Curated by THEOUTPOST
On Thu, 16 Jan, 12:05 AM UTC
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I'm a veteran laptop reviewer. Here are my top 10 laptops of CES 2025.
It was a treat to see dozens of laptops that debuted at CES a few years ago return to the show floor, further refined thanks to chip architecture and power efficiency advances. My years as a laptop reviewer have been punctuated by CES. Though the first time I attended, I was focused more on gaming desktops and components, I've been laser-focused on laptops since 2020. (What a weird year that was, covering CES remotely with my colleagues.) I've gone hands-on with and reviewed a gamut of laptops announced at CES, from tiny 13-inch productivity machines to massive gaming laptops and even dual-screen convertibles. Every year, a new trend or twist on laptop design is usually carried into the following year. CES 2025 was an amalgamation of all those years I spent holding and typing away on prototypes. (The only thing missing this time was actually being able to see gaming benchmarks.) It was a treat to see dozens upon dozens of laptops that debuted at CES a few years ago return to the show floor, further refined thanks to chip architecture and power efficiency advances. There was a little of everything on display. If I could make a keyword graphic of the laptops that stood out to me the most, it would say thin, light, budget-friendly, unique, powerful, and AI. I'm a teacher skeptical of AI's usefulness in education. But the Thinkpal T100 AI Learning Tablet is the first compelling AI-integrated anything I've seen since the bandwagon left town. It's not designed to -- nor can it -- replace your kid's teacher or tutor. Still, it has a surprising amount of merit as a homework study buddy and seems to incorporate many of the same teaching methodologies I learned when I worked as a 1-to-1 tutor and aide. With AI-integrated software and a camera, it analyzes your kid's math, writing, or reading homework by taking pictures of it. If they got a math problem wrong, the tablet will explain how to get the correct answer. If they mispronounce a word, the tablet will say the proper pronunciation (similar to Duolingo and other language apps). If they don't know what a word means, they can call up its dictionary entry by placing their finger on it. The ThinkPal tablet also connects to popular apps like Google Classroom and YouTube. So if your kid needs to type something in Google Docs or watch a video for homework, they can do that. You can pre-order the Thinkpal T100 AI Learning Tablet for $249. The tablet, plus the optional detachable keyboard, costs $339. If you blinked, you might have missed this laptop at CES. LG first announced its new Gram Pro 16 last year at IFA Berlin 2024, providing more details at the tail end of 2024. But I found it at a tiny booth at the end of an aisle at CES Unveiled. Not only is the Gram Pro 16 the first Copilot+ PC in LG's laptop family, but holy cannoli, it's seriously light for a 16-inch laptop. It weighs 2.73 pounds, is 0.5 inches thick, and has a large 77Wh battery inside. The base model comes configured with an Intel Core Ultra 5 (Lunar Lake), but you can upgrade that to an Ultra 7 or Ultra 9. (All will have integrated Intel Arc graphics.) It will also support up to 32GB of RAM and up to 2TB of SSD storage, but the 144Hz display panel is an LCD, not OLED. There is no word on pricing or availability yet, but if we're lucky, we could have this laptop in our testing lab before the end of Q1. When I think of a blade, I think of something thin and sharp, like a razor. Razer, the company, is known for its sharp-looking gaming laptops, but compared to some of its competitors, it hasn't been quite as thin. This time, its Blade 16 gaming laptop is 32% thinner and 30% lighter than it's been in the past. To put that into context, the 2024 Razer Blade 16 is 0.87 inches thick, but the latest model is 0.59 inches. Just because it's shed some excess chassis doesn't mean Razer skimped on the high-end specs, either. It'll have up to an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 processor, an Nvidia 50-series GPU, a 1440p 240Hz OLED display, and a 90Wr battery. That said, there's no word on the price or release date yet, but if Razer's pricing history is any indication, it will not be cheap. (Probably in the $3,000 range.) Feeling nostalgic for transparent 90s tech? MSI has a brand new, 17-inch budget gaming laptop, the Cyborg A17, showing no need for a portable gaming machine to look boring and ugly. This time, the transparent sections are on the top of the laptop, around the keyboard, and underneath it, making the aesthetic more obvious. (And, of course, the keys are out with RGB lighting.) This laptop can be configured with an Intel Core Ultra 240H or AMD Ryzen 7 260 processor, an Nvidia RTX 50-series GPU, and will have a 1080p IPS display with a 144Hz refresh rate. No word on the release date or pricing yet, but given this is a budget gaming laptop, I'd expect the official price to be somewhere in the $900 range. I've appreciated the Vero line's use of recycled materials and budget-friendly price tag. Acer's newest Vero 16 is no different. This time, the company has incorporated oyster shells into its recycled plastic chassis to boost the overall percentage of recycled materials used in the laptop. The result is a speckled surface that's smoother than previous versions of the Vero. Specifically, Acer says at least 3% of the bottom palm rest and bottom cover are bio-based oyster shell material, while the entire chassis has at least 69% post-consumer recycled plastic (PCR). The rest of the laptop consists of familiar specs: an Intel Core Ultra 7 processor, 16GB RAM, up to 2TB of SSD storage, and a 1200p IPS display with an optional touchscreen. The Vero 16 will