This web site uses cookies to improve your experience. By viewing our content, you are accepting the use of cookies. To find out more and change your cookie settings, please view our cookie policy. Close

Asus S6F review

Our rating

4.5 stars out of 5

User rating

0 out of 5

Not yet rated

What do you think?

Verdict

The S6F is an almost-perfect combination of style and substance. Its distinctive leather finish, small form factor and long battery life make it a joy to take on the road, and its powerful components allow it to keep up with the fastest of PCs. It's also tremendous value for money

Typical price

£720

Good

  • Ultra-small, lightweight chassis
  • Excellent keyboard
  • Great screen
  • Wireless connectivity

Bad

  • Relative lack of power
  • Limited number of IO ports

In this review

It's been a long time coming, but the world of laptops is about to get a major shake-up thanks to arrival of the Asus S6 series. Not only do these laptops feature the latest Centrino Duo components, but also they're the first to feature permanent, real leather panels.

The Asus S6F wasn't available in the UK at time of publication, but Asus assures us you'll be able to buy it some time in May. The RRP is £1,699, but expect online retailers to lower that.

Design
The S6F is obviously the product of painstaking design. It would have been easy for Asus to ruin the delicious prospect of a leather-clad laptop by delivering a shoddy final product, but during our time with it we found it to be as sturdy and as solidly built as the rest of the Asus laptop range.

Its biggest selling point is obviously its panelling. Asus has chosen to deck the rear of the screen and the palm rest below the keyboard in a real cow-leather material, though we'd like it if there were more abundant use of leather, perhaps around the screen bezel. Despite this, the overall aesthetic is superb. Some users won't be fond of the chocolate brown colour of our review sample, but a more contemporary camel-grey colour will soon be available exclusively via the Micro Anvika site, and there's the prospect of pink and possibly crocodile-skin editions later in the year.

The gunmetal-grey keyboard and matching mouse touchpad are also attractive and make a pleasant change to the plethora of matte-black input devices that litter the laptop market. The buttons for the mouse are vaguely reminiscent of those found on the Apple Mighty Mouse in that there's no seam between the left and right buttons, which adds an air of style.

The only negative point we could find was that the high-yield battery on our review sample juts noticeably from the back of the unit. This can be replaced with a smaller battery that fits flush with the chassis. To the left side of the laptop there's a VGA port and a hard-wired switch for enabling or disabling the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth radios. There are also modem, LAN, two well-spaced USB ports and a mic jack. These are hidden behind a magnetically sealed flap, which is a far better solution than untethered flaps that can get lost and leave ports exposed to dust and foreign objects.

There's an SPDIF headphone socket just outside the port, and on the right of the laptop an additional USB port, a DVD-rewriter drive, an ExpressCard slot and a multi-format card reader. All things considered, you'll be hard pressed to find a better-looking, more thoughtfully designed laptop.

Features
In light of its ultra-modern exterior, we'd have probably forgiven Asus for shipping the S6F with older components. We'll give the company full credit, then, for cramming the laptop with the latest Centrino Duo technology. It uses the Intel 945GM chipset and an Intel Centrino Duo L2400 dual-core CPU running at 1.66GHz.

Our review sample shipped with 1.5GB of fast DDR2 memory, but final retail models will use 1GB. All laptops in the S6 range use the same 11.1-inch TFT SXGA screen, which runs at a native resolution of 1,366x768 pixels, and has Asus' glossy Colour-Shine coating. This can be a little too reflective if used in direct sun or office light, and its small size means it can be difficult to read, but we found it fine provided you enable 'Large fonts' mode in Windows XP's display settings.

We had few other issues with the laptop's usability. Its keyboard had surprisingly large buttons that were comfortable to type on, and the mouse touchpad proved responsive, despite the fact that its square-ish shape doesn't match the flatter, rectangular aspect ratio of the screen.

  • Print

Tell us what you think

Log in with your CNET UK or Facebook account to post a user review, or click Join to create an account

Step 1

0 out of 5

Step 2

Submit

Please log in, register or login with Facebook to add a review or comment

Should I buy it?

Ask your Facebook friends and Twitter followers if you should buy the Asus S6F

About CBS Interactive

Copyright © 2013 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved.