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Category: Zenbook A14

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  • Asus Zenbook A14 vs Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: a very narrow win for Microsoft

    The Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 has been one of the best laptops you can buy, along with the best example yet of the new wave of Windows on ARM laptops. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X lineup has been the driver of this movement, and the Surface Laptop 7 makes great use of the platform.

    But it’s not alone. The Asus Zenbook A14 combines the Snapdragon X with a lightweight chassis and a reasonably efficient OLED display for a great build and battery life. Can it compete with Microsoft’s best laptop?

    Specs and configurations

       Asus Zenbook A14 Microsoft Surface Laptop 7
    Dimensions 12.23 x 8.42 x 0.63 inches 11.85 x 8.66 x 0.69 inches
    Weight 2.4 pounds 2.96 pounds
    Processor Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-42-100 Snapdragon X Plus
    Snapdragon X Elite
    Graphics Qualcomm Adreno Adreno GPU
    RAM 16GB
    32GB
    16GB
    32GB
    64GB
    Display 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED, 60Hz 13.8-inch 3:2 (2304 x 1536) IPS, 120Hz
    Storage 512GB SSD
    1TB SSD
    256GB
    512GB
    1TB
    Touch Yes Yes
    Ports 2 x USB4
    1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
    1 x HDMI 2.1
    1 x 3.5mm headphone jack
    2 x USB4
    1 x USB-A 3.1
    1 x Surface Connect
    1 x 3.5mm audio jack
    Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetoth 5.3 Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4
    Webcam 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello support
    Operating system Windows 11 on ARM Windows 11 on ARM
    Battery 70 watt-hour 54 watt-hour
    Price $1,000+ $1,000+
    Rating 4 out of 5 stars 4.5 out of 5 stars

    The Zenbook A14 only has two available configurations. There’s the $1,000 base model with a Snapdragon X Plus chipset, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a 14.0-inch FHD+ OLED display. For an extra $200, you get 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD.

    For the same $1,000, you can get the Surface Laptop 7 base model wit ha Snapdragon X Plust, 16GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD, and a 13.8-inch 2304 x 1536 IPS display. You can upgrade to a 512GB SSD for an additional $200 and to 1TB for $400 more. The Snapdragon X Elite ups the base price to $1,400 with 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD, and then you can choose 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD for a grand total of $2,400.

    That makes the Surface Laptop 7 the more expensive laptop by a fair margin, at the highest configuration.

    Design

    The Surface Laptop 7th Edition on a white table.
    Surface Laptop 7 Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

    The Surface Laptop 7 is the culmination of several generations of refinement, resulting in a laptop that’s incredibly well-built — as are all Surface devices — and enjoys a rather iconic aesthetic. It’s all-aluminum and comes in several attractive colors, with just the right blend of tones to give the laptop a modern, elegant look. The small display bezels framing a taller 3:2 aspect ratio stands out, and handling the Surface Laptop 7 attests to Microsoft’s attention to detail in its premier hardware lineup. Everything just feels great, including the hinge that allows opening the lid with one hand and keeps it firmly in place.

    But, Microsoft isn’t the only company that makes quality Windows machines. Asus Zenbooks have long rivaled Surface in terms of build quality, with all-metal designs that feel as robust. The Zenbook A14 uses a new material that Asus developed, called Ceraluminum, which puts aluminum through a process that creates a unique, ceramic-like feel that’s also incredibly strong. That makes it incredibly light at 2.4 pounds versus the Surface Laptop 7’s 2.96 pounds. And, it does so without sacrificing a solid feel, with a warm touch that feels weird at first glance but grows on you the more you use it. My one complaint is with the Zenbook A14’s hinge, which is too loose and allows the lid to flop around a bit. Aesthetically, the Zenbook A14 is more minimalist and doesn’t feature the wide range of color ways.

    The Surface Laptop 7 is just a little better in terms of its build and aesthetics. But you can’t go wrong with the Zenbook A14, either.

    In terms of their keyboards, it’s another close battle. The Zenbook A14 has a spacious layout with large keycaps, and its switches are light and snappy. The Surface Laptop 7 has an equally comfortable layout, and its switches are firmer and deeper. I’d give Microsoft’s keyboard the nod here, given the Asus switches’ bottoming action that I didn’t quite find as precise. Both are very good, but again, the Surface Laptop 7 comes out on top.

