere on it, which is handy if you want to select a whole paragraph of text: you press down where you want to start your selection and then keep it pressed down as your finger moves down the pad.

You can’t charge via the USB-C slot, with Asus relying on a convention­al moulded power supply that will add an unsightly bulge to

“Asus tucks the speakers under the front lip of the laptop, and they’re worthy of the Harman Kardon branding – loud and clear”

your briefcase if you need to carry it with you. Fortunatel­y, you may not need to. It lasted 10hrs 35mins in our video-rundown tests, which is great for a Windows laptop with a 14in screen. This battery life result was for the low-end UX410 with a Core i3 processor; the £720 version, with a Core i5, is likely to last around half an hour less. That extra money increases the RAM from 4GB to 8GB and doubles the SSD size from 128GB to 256GB, and it’s this latter upgrade that’s arguably most worthwhile. Certainly, the UX410 was never slow during everyday duties. It whisked through Windows 10 Home without any judders, and as our benchmarks reflected it was only in memoryinte­nsive duties such as video editing and heavy multitaski­ng that it struggled. A score of 34 is in line with expectatio­ns for a Core i3-7100 with 4GB of RAM. It adds up to an excellent budget laptop. I’m not a fan of 128GB SSDs, and would be tempted to upgrade to the higher spec version for this reason alone, but if you control what you store on this laptop then it becomes manageable. It’s another excellent offering from Asus, which once again shows its rivals how to build an alluring mid-range laptop without making compromise­s in the wrong places.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

Dual-core 2.4GHz Intel Core i3-7100U processor ● Intel HD Graphics 620 ● 4GB RAM 14in IPS display, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution ● 128GB SATA 3 M.2 SSD ● HD webcam 802.11ac Wi-Fi Bluetooth 4.1 USB-C USB 3 2 x USB 2 HDMI SD card reader Windows 10 Home 48Wh battery ● 323 x 223 x 19mm (WDH) ● 1.4kg 1yr RTB warranty

 ??  ?? The UX410UA is available in Rose Gold, above, or Quartz Grey as shown below
The UX410UA is available in Rose Gold, above, or Quartz Grey as shown below
 ??  ?? Its styling won’t suit everyone, but the ZenBook has the aura of a laptop costing twice as much
Its styling won’t suit everyone, but the ZenBook has the aura of a laptop costing twice as much
 ??  ??

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