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Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED hands-on: There?s real potential here

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Old 09-01-2022, 07:33 AM
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Rss Feed Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED hands-on: There?s real potential here

Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED hands-on: There?s real potential here





Credit: Bogdan Petrovan / Android Authority


Folding-screen laptops were not something I thought I could be excited for, but after seeing Asus? new Zenbook 17 Fold OLED at IFA, I am beginning to change my mind. Somewhat implausibly, Asus made a functional, practical even, 17-inch tablet that folds in half and becomes a portable 12-inch laptop. It?s eye-wateringly expensive, but after four generations of pricey Galaxy Folds, would you expect anything else?

The incredible shape-shifting Zenbook

The Zenbook 17 Fold OLED is a decent piece of kit as a laptop, but its huge folding screen sets it apart from almost everything else out there. The sole exception is the Lenovo X1 Fold, first announced in 2019, which features a similar, if smaller form factor. Lenovo just released a refined version of the X1 Fold at IFA 2022, with a bigger screen and other upgrades.

Asus? take on the concept is similar to Lenovo?s: a large foldable display that bends down the middle, an adjustable kickstand for when you need to prop it up, and a slim magnetic keyboard for text entry and navigation.



Credit: Ryan McLeod / Android Authority


In tablet mode, when the screen is fully unfolded, the Zenbook 17 Fold provides a vast 17.3-inch touchscreen to play and work on. It?s a nice and bright OLED panel, with great contrast ratios and enough pixels to make everything look crisp. While there are plenty of other 17-inch laptops out there, you just can?t get this size in the roomy, productivity-enhancing 4:3 format.


There?s a crease running down the middle that?s easily noticeable when you look at it from a side, but it mostly disappears when you view it from the front. Your eyes naturally focus on the picture on the screen, rather than the subtle distortion from the crease. It?s a lot like looking at the Fold 4, Flip 4, or any of the other foldable phones out there ? the crease simply isn?t a problem.

While you can use the Zenbook 17 Fold as a tablet, it?s more enjoyable to treat it as a portable monitor


Unfortunately, Asus did not make the jump to ultrathin glass, like Samsung did for its foldables. The Zenbook 17 Fold OLED?s cover layer is made of glossy plastic, which feels less premium and durable than glass. It also picks up fingerprints like there?s no tomorrow, which tends to be a problem when you need to repeatedly fold and unfold the screen.



Credit: Ryan McLeod / Android Authority


While you can use the Zenbook 17 Fold as a tablet, it?s more enjoyable to treat it as a portable monitor (or an All-in-One PC). Just open the kickstand, prop it on a table, and use the keyboard and/or touchscreen to interact with the screen like you would with a desktop computer.

Asus said the hinge inside the Zenbook 17 Fold OLED is rated for 30,000 open-and-close cycles. Based on the manufacturer?s calculations, that should ensure durability for at least five years of average use. Company representatives did warn that users should treat the device with care ? this is no rugged machine you can abuse without repercussion. It?s not just the hinge you have to worry about either ? as we?ve seen with other foldables in the past, debris can get lodged underneath the flexible screen. Due to its sheer size, Asus? foldable laptop seems especially susceptible to this vulnerability.



Credit: Ryan McLeod / Android Authority


Fold down the screen and you?ve got yourself a compact 12.5-inch laptop. You can place the bundled wireless keyboard on top of the lower half of the screen. The device detects it and adapts the UI to only use the upper half of the display. In this mode, the Zenbook 17 Fold OLED behaves like a normal small laptop. Alternatively, you can use the device in touchscreen mode. The content just ?flows? from the vertical half of the screen to the horizontal half. You can bring up a virtual keyboard to type, or you can scroll through documents and web pages across the two halves of the screen. Personally, I found this mode clunky, though I can?t deny the usefulness of being able to fit more content on the screen.

It?s a shame that the Zenbook 17 Fold is not stylus compatible, as the plastic screen is not strong enough to withstand a sharp stylus tip.






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