    The Zenbook A14 has a slightly larger touchpad than the Surface Laptop 7, but it’s a mechanical version. I tend to prefer haptic touchpads, and the Surface Laptop 7 has a very good example with all of the customization options that the technology affords. This is a bigger advantage for the Surface Laptop 7 than we’ve seen so far.

    I’d give the Zenbook A14 the nod in terms of connectivity, primarily given its inclusion of an HDMI 2.1 port. But, the Surface Laptop 7 has a Surface Connect power connection that keeps both fast USB4 ports available for use. That’s a plus. The Surface Laptop 7 also has the latest wireless connectivity, while the Zenbook A14 is one generation behind.

    Finally, both laptops have 1080p webcams that offer up excellent video quality. And, both have the same 45 tera operations per second (TOPS) Neural Processing Unit that powers Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC AI features. You’ll get full support for everything Microsoft has to offer in terms of efficient on-device AI processing, although Asus does add in some additional AI-enabled features.

    Performance

    The ports on the side of the Surface Laptop 7th Edition.

    Both laptops are built around Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X chipset, but the Surface Laptop 7 offers the Snapdragon X Elite with 12 cores and the fastest available speeds. The Zenbook A14 uses the 8-core Snapdragon X Plus with just eight cores and running at a slower speed. The Adreno integrated graphics on the Snapdragon X Elite is also faster than the Plus model.

    Overall, that makes the Surface Laptop 7 a faster laptop overall. I’m providing results from the larger 15-inch model, but performance will be similar on the smaller Surface Laptop 7. It will be faster for the most demanding productivity users, although gamers won’t find a huge difference in performance and neither will creators.

    Geekbench 6
    (single/multi)
    Cinebench R24
    (single/multi/battery)
    3DMark
    Wild Life Extreme 
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus / Adreno)
    2,436 / 11,242 108 / 690 3,262
    Microsoft Surface Laptop 7
    (Snapdragon X Elite / Adreno)
    2,388 / 13,215 105 / 826 5,880

    Display and audio

    Asus Zenbook A14 front view showing display.

    The Zenbook A14 has 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED display that has the technology’s usual bright, dynamic colors and inky blacks. Asus compromised with a lower resolution to save on battery life, so if you want a really sharp display, it won’t stand up to the Surface Laptop 7. That laptop has a 13.8-inch 3:2 IPS display running at 2304 x 1536. So, it’s sharper, and it’s also a very good IPS panel with its own very good colors. Both laptops look great for most uses, and the Surface Laptop 7’s display benefits from a faster 120Hz refresh rate that makes the Windows user interface run more smoothly.

    According to our colorimeter, the Zenbook A14 has wider and more accurate colors that will be better for creative work, and it has near-perfect blacks and very high contrast. The Surface Laptop 7 has a brighter display with slightly narrower and less accurate colors. Its contrast is very good for an IPS display, but can’t match the Zenbook A14.

    If you prefer OLED and don’t mind seeing more pixels, then you’ll love the Zenbook A14’s display. The Surface Laptop 7’s display is also very good, and it’s sharper and faster. Some might consider this to be a draw.

    Asus Zenbook A14
    (OLED)
    Microsoft Surface Laptop 7
    (IPS)
    Brightness
    (nits)
    411 561
    AdobeRGB gamut 97% 85%
     sRGB gamut 100% 100%
    DCI-P3 gamut 100% 95%
    Accuracy
    (DeltaE, lower is better)
    0.88 1.27

    The Zenbook A14 has dual downward-firing speaker that are just okay, compared to the Surface Laptop 7’s audio system that projects sound up from speaker behind the keyboard. It has louder and clearer audio and more bass, and so you’ll be less likely to reach for a pair of headphones.

    Portability

    Asus Zenbook A14 left side view showing ports.

    Both laptops are very portable, with the Surface Laptop 7 being slightly narrower and shallower but the Zenbook A14 being thinner and lighter. You’ll likely appreciate the Zenbook A14’s lighter weight more than anything.

