ZDNET’s key takeaways
- The 2024 Asus Zenbook 14 is available now for $799 and is a contender to be one of the best work laptops of the year.
- It’s affordable, sports the latest hardware, and has a long battery life; all packed into a form factor that weighs less than three pounds.
- As great as it is, this laptop has a tendency to run hot.
Among the plethora of work laptops, the 2024 Asus Zenbook 14<!–> stands out above the rest. It performs incredibly well, has a comfortable keyboard, long-lasting battery, and bright, smooth display. There isn’t a single category where this device doesn’t excel. This Zenbook model is one of the best laptops I’ve used this year alongside the Dell XPS 16, and is nothing short of fantastic – especially at this price point.
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Now that I’ve sufficiently sang its praises, let’s get into what makes the Zenbook 14 so good, starting with its battery. No matter which power mode the machine is set to, you can expect it to last the entire workday. I performed my usual test of running an endlessly playing YouTube live stream at 720p and 50 percent brightness.
On Best Performance, the battery ran for about 6.5 hours before dying. On Balanced, it surpassed that time by going over 10 hours. Then on Best Power Efficiency, the Zenbook 14 lasted a whopping 12 hours. Keep in mind these times were all achieved without the battery saver turned on. With that setting enabled, I expect run times to be even longer.
I was genuinely surprised by how long the device lasted, and haven’t been this impressed with a laptop’s battery performance since the Acer Chromebook Spin 714. It seems the model’s longevity is owed to the hardware.
Also: One of the longest-lasting OLED laptops I’ve tested is not from Samsung or Asus
Asus went with an energy-efficient chipset for this laptop, which greatly contributes to its impressive battery life. The processor on my review unit was an Intel Core Ultra 5 125H bundled with an integrated Intel graphics card and 8GB of RAM. Make no mistake: that is not a particularly high-end configuration. But it doesn’t need it. It performs this efficiently thanks to its secret weapon: a neural processing unit (or NPU).
NPUs are a recent addition to laptops, with 2024 seeing their large-scale integration. To oversimplify what they do, NPUs harness AI to boost the performance of CPUs and GPUs by taking some of the load off them. For example, while testing this laptop, I was able to have 50 tabs open across six windows, all without experiencing a drop in performance. Impressive performance indeed, considering the hardware.
Also: One of the most powerful laptops I’ve tested has MacBook written all over it (but isn’t one)
In addition, Asus equipped this laptop with a 14-inch, OLED display outputting a Full HD resolution (1,920 x 1,200 pixels) image at a refresh rate of 60Hz. Recent laptops have shifted towards supporting 120Hz refresh rates for velvety smooth video, and it would’ve been nice to have the Zenbook join the party, but 60 Hz is fine for most applications.
Instead, it makes up for the lower speeds by sporting a vibrant display. The screen covers the entire PCI-3 gamut, enabling bright, vivid colors and a FullHD resolution that results in highly-detailed images. Plus, the bezels around the display are very thin, resulting in a display with a 16:10 aspect ratio for wide-angle viewing.
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All in all, this laptop has a marvelous design. It weighs less than three pounds yet is quite durable since it has an exterior made primarily from aluminum. Even the screen is tough, as Asus used Corning Gorilla Glass in its construction. However, since it’s so thin, there aren’t a ton of ports on this laptop. All it has is one USB-A input, two USB-Cs, a headphone/earphone jack combo, and an HDMI port. At least the basics are covered.
Personally, I appreciate laptops with great keyboards, and the Zenbook 14 does not disappoint. It comes equipped with the company’s patented ErgoSense technology which, as the name suggests, makes the keyboard ergonomically friendly. Each of the keys has a travel distance of 1.4mm travel distance, letting you type on them without having to press the buttons all the way down. This alleviates some of the stress on your fingers. Also, ErgoSense replicates the key spacing on full-sized keyboards, ensuring accurate typing.