ASUS VivoBook Flip 14 Thin and Light 2-in-1 Laptop, 14” HD Touchscreen, Intel Celeron N4020 Processor, 4GB RAM, 128GB EMMC, Windows 10 Home in S…
$399.00
Last updated on November 21, 2024 12:00 pm Details
- Powerful & efficient Intel Celeron N4020 Processor 1.1 GHz (up to 2.8 GHz), 128GB EMMC, and 4GB DDR4 RAM
- Secure with a fingerprint sensor integrated with Touchpad and a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) to store all your passwords
- 14 inch glossy screen in a 13 inch frame with NanoEdge HD and a touchscreen display with up to 178° viewing angle optimized for entertainment. Windows 10 Home in S Mode with 1-month trial for new Office 365 customers
- Portable and convertible 2-in-1 laptop with four viewing modes: tablet, tent, stand, and laptop
- Comprehensive connections including, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C, 1x Micro HDMI, 1x Micro USB 2.0, 2 in 1 SD/MMC Card Reader, plus headphone out and audio-in combo jack. Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) wireless connection with dual-band Bluetooth 4.1
- Compatible with Google Classroom; run Google Classroom on Microsoft Edge or Internet Explorer 11
- Comes with a FREE upgrade to Windows 11 (when available)
Specification: ASUS VivoBook Flip 14 Thin and Light 2-in-1 Laptop, 14” HD Touchscreen, Intel Celeron N4020 Processor, 4GB RAM, 128GB EMMC, Windows 10 Home in S…
|
8 reviews for ASUS VivoBook Flip 14 Thin and Light 2-in-1 Laptop, 14” HD Touchscreen, Intel Celeron N4020 Processor, 4GB RAM, 128GB EMMC, Windows 10 Home in S…
Show all
Most Helpful
Highest Rating
Lowest Rating
Add a review
ASUS VivoBook Flip 14 Thin and Light 2-in-1 Laptop, 14” HD Touchscreen, Intel Celeron N4020 Processor, 4GB RAM, 128GB EMMC, Windows 10 Home in S…
$399.00
Carlos –
It came with the keyboard disabled. I soent half a day between trying to make it work by looking for the solution online and then calling Amazons and then being transfered to Asus. It was very frustrating. How can a new computer come with a disabled keyboard that had to be reset in order to make it work again. I just hope i dont have anymore issues.
Jared lupiccini –
So right away there’s a problem……
It cant do a thing…this is it, this notification, over and over and over and over again…..WTF
Why did I just spend over 500 dollars on this and its automatically useless to me ….it says windows could not complete the installation. To install windows on this computer. Restart the installation.
So I have tried…
I’m pretty much just thinking of asking for all my money back..
Jet –
As it only have 4G RAM, it can be upgrade the SSD hard drive, but when I try to upgrade the RAM, you can’t find the RAM slot on the mother board, even you can not find the existing 4GM ram, where is it….
Updates: the power button design is really silly, I think. It is on the side of key board, so you easy to turn it off during the using if you/someone try to move the laptop…..
It always happened….
harold –
I had this for 2 weeks and it seems to have a life. It suddenly shut down on its own while I’m the middle of something. Might just be a glitch receiving a defective one but it was doing great except for this weird instance. Can’t risk returning it or I’ll be late with my online classes.
Abdul Shahban –
This light and portable laptop has great battery life, which lasts the whole day without needing to be recharged. This computer lags a little bit. For example when typing it takes a few seconds extra for the typed words to show up on the screen. The track pad is not very responsive, as you will need to keep tapping the track pad a few times for it to do the action. The finger/thumb sensor is unresponsive and unable to read thumb/finger impression/fingerprint
Murat P –
I got this as a second laptop, mainly to take notes. It being 2 in 1, I figured it would support pen input.
First things first, you get the computer and a charger in the box. The computer is all metal, which is a nice plus in this price range; however the build quality leaves a lot to be desired. There is significant keyboard and screen flex, and overall the keyboard is just not good. They should also move the caps lock indicator on the actual caps lock key and not on the chassis. The trackpad is decently sized. I am not a huge fan of dedicated left and right click buttons, but I know some people prefer this. It’s a Windows Precision Trackpad so it supports Windows Gestures.
There is a fingerprint scanner, but it wouldn’t recognize my finger no matter how many times I tried.
In terms of ports, it’s not great. There is a microUSB port that can serve as a USB 2.0 port, a micro HDMI port, a headphone jack, one USB-C port, one SD card reader and the barrel charging plug. I understand there is a reason why they added the microUSB and microHDMI, but you’re going to use the USB-C port for all that anyways. So they could have just added another USB-C.
Before we talk about the performance, let’s talk about the screen. It’s 1366×768 and I realized I forgot how non Full HD screens look like. You can count all the pixels, which isn’t a huge deal in laptop mode. But if you’re taking notes, it becomes obvious and you end up not wanting to take notes on this. Speaking of taking notes in tablet mode, my Dell pen worked splendidly with this laptop, so it definitely supports pen input.
Another problem in tablet mode is the viewing angles. This has a TN panel, which means horrible viewing angles. It’s borderline impossible to see what you’re typing unless you’re looking at the laptop from straight above.
With this, let’s move onto performance. It has a 2-core, 2-thread Intel Celeron and 4 gigabytes of RAM. Combine this with a 128GB not-so-fast storage, and you have this. It’s actually not half bad in daily tasks or if you have like 2 tabs open in Chrome; but anything more and it starts to slow down and freeze. 4 gigabytes of RAM is just not enough, and what’s worse is that you can’t upgrade it! Same goes for the storage, it’s all soldered.
I didn’t even bother running Cinebench or PCMark10, because I knew it wasn’t going to perform well.
I would still be okay with keeping this because essentially you’re getting a computer for the price of an iPad if it weren’t for the HORRIBLE battery life. It would only last me an hour and a half, after all the updates were done. It wouldn’t matter which power setting I was at.
I ultimately returned mine as I’m sure it had a battery problem, but otherwise it could make a passable entry level computer.
hodaynii –
Works perfectly fine, just as explain in the detail. This was an excellent choice for school. Very stylish I love it . Worth every $
CycleGuy –
So far this computer has been working as described. No issue with the hardware, software however, is another story. At first blush Windows 10 S Mode ( presume this means security mode) offers lots of enhanced security measures blah, blah, blah. What it truly is, is a useless work platform which Microsoft has dumped on their unsuspecting customers yet again. This crap system DOES NOT allow the user to install programs or apps unless they are from the Microsoft Store. Talk about a monopoly. Can’t install you own antivirus. Can’t install PDF software from reputable companies. Couldn’t even install my ASUS WebStorage, which costs far less for storage than Microsoft’s OneDrive. Had to switch out of S Mode (yes that is an option but only one way) to a standard Mode to set this computer up so I can actually accomplish work.
Get the computer, dump S Mode, unless all your programs come from Microsoft.