    Even though it’s lighter, the Asus packs in a larger 70 watt-hour battery that helps offset the more power-hungry OLED display. The Surface Laptop 7’s smaller 54 watt-hour battery benefits from the more power-efficient IPS panel.

    I list the battery test results for the larger 15-inch Surface Laptop 7, which might be an hour or so less with the smaller machine. So, it’s likely that it’s going to last around the same time as the Zenbook A14, making them both some of the longest-lasting Windows laptops ever. We’re talking multi-day battery life when doing lighter productivity tasks.

    Web Video
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus)
    15 hours, 4 minutes 21 hours, 55 minutes
    Apple MacBook Air 13
    (M4 10/8)
    14 hours, 21 minutes 22 hours, 39 minutes

    It’s very close, but the Surface Laptop 7 comes out ahead

    These are two very good laptops. They’re well-built, have great performance and even greater battery life, and they’re attractive enough. In many ways, they’re very closely matched.

    But, the Surface Laptop 7 just has some finer points, like a better haptic touchpad, an overall more comfortable design, and faster performance that gives it the edge. Note, though, that you’ll pay a price. If you want the least expensive laptop, then the Zenbook A14 is well worth your consideration.

  • Asus Zenbook A14 vs Apple MacBook Air 13 (M4): close, but no cigar

    I recently gave the Apple MacBook Air 13 (M4) a rare perfect 5-star rating and called it the best 13-inch laptop you can buy today. And I stand by that review, because the MacBook Air 13 really is as close to perfect as you’ll find in a small laptop.

    But the Asus Zenbook A14 also impressed me, with its really light weight that avoids feeling flimsy, and its combination of a beautiful OLED display and excellent battery life. Is it good enough to dethrone the MacBook Air 13?

    Specs and configurations

       Asus Zenbook A14 Apple MacBook Air 13 (M4)
    Dimensions 12.23 x 8.42 x 0.63 inches 11.97 x 8.46 x 0.44 inches
    Weight 2.4 pounds 2.7 pounds
    Processor Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-42-100 Apple M4 (10 core)
    Graphics Qualcomm Adreno 8 core GPU
    10 core GPU
    RAM 16GB
    32GB
    16GB unified memory
    24GB unified memory
    32GB unified memory
    Display 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED, 60Hz 13.6-inch 2560 x 1664 Retina IPS display at 60Hz
    Storage 512GB SSD
    1TB SSD
    256GB SSD
    512GB SSD
    1TB SSD
    2TB SSD
    Touch Yes No
    Ports 2 x USB4
    1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
    1 x HDMI 2.1
    1 x 3.5mm headphone jack
    2 x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4
    1 x MagSafe 3 for charging
    1 x 3.5mm audio jack
    Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetoth 5.3 Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2
    Webcam 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello 12MP Center Stage camera with Desk View
    Operating system Windows 11 on ARM macOS Sequoia
    Battery 70 watt-hour 53.8 watt-hour
    Price $1,000+ $999+
    Rating 4 out of 5 stars 5 out of 5 stars

    The Zenbook A14 only has two configurations. The base model costs $1,000 with a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus chipset, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a 14.0-inch FHD+ OLED display. You can upgrade to 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD for $1,200.

    The MacBook Air 13 is a more configurable laptop. The $1,000 base configuration has a 10-core CPU/8-core GPU M4 chipset, 16GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD, and a 13.6-inch Retina IPS display (the only option). Upgrading to a faster 10-core CPU/10-core GPU M4 adds $100, while upgrading to 24GB RAM is $200 and to 32GB RAM is $400. Storage can be upgraded to 512GB for $200, and the largest 2TB SSD adds $800. That makes the most expensive MacBook Air 13 cost $2,199.

    The Zenbook A14 is better configured at the low end and costs significantly less at the high end. You do get more storage with the most expensive MacBook Air 13, but you’ll pay more for it, as well.

