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VPNs for ad-blocking The big picture here is that practicality trumps presentation. The ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED is more interested in giving you the best tools for the job than it is giving you the best-looking ones.  I’ve been reviewing laptops for a fair few years now, and I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a laptop with this many bells and whistles attached to the display. Most of these concern the display. Rather than opt for quality or quantity, ASUS have tried to stack both decks in their favor. The 16-inch 4K screen on the Vivobook Pro 16X is gargantuan compared to most other mainstream laptops. What’s more, this display comes with a laundry of other specs that compound the baseline appeal of the high resolution OLED panel involved. Like many such laptops, the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X is a machine that’s as defined by the screen on the outside as it is by the specs on the inside. The Vivobook Pro 16X OLED boasts a response time of 0.2ms, peak brightness of  550 nits, support for 100% DCI-P3 and Pantone-validated color, VESA Certified Display HDR support, touch sensitivity and a dedicated mode that reduces blue light, which primes it to reduce the eye strain associated with longer usage without compromising on fidelity. Still, the most tangible design choice for many is going to be the 16:10 aspect ratio. Combined with the larger physical footprint, it gives the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED a more squared design that sets it apart from the slimmer rectangles found elsewhere. This profile can take some getting used to. However, in practice, the realities of working on a laptop screen this big quickly set in. At times, the Vivobook Pro 16X feels less like a laptop with a bigger screen and more like a high-end desktop monitor with a more portable form-factor. Unsurprisingly, this blurring of traditional laptop qualities extends into the means by which you use the Vivobook Pro 16X on a daily basis. The keyboard is a little on the chunky side, but 1.5mm of keypress gives everyday usage a satisfying and desktop-like depth. The wider, high-precision trackpad yields similar experiences. While ASUS haven’t gone the full ScreenPad route here (as seen with the latest Zenbook range), they have kitted the Vivobook Pro 16X out with a unique DialPad. This is essentially a virtual control dial that can be summoned onto the trackpad when needed. It’s a neat idea, but in practice, its uses are both too broad and frustratingly narrow. While the ASUS Creator Hub app does let you tinker with and customise the DialPad for use with any application, scant few actually support any sort of functionality that you can’t already do with hotkeys or basic shorrtcuts like Alt-Tab in Windows. The exception to this rule is the Adobe Suite, which does currently support DialPad integration across Adobe AfterEffects, Premiere Pro, Photoshop and Lightroom Classic. Again though, there’s not a lot here that you couldn’t do by other and potential more intuitive means. Given the larger size and content creator bonafides, I was surprised to see only a single USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C port on the Vivobook Pro 16X. While this comes flanked by a trio of standard USB-A ports, two of these are USB 2.0. Only the third is USB 3.2 Gen 1. Unless you know what you’re looking for, the visual differences between the three are fairly easy to miss. It’s the kind of scattershot layout that only accentuates the existing issues with port standards rather than try to work around them. Despite these inconsistencies, ASUS mostly hits the mark when it comes to ports here. Rounding out the above, you get a headphone jack, Micro SD slot and a HDMI 1.4 output. It’s hard not to wish for a little more, specifically a standard SD slot, but it’s easy to like what’s here. There are a few other small touches worth noting here, such as a physical webcam shield, a microphone with built-in noise-cancellation tech, speakers that are integrated into the hinge, and a fingerprint sensor that’s built into the power key. Assessed individually, these are nothing new. The modern laptop landscape is as vast as it is diverse. Nevertheless, like the bundled-in subscription to Adobe Creative Cloud, these little details serve to make the overall package a little more robust. The ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X is a laptop loaded with design choices that lean in and complement the process of helping you actually get work done, rather than lead in on looks. As standard, the laptop is kitted out with a minimum of 16GB of RAM, 512GB of SSD storage, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 Ti graphics and an AMD Ryzen 7 processor. The model we reviewed rocked a Ryzen 9 processor, which is pretty much as good as AMD processors get (short of a Threadripper) when it comes to laptops. Unfortunately, that spec sheet supremacy was rarely reflected in the benchmarks scores for the Vivobook Pro 16X OLED. When it came to tests that leaned on the CPU and memory for the device, ASUS’ portable powerhouse failed to eclipse Apple’s M1-powered Macbook Pro or even the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro OLED.  It excelled on some fronts, but even when set to the dedicated performance mode it failed to push boundaries in the way that you might expect it to. The fact that the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED didn’t deliver scores as high as that of Lenovo’s Yoga Slim 7 Pro when it came to Novabench or Cinebench doesn’t discount the reality that this machine has something that Lenovo’s laptop lacks: a dedicated graphics card. For several years now and for a variety of globe-spanning factors, getting ahold of a graphic card has been both expensive and convoluted. In this environment, laptops with a dedicated graphics card like the one in the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED offers exceptional, and arguably unprecedented, value to those who need them. Rendering 3D graphics in Blender this machine versus on older or integrated graphic hardware turned workloads that would have taken minutes into seconds. What’s more, if you’re working in a professional role where 3D rendering is needed, you’re probably going to have a much easier time hunting for this laptop than you will a conventional graphics card.  Burned down via streaming video content on YouTube, the 61Wh battery inside the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED lasted 9 hours and 58 minutes. That’s a fairly respectable result, but one that definitely feels a little on the short side given the hit to portability that comes with the larger form-factor. For some, the impact of this blow to the ASUS Vivobook Pro 16X OLED’s appeal may be softened by the fact that the device supports quick charging via the 120W USB Type-C charger that it ships with. That’s a lot of watts, which goes some way towards making up for the fact that the USB Type-C ports on the Vivobook Pro 16X OLED can’t be used for charging.  Given the overlap in the design and specifications when it comes to this particular laptop and the rest of this year’s Vivobook Pro lineup, it’s clear that the thing you’re really paying extra for here is that physical screen space. And even for enthusiasts, finding the value in those additional pixels can be tricky.  Not everyone needs a screen this big, this bright or this squared. However, if your needs are more pro-grade, then the math changes. If you’re the kind of user whose needs find those quirks to be quintessential and a dedicated graphics card to be a necessity rather than a nice-to-have, then the Vivobook Pro 16X OLED does provide both for a half-decent price. Laptops with a 4K OLED screen this big and nice are available through other OEMs like Dell, but you’re almost certainly looking at spending more. The Vivobook Pro 16X isn’t a laptop for everyone, but if you can tell at a glance that it’s big screen is going to be to your benefit, you’re gonna love it. 

