TechRadar rating
/5
For
- Incredible touchscreen
- Thin
- Light
- Great battery life
- Powerful
Against
- Relatively expensive
- Resolution tricky in desktop mode
- Bloatware
A Retina-beating display, new Haswell processor and cutting-edge design. Is this the ultimate Ultrabook?
Samsung was one of the very first PC manufacturers to jump on the Ultrabook bandwagon. Its done a fine job of representing Intels baby ever since, with some stunning offerings, including the Series 5 Ultra Touch and, more recently, the top of the range Series 9 NP900X3D.
Samsung certainly knows its stuff when it comes to Ultrabooks, but the goal posts are always moving. So what new trick can it pull out of its sleeve for late 2013?
Its a wonderful-looking unit. Its thin and carefully crafted, with just a slither of the all-aluminium chassis peaking through the dark outer casing. But its plain black exterior might lend some clues as to its intent: this is an Ultrabook focused as much on the business user as regular Joe on the high street.
But unlike those Windows Ultrabooks, the Ativ features the new fourth-generation Haswell processor from the Intel stable, as does the 2013 Macbook Air, which makes it the closest competitor in terms of performance, even though the Air is a consumer device first and foremost.
The key gains are proposed longer battery life, lower heat output and better graphics performance. From a business users point of view, battery life is the biggest concern, but portability is also important.
At 1.39kg, its not the worlds lightest Ultrabook (that accolade goes to the Sony Vaio Pro 13, at just over 1kg). But its comparable to the current Macbook Air, which comes in at 1.35kg, and it feels plenty light enough to carry in one hand.
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