Asus UL30A-A1
If you are in the marketplace for an low-cost thin-and-light, the Asus UL30A-A1 offers great value and a solid Core 2 Duo CULV processor in a magnetic package.
Whether CULV thin-and-light laptop computers will ever fully find a spot between the Netbook world and the full-featured laptop computer world, they’re most definitely a category that’s growing day-after-day. Dropping an optical drive and throwing a low-voltage CPU alongside a long-lasting battery is the trend of 2009, though the low-voltage laptops we have seen so far have often sacrificed either build quality, performance, or value-for-dollar.
It is relieving to say, thus, that the 13-inch Asus UL30A-A1 is a thin-and-light that we would gladly carry around in our bag for a good long time to come. With a sturdy frame, a properly performing new Core 2 Duo CULV CPU as opposed to the disappointing single-core Core 2 Solo CULVs we have seen, and really good battery life, it is about a complete package for a sub-$1000 laptop that doesn’t resort to an Atom processor.
While we have seen similar-looking products here before, including the Lenovo IdeaPad U350 and the MSI X340, we liked the overall performance on the UL30A-A1 better. And as far as its closest competitor goes, the Acer Aspire Timeline 3810T, the Asus UL30A-A1 had equal or better performance, better battery life, and costs $100 less than the 3810T did at launch. This is a thin-and-light that does everything we had hoped thin-and-lights would do, and it costs nowhere near what a MacBook Air or a Dell Adamo does.
With a solid-feeling chassis, the Asus UL30A-A1 has a plastic feel, but unlike some low-cost laptops, you shouldn’t be worried about it breaking if you don’t hold it right. The bottom’s generic black matte plastic is topped with a glossy silvery plastic on the interior, surrounding a very MacBook-esque chiclet-style raised keyboard. Glossy black plastic surrounds the upper lid’s inset shiny screen, while the back is covered in what feels like a thin overlay of aluminum. Even though the UL30A-A1 does look (from a distance) somewhat MacBook-esque, the overall construction is far more budget-minded. To this thin-and-light’s credit, the battery is well integrated into the space behind the keyboard and between the two display hinges.
Unfortunately, the keyboard area did demonstrate some discomforting flex when pressed down on, always a bit of a pet peeve here for us in a thin-and-light. Even so, the raised keyboard still had sufficient firmness when typing to not be a major problem. While we’d say the Lenovo U350 still felt higher-end and more polished in its construction, the Asus UL30A-A1 is on the better side of laptop build quality and feels a few hairs short of excellent.
There are two silver buttons on the top left and right of the keyboard tray. One is the power button, while the other launches a pre-boot Express Gate quick-start environment, with a browser, a music player, an online gaming portal, and a photo viewer. It started much more quickly than a regular Windows Vista boot, but the screen resolution seemed squashed and improperly set on initial use of the Web browser. We are not sure how many people use features such as prelaunch environments, but it is nice to have. When the UL30A-A1 is running Windows Vista, the left button toggles four power settings, including both Battery Saving and High Performance modes. These presets are shortcuts to settings that can also be configured in the Control Panel, and all of our tests were run in High Performance mode. Honestly, we can’t see why you’d even select Battery Saving mode at all, since the UL30A-A1 had astonishing battery life even at the highest settings.
We had a small beef with the touch pad: while its multitouch functions such as page scroll worked well, the dimpled glossy surface shares the same material as the rest of the palm rest area, and feels too smooth; we like better traction in a pad. The click-bar button area below worked well but had a central pivot and left/right click areas; we choose two discrete buttons instead.
The glossy 13.3-inch LED screen on the UL30A-A1 has a 1,366×768 native resolution, which is standard for laptops of this size, and it still looks bright and colorful here on the UL30A-A1. Text and icons popped, and videos looked fine. Stereo speakers are tucked in the bottom of the front end, on the laptop computer’s underside. They had decent volume, but were nothing particularly remarkable.