    Design

    Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 front angled view showing display and keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    I’ve lauded the MacBook Air 13 for its near-perfect design. It’s the thinnest laptop you can buy today, and yet it manages to feel incredibly solid in hand with a kind of density that excudes quality. And it looks great, with a simplistic yet elegant aesthetic that benefits from several attractive colors. The hinge is remarkably smooth and holds the lid in place, and carrying it around proves Apple’s meticulous attention to design given its amazing balance. Obviously, I like that laptop a lot.

    But it’s not alone. The more I handled the Zenbook A14, the more I liked it. The Ceraluminum material felt strange to me at first, with its odd yet comfortable texture. And the laptop’s extremely light weight was a little surprising, but I pretty quickly realized that it’s a well-built laptop and not at all flimsy, unlike some other very light laptops I’ve carried around. It doesn’t have quite the same overall feel as the MacBook Air 13, and it’s not quite as cohesive in its aesthetic. Even so, it still felt great in hand and it quickly grew on me. I like it a lot, as well. I did have one complaint, and that’s that the hinge was way too loose and it didn’t hold the display firmly in place.

    In comparing these laptop designs, I’m reminded that it’s the littlest things that can make a big difference. And while I still prefer the MacBook Air 13, I can imagine many people disagreeing. Both laptops have their charms.

    Speaking of little things, the Zenbook A14 has one of the better keyboards I’ve used on a Windows laptop. The layout is spacious and the keycaps are large enough. But the switches, while reasonably light and snappy, had a bottoming action that just didn’t feel quite right. Apple’s Magic Keyboard, on the other hand, is just perfect in its layout and consistency, and the switches let me type at full speed, without errors, for a long time without getting fatigued.

    Switching to the touchpad, Apple’s Force Touch haptic version with its Force Click feature is large and perfect. It’s the best touchpad on a laptop today, no matter the size. The Zenbook A14’s mechanical touchpad was okay, but it really couldn’t compare. The difference is a little larger this time around.

    In terms of connectivity, the Zenbook A14 has legacy ports that the MacBook Air 13 lacks. Also, it has two fast USB-C port, one of which is used for charging. The MacBook Air 13’s  dedicated MagSafe 3 charging connection leaves both its Thunderbolt 4 ports available, but overall, the Zenbook A14’s connectivity is better. Both have wireless connectivity that’s one generation behind. For logging in without a password, the Zenbook A14 uses Windows 11 facial recognition while the MacBook Air 13 has Apple’s Touch ID built into the power button. Both methods worked well.

    Finally, the MacBook Air 13 has a higher-resolution 12MP webcam with support for Apple’s Center Stage and Desk View videoconferencing features. Its image quality was better overall than the Zenbook 14’s 1080p webcam. But, the Zenbook 14 has a faster Neural Processing Unit (NPU) than the M4 chipset’s Neural Engine, and right now, Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC AI initiative has more AI-powered features than Apple Intelligence. If you’re into AI, then the Zenbook A14 will provide a more complete experience.

    Performance

    Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 side view showing ports and lid.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Zenbook A14 uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Plus chipset, which is an 8-core ARM architecture aimed at balancing efficiency and performance. Its Adreno integrated graphics aren’t the fastest, and the Zenbook A14’s version doesn’t impress in terms of its graphics performance. It’s pitted against Apple’s latest M4 ARM-based architecture with 10 CPU cores and eight graphics cores (a 10-core GPU is available).

    In our benchmarks, the MacBook Air 13 was significantly faster. That’s in both single-core performance, which will show up most in common productivity tasks and image editing, but also in multi-core tasks like video editing. And, its graphics cores were a lot faster, making it a more viable lightweight gaming machine (although not in the same class as Windows laptops with discrete graphics or the faster M4 Pro or Max chipsets).

    Overall, the MacBook Air 13 is snappier and more responsive. I noticed the difference in my day-to-day usage. But the Zenbook A14 would likely be fast enough for a lot of users. I should add that the MacBook Air 13 has no fans but still stays cool, making it a more silent option than the Zenbook A14.

