Script: JASPER (Design and Durability)

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JASPER(Design and Durability)

- Like other ZenBooks, the Asus ZenBook 13 is a visual treat. Pine Gray aluminum alloy
covers the whole chassis of the ZenBook 13. Only the Asus logo etched in the center-left is
adorned with glitz. Once you've got your eye on the lid, make sure to focus on the concentric
circles that criss-cross the surface. That being said, it doesn't have as many fingerprints as the
ZenBook Flip S, its convertible sister.
ROBERT(Ports)

- The input/output selection of the ZenBook 13 is impressive for such a small laptop. You'll
find two USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C ports (either of which can accept the USB-C power adapter),
one USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A port, a full-size HDMI 2.1 port, and a microSD card reader.
Oddly, there's no 3.5mm headphone jack, but you might not need one if you have Bluetooth
wireless headphones, and you can use a USB-C-to-3.5mm dongle if you don't.
-
- The lack of USB4 and Thunderbolt support is slightly disappointing. But overall, the
cornucopia of available ports puts the MacBook Air and the XPS 13 to shame. Both of those
laptops include a headphone jack, but they lack HDMI or USB-A ports.
JASPER(Keyboard and track pad)

- Asus touchpads have had these extra functions for a long time, but using them fully requires
some practice. For example, I always believed that when the calculator is active, the touchpad
couldn't be used to move the pointer. Even while the calculator is active, the pad may detect
finger swipes as cursor movements. No fingerprint reader, but a small camera in the ultra-thin
upper display bezel. The camera has IR sensors for Windows Hello facial recognition. Asus
claims the new system's enhanced facial identification technology produces crisper
photographs and better white balance. Even in a well-lit environment, the webcam's footage
seemed slightly choppy.
ROBERT(Specs, Processor, Ram and Storage)

- The ZenBook 13 OLED was also middle of the pack when it came to video workloads. The device
completed an export of a five-minute, 33-second 4K video in 14 minutes and 14 seconds, which is a few
minutes slower than both the ZenBook 14 (11 minutes and 28 seconds) and the XPS 13 (10 minutes and
43 seconds), and also slower than the M1 MacBook Air (eight minutes and 15 seconds). It’s not a surprise
that the 5800U was weak on this test, as it lacks Intel’s Quick Sync feature. It was an improvement over
the 15-inch Surface Laptop 4, which has a last-generation AMD Ryzen 7 4980U and took over 16 and a
half minutes to complete the same task.

 Processor: AMD Ryzen 7 5800U 


 RAM: 16GB 3733 MHz LPDDR4X
 Weight: 2.51 lbs (1.14 kg)
 Battery: 67Wh 4-cell lithium-polymer
 Camera: HD IR camera
 Wireless: Dual-band Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Bluetooth 5.0

JASPER(GAMING)
- As good as its everyday and multimedia performance is, the ZenBook 13 isn't a gaming
powerhouse. Its AMD Radeon integrated graphics perform essentially the same as Intel's Iris
Xe integrated graphics, found in the other Asus ultraportable and the XPS 13. The Blade
Stealth boasts a more powerful discrete GPU from Nvidia, so it outclassed its Windows
competitors in our 3DMark and Superposition gaming simulations. 
ROBERT(AUDIO AND WEBCAM)

- The 720p HD webcam on the Asus ZenBook 13 is pretty standard as far as webcams go.
Considering how much they've become a part of everybody's life in 2020, we would like to
see a better quality camera, but the ZenBook 13 is hardly the only offender in that regard.
Fortunately, there is a privacy switch that will shut the camera off. It's not a physical shutter,
but it's better than not having any switch at all.
- The microphone quality was generally excellent, and our colleagues heard us loud and clear
during meetings. We conducted several interviews for work as well that went off without a
hitch.

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