Affordable OLED thrills with few performance frills
Two-minute review
A PC and OLED TV in one. Those are Asus’s words, not ours. And quite a claim for the Asus Vivobook 13 Slate OLED to live up to. Heck, it’s quite a claim for any device to deliver on, let alone a 13-inch tablet-convertible PC.
Whatever, the Vivobook 13 Slate OLED certainly has plenty going for it, the most obvious of which is a 13.3-inch OLED panel with a punchy 550 nits of peak brightness. The competition in the PC-based slate market generally still goes with LCD screen tech. It’s also very slick and slim, with fairly narrow bezels, a skinny chassis and nice build quality. And all for under $600 / £600.
You also get plenty of input options beyond the touchscreen. Both the Asus Pen 2.0 and a detachable keyboard are part of the comprehensive standard package. Other highlights include quad-speaker Dolby Atmos sound, Wi-Fi 6, dual cameras, two high-speed USB-C ports, a MicroSD card slot, quick charging and more.
Oh, and did we mention the 1080p OLED panel offers fully 100% coverage of the demanding DCI-P3 cinema color space, something even professional desktop monitors struggle to achieve, plus 0.2ms response times? Oh, yeah. There’s plenty to like.
There are also a few details, however, that don’t entirely bear close scrutiny. Take the CPU. It’s a quad-core Intel chip capable of over 3GHz, which sounds nice until you realise the Intel Pentium Silver N6000 is based on Intel’s Atom lineage of CPUs. You could think of it as having four efficiency cores a la Intel’s new Alder Lake processors. Except, the cores in the Pentium Silver N6000 are older than the efficiency cores in Alder Lake and not nearly as powerful.
Consequently, performance is pretty glacial. Installing large apps takes a long time, despite the 256GB SSD and 8GB of DDR4 memory. Loading proper apps takes plenty of time, too. And forget about anything graphically intensive. The Pentium chip’s integrated graphics are feeble.
The showpiece OLED panel isn’t quite the stunner you might hope for. As handheld devices go (which includes this one at least part of the time), the Vivobook’s 1080p resolution makes for mediocre pixel density on a 13-inch screen. Making matters worse, it’s unclear if the Vivobook’s panel has conventional RGB subpixels. OLED panels commonly don’t.
Anyway, the Vivobook’s screen isn’t terribly sharp and doesn’t render fonts all that crisply. In mitigation, video does look great thanks to the inherent advantages of OLED tech, including excellent viewing angles, more or less infinite contrast and super-speedy response.
The otherwise unimpressive Pentium chip also does a good job of decoding high bitrate video streams, including 4K YouTube. It also offers decent battery life of around nine hours for video playback, albeit comparably priced ARM-powered tablets typically last quite a bit longer.
All told, from a content consumption perspective this machine has quite a bit going for it. The fact that it’s way cheaper than premium Windows tablets like the Microsoft Surface Pro 8 likewise adds to the appeal. But the Vivobook’s weak performance and the limitations of its showcase OLED display make for a mixed proposition overall.
Price and availability
SPEC SHEET
Here is the Asus Vivobook 13 Slate OLED configuration sent to TechRadar for review:
CPU: 1.1GHz Intel Pentium Silver N6000 (quad-core, 4MB cache, burst up to 3.3GHz) Graphics: Intel UHD integrated RAM: 8GB DDR4 RAM Screen: 13.3-inch 1080p OLED Storage: 256GB M.2 NVMe SSD Optical drive: N/A Ports: 2x USB-C, MicroSD Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6(802.11ax)+Bluetooth 5.2 (Dual band) 2*2 Camera: 5MP front, 13MP rear Weight: 1.72 pounds (0.78 kg) Size: 12.20 x 7.48 x 0.31 inches (30.99 x 19.00 x 0.79 cm; W x D x H)
At $599 (around £600, AU$840), the Asus Vivobook 13 Slate OLED looks like good value. It’s a full-function PC in tablet-convertible format, complete with detachable keyboard and input pen. It also gets OLED display technology, which makes for a very appealing overall package. The catch is a weak Intel Pentium processor. At this price point, you can’t have everything.
For less money, you can have Microsoft’s smaller 10-inch Surface Go with a full suite of accessories and a similar CPU. For the same money you can have the Go with a more powerful Intel Core M3 chip, but you’ll have to pay extra for a keyboard and input pen. The entry-level Microsoft Surface 7 Pro can be had for similar money but comes with very few frills. All of which means a case can be made for the Vivobook in value terms as a media consumption device. But for anything resembling real computing, it’s less compelling.
Design
Slick design and great build quality are certainly part of the Asus Vivobook 13 Slate OLED’s core appeal. The tablet portion is genuinely compact with slim bezels around the 13.3-inch OLED panel and very nicely put together. It’s just 8mm thick, weighs in at just over three quarters of a kilo and encloses a 50WHr battery.
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