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Asus F70 review

Our rating

3.0 stars out of 5

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Verdict

The F70 is a good-looking laptop, but its most interesting feature is a screen that's 0.3 inches wider than normal. In other words, it's pretty boring. It's not a bad machine, but it's uninspiring by Asus' own high standards

Typical price

£859

Good

  • Good looks
  • Good connectivity and networking

Bad

  • Uninspiring specification

In this review

The Asus F70 is aimed at the film buff who wants to replace their bulky desktop PC with something a little more portable. Its biggest selling point is a 17.3-inch display with a 16:9 aspect ratio, but it promises to be a fairly competent all-rounder. It's available to buy now for £849.

Design
We can't fault the F70's styling. Most machines of this size struggle to impress, but we instantly fell for the subtle swirling patterns in its blue-grey lid, its gently curved edges, and the fact that it isn't a complete beast to lug around. Its 4.1kg, 466 by 309 by 47mm chassis is by no means slender, but it's a far cry from the majority of bloated 17-inch laptops that come our way.


These Altec Lansing speakers are okay, but if you actually want to enjoy the sound in a movie instead of just hearing it, you should use external speakers

Large laptops tend to have comfortable, easy-to-use keyboards, and the F70 is no different. It uses so-called chiclet keys -- a style of keyboard where each button is concave to better fit the user's fingertips for easier, more accurate typing. Asus also believes that by reducing the space between each key, it's able to offer greater protection against dust. We're not sure what kind of giant dust Asus was testing it with, but where we come from, dust is pretty damn small and won't have any trouble infiltrating this keyboard.

The mouse trackpad is comfortable. It's large, has a dedicated scroll strip on the right for rapidly moving up and down through documents, and has chunky (though not clunky) selector buttons. Between each of these buttons is a fingerprint reader, which makes logging into your user account quicker and easier than typing a password. It's not completely foolproof -- determined hackers can bypass the system -- but it's certainly convenient, and makes a nice complement to the laptop's clever facial recognition system.

Connectivity on the F70 is good, as you'd probably expect from a desktop replacement. It packs four USB ports, an eight-in-one memory card reader supporting MMC, SD, miniSD and xD formats, a modem, Ethernet, headphone-out and microphone-in. It also has a range of ports that should cement its status as a top-rung multimedia laptop. It packs both D-Sub, VGA and HDMI video, plus digital SP/DIF audio output.


From left to right there’s an ExpressCard/34 slot, a switch for toggling the Wi-Fi, audio ports and two USB ports

Features
Most 17-inch laptops tend to use powerful components in their efforts to compete with the desktop PCs they're designed to replace. The F70, however, doesn't seem to try very hard. It's available in three separate configurations, none of which will rock your world.

The pick of the bunch is the £859 F70SL (TY076C), which uses an Intel Core 2 Duo T5850 CPU clocked at 2.16GHz, 4GB of DDR2 800MHz memory and a 320GB hard drive. For £20 more, you can buy the TY087E, which gives you just 3GB of RAM and Windows Vista Business instead of Vista Home Premium. Why you'd want to buy that, we're not entirely sure. If the recession hasn’t reached your home, the £949 TY065C comes with a faster Core 2 Duo P8400, 4GB of RAM and a 500GB hard drive.

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