Screen size and type: Unlike upgradeable components like your GPU, RAM and storage, you’re stuck with the display you buy when you purchase a laptop. Is it a comfortable size? Does it offer a wide-viewing angle? Resolution: Similarly, you can’t change your display’s resolution after the fact. 1080p (Full HD) is the bare minimum these days and most laptops worth their price tag aim for 1440p at least (QHD or QuadHD) but you can also opt for 4K if you’re willing to spend a little extra. Refresh rate: A screen’s refresh rate is the measurement of how frequently it changes. If you play fast-paced multiplayer games like Call of Duty, you know that the difference a few milliseconds that a high refresh rate gets you can count for a lot. The higher the refresh rate, the better. Most conventional laptops offer 60Hz to 90Hz but fancier gaming laptops can offer 144Hz, 165Hz or even 240Hz screens. Ports and connections: Like your screen, ports will impact your everyday experience with a laptop, particularly if you use it for work. While you can work around this with USB hubs and adapters, a laptop with fewer ports than you need can quickly become a headache. Future-proofing: There are no hard and fast rules here but as a general suggestion, you’ll want to sure you’re laptop has the legs to survive a few years of technology improvements in any way you can. You can overshoot on your desired specs, spending more on a machine that’s more powerful than you currently need, or opt for a model or brand that has support for upgrades down the track. Check which features of the machine are upgradeable. The Dell XPS 15, for example, supports additional RAM, while Apple MacBooks do not.

Check out our dedicated laptop buying guide for more suggestions on shopping for the best laptop for your needs.

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