Original Post
Written by
Edited August 4, 2022
at 09:17 PM
by
Highlights
Processor: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i7-1165G7 Processor
Memory/Storage: 16GB RAM / 1TB SSD
Screen: 15.6" OLED Full HD (1920 x 1080)
Keyboard: Full-size, backlit keyboard with num-key
Graphics: Intel® Iris Xe Graphics
Processor and Memory
Processor Type: Intel® Core™ i7-1165G7 Processor
Processor Speed: 2.8 GHz
Cache: 12M Cache
Memory (RAM): 16GB DDR4
Maximum Memory Expansion: N/A
Hard Drive and Multimedia Drives
Hard Drive: 1TB PCIE SSD
Optical Drive: No Optical Drive
Multimedia Card Slot: Micro SD
Graphics and Audio
Graphics: Intel Iris Xe Graphics
Audio: Audio by ICEpower®, Built-in speaker, Built-in microphone//harman/kardon (Mainstream)
Display, Keyboard, Mouse, and Webcam
Display Size: 15.6"
Display Type: FHD (Says OLED)
Display Resolution: 1920 x 1080
Keyboard: Backlit Chiclet Keyboard with Num-key
Mouse: N/A
Webcam: 720p HD camera
Connectivity
Ethernet: N/A
Wi-Fi: Wi-Fi 6(802.11ax)
Bluetooth: Bluetooth 5.0 (Dual band) 2*2
Modem: N/A
Ports/Slots
Ports: 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C, 2x USB 2.0 Type-A//1x
HDMI 1.4, 1x Headphone out//Micro SD card reader, Micro SD 4.0 card reader
Expansion:
1x DDR4 SO-DIMM slot, 1x M.2 2280 PCIe 3.0x2, 1x STD 2.5" SATA HDD
Power
Battery Type: 3-cell Li-ion
Typical Battery Life: 42WHrs, 3S1P *Battery Life vary based on testing environment
AC Adapter: ø4.0, 65W AC Adapter, Output: 19V DC, 3.42A, 65W, Input: 100~240V AC 50/60Hz universal
Software
Operating System: Windows 11 Home
Manufacturer Software: N/A
Other Software: N/A
Trial Software: N/A
Physical Specifications
Environmental Specifications: N/A
Operating Temperature: N/A
Storage Temperature: N/A
Package Contents
Vivo book - K513EA-UH78
Power Adapter & Cord
Warranty Card
User Guide
Will show at $999 now until Saturday .
https://www.samsclub.com/p/asus-v...vingsevent
Only had 3 units at my club and 2 were already spoken for (Must be employees)
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It's a different story for video editing. If you do a lot of video compression, for example encoding in HEVC x265, then the Ryzen trounces this CPU. This matters to me since I am converting a lot of old videos to x265 to save space. Some videos are 8-10 hrs long and take 2-5+ hours to compress. That's when speed really matters and you'll notice a difference between the Intel and Ryzen. So if you plan on saving your videos in x265 to save space (and you should!), or do other extensive video manipulation, then the Ryzen might be a better choice. Same goes for other mathematically-intensive tasks like 3D modeling, etc. I bought a Ryzen 4700U notebook on eBay for about $379 just for video editing.
Overall, this is a great notebook for photo and video editing unless speed is an issue. For minor editing and short TikTok videos, it probably wouldn't matter. On the plus side, you're getting an OLED screen and 16gb of RAM, which I've never seen at this price. My 4700U notebook, for example, only has 8gb. That can make difference if you're editing large videos. Basically, the more video you can put into RAM, the less the computer needs to access the video on a slower hard drive/SSD. RAM is much faster than any hard drive or SSD.
As for the OLED screen, I've never even considered getting an OLED notebook because the screen is normally so expensive. My guess is that the screen makes up half the price of this notebook. With OLED, you'll get incredible contrast and colors will really pop out. That can matter if you're doing precise photo and video touchups, but it also contributes to a wonderful viewing experience. This is especially true if several people are watching the screen. OLED screens have better viewing angles, where watching from the sides won't affect picture quality as much as that on an LCD screen, where colors fade.
Another plus is that OLED screens can extend battery life. LCD screens are back (or side) lit. Generally speaking, that means the LEDs backlighting the screen are on full brightness, regardless of how bright the image is. What you see is how much light is allowed through the LCD crystals, not how bright the backlight LEDs actually are. A good analogy is the blinds in your bedroom. What your neighbor sees is how much light you let through the blinds, not how much light is actually in your room. That means a totally blank (black) screen will use just as much energy as a bright white image. Not so with OLED. Each pixel is it's own LED (actually 3 LEDs: red, green and blue to produce colors). The more pixels you turn on, the more energy is used. The darker the image, the less energy you use. A totally black screen has no lit pixels so it uses no energy. This can matter if you plan on being battery powered a lot.
The only downside is burn-in. People who do a lot of wordprocessing or spreadsheet work often have the same image on the screen for long stretches of time. For example, the formatting bar (bold, italic, underline, etc) on top of a wordprocessor remains the same as you type away. That leads to burn-in, where a faint image of that formatting bar will stay permanently on the screen even when you're using another app. The secret to fighting burn-in is to change the screen image frequently. A screensaver may help, but that only works when you're not using the computer. There are apps for phones that shift the screen by a few pixels at regular intervals. Because the shift is so small, it may not be noticeable. However, I don't know if such apps exist for Windows. Your best bet is to not use a single app with a single image for long stretches of time. But if your primary apps (e.g. wordprocessing) have a lot of static areas where the image doesn't change, then an OLED screen might not be the best choice.
In summary, this is great computer for photo and video editing, and especially for watching videos. But if speed matters, then a 4700U notebook might be better. However, the 16gb RAM might offset the slower CPU. So I'd say grab one if you can find it.
PS - oh wow, this post got way longer than I had intended! I'm writing on a phone so I had no idea what the final results were.
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Nice screen and okay performance though. You're paying extra for the screen. Should be sub $500 without.
I bit on the 12th-gen i5 Dell 7420 2-in-1 from BB for my son to replace the i3 HP he's had since freshman year for college, even though he was hoping for something more "gamey." (e.g. an XPS and didn't really want touchscreen or 2-in-1)
From an objective standpoint, having a dedicated number pad is great, along with the additional memory for $30 more, but that previous gen i7...
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I was first told "I" could not reserve and that they wouldn't allow you to get price adjustment if you bought at full price. They wouldn't even allow me to see it. Advised me to be first one in on Saturday. But I explained that wouldn't work, the very nice manager allowed me to buy it and had them write on the receipt I could get an adjustment Saturday morning. So YMMV on this.
I can't find it but I thought I saw it would be available online early Saturday morning, perhaps that means just after midnight. I would try.
As for a prior posted question, you need to be a Sam's member, but there are many posts that you can pay the $45 membership fee and get a $45 reduction on your first purchase.
I was first told "I" could not reserve and that they wouldn't allow you to get price adjustment if you bought at full price. They wouldn't even allow me to see it. Advised me to be first one in on Saturday. But I explained that wouldn't work, the very nice manager allowed me to buy it and had them write on the receipt I could get an adjustment Saturday morning. So YMMV on this.
I can't find it but I thought I saw it would be available online early Saturday morning, perhaps that means just after midnight. I would try.
As for a prior posted question, you need to be a Sam's member, but there are many posts that you can pay the $45 membership fee and get a $45 reduction on your first purchase.
12:01 am EST Saturday the 6th.
Nice screen and okay performance though. You're paying extra for the screen. Should be sub $500 without.