ASUS Zenbook A16 – A $1699 Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme CoPilot+ laptop

ASUS Zenbook A16 is one of the first Copilot+ PCs/laptops based on the Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme 18-core Armv9 SoC and is now available for $1,699 on BestBuy or $1,999 on the ASUS website.

The laptop features a 16-inch “3K” OLED with touchscreen, 48GB of RAM, a 1TB NVMe SSD, HDMI 2.1 video output, WiFi 7 and Bluetooth connectivity, and a few Thunderbolt and USB ports.

Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme laptop

ASUS Zenbook A16 (UX3607) specifications:

  • SoC – Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme (X2E-96-100)
    • CPU – 18x Armv9 cores with 12 Prime cores up to 5.0 GHz (single/dual core) / 4.4 GHz (multicore), and 6 Efficiency cores up to 3.6 GHz
    • GPU – Adreno X2-90 @ 1.85 GHz with support for DirectX 12.2 Ultimate, Vulkan 1.4, OpenCL 3.0
    • VPU
      • Encode: HEVC, AVC: Dual 8K UHD @ 30 FPS, AV1: 8K UHD @ 15 FPS, UHD @ 60 FPS
      • Decode: AV1, HEVC, AVC: Dual 8K @ 60 FPS
      • Concurrent: 8K UHD @ 30 FPS Encode + 8K @ 60 FPS Decode
    • AI accelerators
      • 80 TOPS (INT8) NPU
      • Dual Micro NPU on Qualcomm Sensing Hub
  • System Memory – 48GB LPDDR5X @ 9600 MHz (PoP)
  • Storage
    • 1TB NVMe (PCIe Gen4) SSD
    • Full-sized SD card slot
  • Display – 16-inch touch OLED with 2880 x 1800 resolution, 120 Hz refresh rate, 1100 nits brightness
  • Video Output – HDMI 2.1
  • Audio
    • Built-in microphone and 6x speakers
    • 3.5mm headphone jack
    • Dolby Atmos, Smart Amp Technology
  • Camera – 1080p front-facing camera
  • Wireless – WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4
  • USB
    • 2x USB4 Type-C (40 Gbps) ports with USB-PD and DP Alt Mode
    • 1x USB Type-A 3.2 port
  • Security – Facial recognition
  • Misc
    • Backlit keyboard + touchpad
    • Actively cooled design
  • Power Supply
    • Up to 130W via USB-C port
    • 3-cell 70 Wh Lithium-ion battery good for 21+ hours of battery life
  • Dimensions – 35.36 x 24.23 x 1.65 cm
  • Weight – 1.3 kg

ASUS Zenbook A16 keyboard ASUS Zenbook A16 ports

The Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme laptop ships with Windows 11 Home as MyASUS, ScreenXpert, GlideX, and StoryCube programs. A few years ago, Qualcomm seemed really committed to bringing Linux support for their Snapdragon laptop processor, with notably Debian 12 and upstream Linux for the Snapdragon X Elite SoC. However, it doesn’t seem to be the case anymore, and over the last few years, I’ve regularly read negative comments about the status of the Snapdragon Linux port, more recently about the refusal to release the Snapdragon X’s DSP API.

On the positive side, Tom’s Hardware review of the ASUS Zenbook A16 points to excellent performance for the Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme SoC, with Geekbench 6 results close to the ones of the Apple M5 in the 13-inch MacBook Air, and much better than the ones for Intel Core Ultra 7 355 and Core Ultra X7 358H laptops from Dell and Acer. While Tom’s Hardware is pleased with the performance, lightweight design, and a relatively low price for a system with 48GB of RAM, the battery life was measured at just a little over 10 hours (Intel-based Dell XPS 14 lasts over 20 hours in the same test), the chassis doesn’t feel premium, Windows still suffers from a few hiccups from (x86) emulation, and they would have wished for less preinstalled ASUS software.

Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme GeekBench 6 benchmark
Source: Tom’s Hardware

Via Liliputing

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5 Replies to “ASUS Zenbook A16 – A $1699 Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme CoPilot+ laptop”

  1. The slightly better multi core performance doesn’t justify the price difference from the M5.
    Yes, I saw the RAM is 3x than the M5.

    1. What do you mean? 15″ Mac Air with 32GB RAM and 1TB SSD costs 1899$.
      Anyway without proper Linux support those devices are not interesting, both M5 and Snapdragon.

  2. I believe if i used my laptop for strictly work, then this would be great for it. But for that price, a Dell XPS seems like a much better deal

    1. Most people don’t need this much CPU performance for work, the GPU situation is somewhat bad for gaming, it can’t handle Linux, etc.

      I bought one of the cheap i3-1315U laptops and upgraded it to 40 GB DDR4 with a used stick, for about $320 total. It will get slapped around by this on performance/efficiency, but not to the extent that I care.

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