The arrival of Microsoft’s AI-soaked Copilot+ PC has considerably overshadowed the simultaneous launch of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X CPU, an upgraded, ARM-based various to Intel and AMD processors which have lengthy dominated the laptop computer world.
Qualcomm has made some unimaginable claims about what the Snapdragon X would be capable of do since its announcement final fall, probably the most notable being a promise of double the efficiency over competing CPUs at one-third the facility draw. These competing CPUs have all been upgraded since that announcement, so analyzing the scenario with the present surroundings absolutely accounted for is essential. The catch is that Microsoft’s Copilot+ PCs are solely licensed to run on Snapdragon X CPUs—for now, at the very least—so in order for you the Copilot+ expertise with all the brand new synthetic intelligence options baked into Home windows, a Snapdragon is the one technique to fly.
Earlier than we get to the CPU, let’s have a look at the laptop computer containing it extra broadly. The Asus Vivobook S 15 (now that includes an area within the title, however typically not) dates again to 2017, when it started as an Intel-based product. Intel-powered Vivobooks are nonetheless round, thoughts you. The Qualcomm-based model reviewed right here is mannequin quantity S5507Q.
The silver laptop computer incorporates a spacious 15.6-inch (non-touch) show operating at 2,880 X 1,620 pixels of decision. It’s loads shiny with out being eye-searing, backing up its display screen with a beefy Harman Kardon sound system. Along with the Snapdragon X Elite X1E7810 CPU, the unit options 16 GB of RAM and a 1-terabyte solid-state drive, each normal on a contemporary laptop computer. The keyboard is roomy and responsive, even squeezing a tiny numeric keypad to the best.
An intriguing addition is the inclusion of coloration LED backlighting for the keyboard—one thing you don’t typically see exterior the world of gaming laptops. The one-zone lighting results will be tweaked within the preloaded MyAsus app, which controls a variety of features starting from fan velocity to audio results. The backlighting is unassuming largely as a result of it’s laborious to see, because of the silver coloration of the keys. Whether or not the backlighting was on or off, I struggled to learn the letters and symbols on the tops of the keys; there simply wasn’t sufficient distinction.
Notice that the unit does not embody Asus’ new Ceraluminum shell—the S 15 has an all-metal chassis—nor does it embody the older ScreenPad characteristic (the place the touchpad doubles as a small show), which is current on another Vivobook choices.
Port choice is sweet and befitting of a 15.6-inch laptop computer, with two USB-C ports supporting USB4, two USB-A 3.2 ports, a full-size HDMI port, and a microSD card reader. All ports are side-mounted. The Vivobook weighs 3 kilos and is 20 millimeters thick, acceptable stats for a machine of this dimension.