Staples has
Asus Vivobook 17X Laptop (K1703ZA-SB54) on sale for
$429.99.
Shipping is free, otherwise free store pickup is available where stock permits.
Thanks to Community Member
delz4stelz for finding this deal.
Specs:- 17.3" 1920 x 1080 LED Backlit LCD Display
- Intel Core i5-12500H 2.5GHz 12-Core Processor
- 8GB DDR4 SDRAM
- 512GB Solid State Drive
- Intel Iris Xe Graphics
- Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax) + Bluetooth 5.0
- Backlit Keyboard
- Windows 11 Home
- Ports:
- 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C
- 2x USB 2.0 Type-A
- 1x HDMI 1.4
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https://www.asus.com/support/FAQ/1045044
This FAQ walks you through it all...enjoy and Happy Holidays!
Initial boot time was relatively slow but I assume that's because it's still in a configuration mode. The BIOS UEFI is decent but appears a bit limited in options relative to what I've seen on other ASUS MB's in the past. I may wipe the SSD and downgrade the box to Win10 after the initial config process - I want to see how much bloatware is installed. If it isn't bad I'll leave it on Win11.
Keyboard is really very good. It resides in a slight 'dish' molded into the case. I thought this was odd at first but it works well and is comfortable to type on. I've also seen reviewers comment on the off center track pad as a negative - after seeing/using it I no longer view it that way - the layout works well. The pad is well sized and centered on the keyboard with the num key offset to the right (giving the appearance that the pad is not centered on the case). Pad clicks are tactile - not as good as a Macbook - but fine. There is a strange graphic embossed on the enter key which is intentional, but aesthetically misplaced.
From the limited use I had with it this morning, the screen is fine (again, for the price point). Viewing angles are good and it's plenty bright. I'm not a gamer, nor will the end user be, so I can't comment on those dynamics. First ASUS laptop for me, but I've had good luck using ASUS MB's on PC builds previously so I'm hopeful this box will be trouble free from a HW perspective.
Time will tell, but keeping in mind the abbreviated interaction I've had with it to date, I think this will be a good value at $430 depending on one's use case. For regular web browsing, viewing of movies/videos and light office work this should be a solid platform. I don't think the build quality is there to make this a good field laptop, it just doesn't feel robust and ruggedly built and the battery capacity won't support extended use away from power. As a family/house laptop it should be just fine. Out of the box it has a good processor, decent SSD, comfortable keyboard and large screen. While it ships with only 8GB of RAM, that's so easily addressed that it's inconsequential to long term ownership (unless the soldered RAM fails of course).
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California either
Cons: i5 ver , NTSC and 250 nits brightness, and Memory is only 8GB. you have only 1 slot to upgrade.
Will buy with $100 more
https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/pdp...adscanfy2
the shame of it is, the $450 laptop in OP would probably meet my needs, but i absolutely must have a way to run dual external monitors off of it. which means usb-c displayport or thunderbolt.
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https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/pdp...adscanfy22 [hp.com]
the shame of it is, the $450 laptop in OP would probably meet my needs, but i absolutely must have a way to run dual external monitors off of it. which means usb-c displayport or thunderbolt.