    Geekbench 6
    (single/multi)
    Cinebench R24
    (single/multi/battery)
    3DMark
    Wild Life Extreme 
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus / Adreno)
    2,436 / 11,242 108 / 690 3,262
    MacBook Air 13
    (M4 10/8)
    3,751 / 14,801 172 / 854 7,827

    Display and audio

    Asus Zenbook A14 front view showing display.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Zenbook A14 is notable for the very intelligent choice of compromising with a lower display resolution in an OLED display that has that technology’s bright, dynamic colors and inky blacks. While its 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED display isn’t the sharpest around, that might matter less to many users than just how awesome it looks when displaying photos and streaming high dynamic range (HDR) video. The MacBook Air 13’s 13.6-inch 16:10 2560 x 1664 IPS display is a lot sharper, and it’s also a good example of that technology, it can’t quite match the Zenbook A14 display’s vibrancy.

    You can see that in our objective colorimeter results, both taken with a Datacolor SpyderX Elite. The MacBook Air 13’s display is brighter, but the Zenbook A14’s has wider and more accurate colors. With near-perfect blacks, the Zenbook A14 also had much higher contrast.

    These are both very good displays. But, the Zenbook A14’s display is just better for more users.

    Asus Zenbook A14
    (OLED)
    MacBook Air 13
    (IPS)
    Brightness
    (nits)
    411 468
    AdobeRGB gamut 97% 83%
     sRGB gamut 100% 100%
    DCI-P3 gamut 100% 94%
    Accuracy
    (DeltaE, lower is better)
    0.88 1.34

    Portability

    Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 left side view showing ports.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Zenbook A14 is incredibly light, while the MacBook Air 13 is incredibly thin. Overall, in part because of its slightly smaller display, the MacBook Air 13 just feels like the more portable laptop. In fact, though, both are easy to carry around.

    One of the MacBook Air 13’s primary strengths with the advent of Apple Silicon has been its incredible efficiency. It’s been the class leader for a while, with few peers. However, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X chipset has given Apple Silicon a run for its money.

    The Zenbook A14 was surprisingly competitive, especially considering its OLED display. The MacBook Air 13 lasted a lot longer when you push it really hard, as in our Cinebench R24 battery test, but otherwise the Zenbook A14 did quite well. Both laptops will last you more than a full day’s work, and that’s impressive.

    Web Video Cinebench R24
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus)
    15 hours, 4 minutes 21 hours, 55 minutes 1 hour, 32 minutes
    Apple MacBook Air 13
    (M4 10/8)
    16 hours, 30 minutes 20 hours, 31 minutes 3 hours, 47 minutes

    The Zenbook A14 gets an A for effort, but not quite an A+

    The Zenbook A14 is a great lightweight laptop, with solid productivity performance, great battery life, and a bright, colorful OLED display with inky blacks. It’s a solid representative of a new wave of much better Windows laptops.

    Even so, the MacBook Air 13 has just enough to keep it at the top. It’s a lot faster, for one thing, and it runs perfectly silently. It’s more balanced and has a more elegant feel. And it lasts longer when you’re working it harder. It remains the best laptop in this class that you can buy today.

  • Asus Zenbook A14 review: really light and really long-lasting

    Asus Zenbook A14

    MSRP $1,000.00

    4/5

    ★★★★☆

    Score Details

    “The Asus Zenbook 14 is remarkably light and incredibly long-lasting.”

    ✅ Pros

    • Thin and extremely light
    • Comfortable Ceraluminum material
    • Solid productivity performance
    • Excellent battery life
    • Great OLED display
    • Attractive price

    ❌ Cons

    • Lid is too loose
    • Only one configuration available

    Buy at Best Buy

    Sometimes, a company makes a laptop with a singular design goal in mind, such as making it as light as possible. The result can be a laptop that compromises in too many areas, such as a too-small battery or a construction that feels a little flimsy. Asus has introduced the Zenbook A14 that’s one of the lightest 14-inch laptops ever, and I was a little worried that it might suffer the same fate as some other really light machines.

    Fortunately, it does not. It’s solidly built (with just one complaint) and it has a large battery that affords exceptional battery life, even with an excellent OLED display. The trick: Asus used a new material to achieve that light weight, along with the highly efficient Qualcomm Snapdragon X chipset and a lower display resolution. The result is a laptop that looks and feels great, runs fast, and lasts a long time.

    Specs and configuration

     Asus Zenbook A14
    Dimensions 12.23 x 8.42 x 0.63 inches
    Weight 2.4 pounds
    Display 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED, 60Hz
    CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P-42-100
    GPU Qualcomm Adreno
    Memory 16GB
    32GB
    Storage 512GB SSD
    1TB SSD
    Ports 1 x USB4
    1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
    1 x HDMI 2.1
    1 x 3.5mm headphone jack
    Camera 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello
    Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetoth 5.3
    Battery 70 watt-hour
    Operating system Windows 11 on ARM
    Price $1,000+

    Although there are several configuration options listed in the Asus materials, there’s only one configuration I could find that available to buy today. It costs $1,000, and it includes a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus chipset, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a 14.0-inch FHD+ OLED display.

    That’s a good price for a well-configured laptop that has twice the storage of the Apple MacBook Air 13 (M4). It qualifies as a midrange price, while the laptop feels like it’s quite premium. So, it’s not a bargain, exactly, but you won’t feel like you spent too much money.

    Design

    Asus Zenbook A14 front angled view showing display and keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Zenbook A14’s primary claim to fame is its incredibly light weight, coming in at just 2.4 pounds. That’s not the lightest laptop we’ve seen, but it’s light enough for a 14-inch laptop that you’ll barely notice it in your backpack — and yet, to my surprise, it avoids feeling flimsy as lightweight laptops sometimes do. That’s thanks to a new “Ceraluminum” compound in the lid, keyboard frame, and base. Ceraluminum is the result of dipping aluminum in a bath and applying high voltage, a process that transforms the surface metal into what Asus describes as a “hard, ceramic-like layer.”

    And it certainly feels different. In fact, it felt weird to me when I first pulled it out of the box, but as I handled the Zenbook A14 a little more, I found myself liking it. And another plus is that the Ceralumium promises to keep the surface free of scratches and blemishes. For example, I couldn’t get it to hold onto a fingerprint no matter how hard I tried.

    The keyboard deck and chassis bottom are solid, and the very thin lid has just the slightest give under pressure. That’s pretty good, considering that some other premium laptops show the same and they’re not nearly as light. That Ceraluminum texture has a warm feel, too, and while the edges are a little sharp they didn’t cut into my wrists. The Apple MacBook Air 13 is a little more solid all around, but it’s also heavier at 2.7 pounds in spite of being a bit smaller and much thinner (o.45 inches versus 0.63 inches) with a 13.6-inch display. And maybe what’s most impressive about the Zenbook A14’s light weight is that there’s still a large 70 watt-hour battery inside, which as we’ll see pays some real dividends in longevity.

    Asus Zenbook A14 rear view showing lid and logo.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    I do have one complaint about the ZenBook A14’s construction: the hinge is too loose. The lid can be opened with one hand, which is great, but it also wobbles more than I like and falls backward when the laptop is lifted by the base. And, the hinge won’t support the lid when it’s any less than about halfway open, meaning it falls closed with a resounding snap. Asus did a ton of testing to verify that the laptop is robust, but even so it was a bit disconcerting. I wish the hinge was a bit firmer, and I wonder if maybe Asus needs to work on the design a bit. The reviewer’s guide has a paragraph on the “EasyLife” design, and I can’t say that my review unit’s hinge matches up very well.

    Aesthetically, the Zenbook A14 stands apart from some other Zenbooks I’ve reviewed. It has none of the geometric patterns you’ll find on many Asus laptops, and the Iceland Gray and Zabriskie Beige (?) color ways look nice but are wholly minimalist. There’s a roundness to the design that I like, and its thin display bezels contribute to a modern look. I still slightly prefer some other laptops in this regard, like the MacBook Air 13 and the HP OmniBook Ultra 14, but I have no complaints about the Asus.

    Keyboard and touchpad

    Asus Zenbook A14 top down view showing keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The keyboard is spacious enough, with a comfortable layout and large keycaps. The switches are light with a snappy bottoming action, but it lacked a bit of the crispness that I like. I got up to speed quickly enough and writing this review wasn’t fatiguing, but I’d rate the keyboard just a step behind Apple’s Magic Keyboard and the excellent version HP is using on its OmniBook and EliteBook lineups.

    The touchpad is reasonably large, and it’s a mechanical version with buttons that are quiet and snappy. As far as mechanical touchpads go, it’s fine, but more and more laptops are including haptic touchpads that I like a lot better. Apple’s Force Touch touchpad with its Force Click feature remains the best touchpad on a laptop today.

    Connectivity and webcam

    Asus Zenbook A14 left side view showing ports.
    Asus Zenbook A14 right side view showing ports.

    Connectivity is good, with two fast USB4 ports, a USB-A port for legacy devices, and an HDMI 2.1 port. The biggest problem is that like most laptops today, the Zenbook A14 charges via USB-C and so you only have one of those ports available when plugged in. That’s not unusual, though, so it’s not really a ding against the Asus. I do prefer Apple’s MagSafe 3 connection on its MacBooks, which keeps all the ports available for use. Wireless connectivity is also one generation behind, which surprises me a little given the Qualcomm chipset.

    Asus Zenbook A14 front view showing webcam.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The webcam is a 1080p version, which has become the new minimum standard. More and more laptops are being released with higher resolution webcams, but this one is good enough for a quality image. The Snapdragon X chipset has a fast Neural Processing Unit (NPU) running at 45 tera operations per second (TOPS), which exceeds the 40 TOPS required for Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC AI initiative. That means the Zenbook A14 can run the various Copilot+ AI features on-device with better efficiency. Asus also adds several of its own utilities that can utilize the NPU, such as its noise cancellation function and its StoryCube app for managing and enhancing photos and videos.

    Performance

    Asus Zenbook A14 side view showing lid and ports.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Zenbook A14 is the first Windows on ARM laptop I’ve reviewed in the last couple of months, and I see that the platform is doing fine. There are some incompatibilities that might trip up some users, but I haven’t run across any that would matter in my workflow. I think that for most users, Windows on ARM will be fully functional. And that’s a good thing, because the Qualcomm Snapdragon X lineup is fast enough for the most demanding productivity users, and that’s this laptop’s target market. And Qualcomm also focused on efficiency, a trademark of the ARM architecture that also shows up in Apple Silicon.

    My review unit used the Snapdragon X Plus X1P-42-100 chipset, an 8-core chipset running at a max multi-core frequency of 3.2GHz that boosts to 3.4GHz single-core. That makes it the second-slowest Snapdragon X chipset and well behind the faster Snapdragon X Elite chipset with 12 cores and faster speeds. Its Adreno integrated graphics run at 1.7 TFLOPs, which is also the slowest in the lineup. It’s up against Intel’s Lunar Lake chipset that’s also aimed more at efficiency. Note that all of the results listed are in each laptop’s “performance” mode.

    As we can see in our benchmarks, the Zenbook A14 was faster than Lunar Lake but not as fast as the Snapdragon X Elite. That’s to be expected. It fell even more significantly behind in the 3DMark Wild Life Extreme benchmark, where Lunar Lake’s Intel Arc 140V graphics did better.

    The conclusion is that the Zenbook A14 is a very fast laptop for demanding productivity workflows, but it won’t impress in gaming or creative tasks that depend on a fast GPU.

    Cinebench R24
    (single/multi)
    Geekbench 6
    (single/multi)
    3DMark
    Wild Life Extreme
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus / Adreno)
    108 / 690 2436 / 11242 3262
    Acer Swift Go 14 AI
    (Snapdragon X Plus / Adreno)
    107 / 716 2413 / 11388 3231
    HP OmniBook X
    (Snapdragon X Elite / Adreno)
    101 / 749 2377 / 13490 6165
    HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    116 / 598 2483 / 10725 7573
    Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    109 / 630 2485 / 10569 5217
    Asus Zenbook S 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    112 / 452 2738 / 10734 7514
    MacBook Air 13
    (M4 10/8)
    172 / 854 3751 / 14801 7827

    Battery life

    Asus Zenbook A14 rear view showing ports and edge.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    As I mentioned earlier, the Zenbook A14 manages to be very light while packing in a large 70 watt-hour battery. That’s plenty for a 14-inch laptop, and when you consider the highly efficient Qualcomm chipset, it bodes well for longevity. Even better, Asus made just the right compromise with the display, offering a great OLED panel but keeping the resolution down a bit.

    The result is some of the best battery life I’ve seen from a Windows laptop. The best machines in our comparison group use IPS displays, such as the Qualcomm-based Acer Swift Go 14, meaning that the Zenbook A14 does a great job of offering up a quality visual experience that nevertheless lasts for a long time. This is potentially multi-day battery life, depending on your workflow — something that, until recently, only the MacBook Air 13 with Apple’s incredibly efficient Apple Silicon processors could boast.

    Web browsing Video Cinebench R24
    Asus Zenbook A14
    (Snapdragon X Plus)
    15 hours, 4 minutes 21 hours, 55 minutes 1 hour, 32 minutes
    Acer Swift Go 14
    (Snapdragon X Plus)
    15 hours, 29 minutes 21 hours, 38 minutes 1 hour, 42 minutes
    HP EliteBook X G1a
    (Ryzen AI 9 HX 375)
    N/A 7 hours, 27 minutes 1 hour, 27 minutes
    Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360
    (Core Ultra 5 226V)
    12 hours, 50 minutes 19 hours, 30 minutes 2 hours, 18 minutes
    HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    11 hours, 5 minutes 15 hours, 46 minutes 2 hours, 14 minutes
    Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    14 hours, 16 minutes 17 hours, 31 minutes 2 hours, 15 minutes
    Asus Zenbook S 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    16 hours, 47 minutes 18 hours, 35 minutes 3 hours, 33 minutes
    Microsoft Surface Laptop
    (Snapdragon X Elite X1E-80-100)
    14 hours, 21 minutes 22 hours, 39 minutes N/A
    HP Omnibook X
    (Snapdragon X Elite X1E-78-100)
    13 hours, 37 minutes 22 hours, 4 minutes 1 hour, 52 minutes
    Apple MacBook Air
    (Apple M4 10/8)
    16 hours, 30 minutes 20 hours, 31 minutes 3 hours, 47 minutes

    Display and audio

    Asus Zenbook A14 front view showing display.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    As I just said, Asus chose a display that compromises between quality and sharpness. It’s a 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) OLED panel, meaning it’s not as sharp given the screen size as the more common 2.8K variety, but unless you pay a lot of attention you might not notice. I’m a writer who loves sharp black text on a white background, and OLED provides the contrast while 2.8K provides the sharpness. But I suspect that most people won’t notice the lower resolution nearly as much as they notice the inky blacks and dynamic colors.

    According to my colorimeter, the display enjoys the usual spectacular OLED quality. It’s bright at 411 nits, well above the 300-nit standard we’ve had for years. Blacks are perfect, and so contrast is extremely high. Colors are wide at 100% sRGB, 97% AdobeRGB, and 100% DCI-P3, and they’re incredibly accurate at a DeltaE of 0.88 (1.0 or less is considered excellent for any use).

    If you don’t demand the sharpest text, you’ll love this display. It’s great for every use including productivity and creative work (although the performance doesn’t quite keep up here), and media consumption including high dynamic range (HDR) content looks great.

    The audio isn’t quite as impressive. The dual downward-firing speakers are loud, but there’s some distortion when turned all the way up. And the lack of bass is palpable, with the clear mids and highs coming across as a little tinny. You’ll want to use a pair of headphones for more than just the occasional YouTube video, and the MacBook Air 13’s quad speaker setup is a lot better.

    A really light laptops that still lasts a long time

    The Zenbook A14 kind of grew on me the more I used it. At first, it just felt kind of weird, with a surface that wasn’t quick like plastic but wasn’t quite like metal, either. But the more I handled it, the more I liked it. All the work Asus put into its Ceraluminum material wasn’t wasted. I wish the hinge was tighter, but that wasn’t at all a dealbreaker for me.

    And I love that even though it’s very light, it still got class-leading battery life with solid productivity performer. It’s right up there with the MacBook Air 13 (M4) which is saying something. If you’re looking for a 14-inch laptop that you don’t need for gaming or video editing, then you really need to give the Zenbook A14 some serious consideration.