be available starting in April 2025 for $800. Typically, when I think of a desktop replacement, I think of a massive laptop with the power of a desktop PC that's harder to upgrade or repair. We still have to crack open our laptops with a screwdriver and hope swapping out components doesn't need a bottle of ibuprofen. But Asus has brought its newest ROG Strix Scar gaming laptop one step closer to a gaming desktop replacement. Like a modern gaming PC desktop case, the bottom panel is removed by sliding a manual switch instead of screws. The dual SSDs and RAM are easily accessible, just a fingertip's depth into the chassis. The SSDs are as easy to remove as they are from an Asus motherboard, as they use the same latched mounting (Q-Latch) system. This new setup also makes it easier to blast dust out of the fans. (Oh yeah -- Asus' new G16 has all the same features.) The Asus ROG Strix Scar G18 should be available on March 31, 2025, and will cost $3,299 for the fully loaded model. For the first version of this gaming tablet to crank out the highest frame rates possible, you'd need Asus' optional RTX 3080 eGPU. That bumped the cost from $1,800 to over $3,000, well beyond an equivalent, high-end gaming laptop. Also, the eGPU used a proprietary connector so you couldn't use it with another laptop. But with those barriers to entry torn down, the ROG Flow Z13 has caught my attention again. Its base model comes configured with an AMD Ryzen AI Max 390, with a 32-core iGPU built on AMD's RDNA 3.5 architecture. That architecture powers the surprisingly excellent gaming performance in the Zenbook S 16 -- and that laptop has half the total number of iGPU cores by comparison! Alongside AMD's improved FSR (resolution upscaling) technology, you likely won't need a discrete graphics card to game on this tablet. (Rumor has it the AMD Strix Halo chips' graphics performance competes with Nvidia's RTX 40-series.) But if you decide you do, Asus will have new eGPUs, up to an RTX 5090, that you can connect it to -- via USB-C. Of course, it will probably cost thousands of dollars, but no more property connector means you can use it with another compatible Windows laptop. The Asus ROG Flow Z13 starts at $2,000 and should be available by the end of March 2025 (Q1). The ROG XG Mobile (eGPU) should be available simultaneously, though Asus has not yet released official pricing. Reviewers, including myself, might have to start rethinking what it means for a laptop to be thin and light. Asus' new Zenbook A14 is so light it feels like there's nothing inside it, like a toddler's "my first laptop" toy. But it's an adult-aged machine made of fancier materials than plastic. The 0.52-inch thick, 2.18-pound A14 chassis houses a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, up to 32GB RAM, up to a 1TB SSD, two USB4 ports (with DisplayPort and power delivery support), one USB-A 3.2 Gen 2, one HDMI 2.1, and an audio jack. That's on top of a 600-nit OLED display and a 70Wh battery, which Asus says lasts up to 32 hours. (Like, what?!) The laptop's outer shelf is crafted from Asus' Ceraluminum material, so it has the same subtle texture as some of the company's newer Zenbooks. The $1,100 Zenbook A14 model, configured with a Snapdragon X processor, 32GB RAM, and a 1TB SSD, should be available in mid-January 2025. A $900 model, configured with a slightly faster Snapdragon X Plus processor, 16GB of RAM, and a 512GB SSD, is scheduled to ship in March 2025 and will be sold exclusively at Best Buy. I still love Lenovo's Yoga Book 9i two years after buying it. But Lenovo's newest model feels like a whole new dual-screen laptop, and upgrading sooner is more tempting than usual. Compared to its predecessors, the new Yoga Book weighs a little less and is a tad slimmer, yet sports a larger 88Wh battery. Its OLED display is larger, too, 14 inches, with a 120Hz refresh rate and 500 nits of max brightness. There are many other excellent features I wish came with the previous versions. The virtual keyboard can now be repositioned and resized with finger gestures. The five-finger tap gesture, which expands a window across both screens, now works regardless of how the displays are positioned. The top end of the keyboard folio stand now folds in two different directions, so the laptop can either stand near-vertical (an original feature) or sit near-flush with your desk (a new feature), making it more comfortable to type or draw while retaining full use of both screens instead of just one. The Yoga Book can be configured with up to 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage space -- but it comes with an Intel Arrow Lake processor (Ultra 255H) instead of Lunar Lake, so it likely will have way more multicore performance by comparison. It should be available in May 2025 for an expected starting price of $1,999, including the laptop, the keyboard with a folio stand, a mouse, a new stylus, a USB dongle, and a carrying pouch for all of it. I didn't believe this 14-inch laptop was a workstation at first. How could something so small and so light have the desktop-like performance needed for heavy workloads? Turns out this ultra-portable powerhouse is an incredible feat of engineering. At the heart of HP's 3.3-pound ZBook 14 Ultra G1a is AMD's Ryzen AI Max+ Pro 395 processor with 128GB of unified memory (RAM that is built into the CPU itself). Like the Ryzen AI 300 series chips, you can allocate a large portion of RAM to the integrated graphics to speed up tasks like 3D image rendering or real-time auto transcription. Combined with its 40-core iGPU, this monster chip could push this ZBook into Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max performance territory or even compete with other workstations configured with Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4060 -- if the ZBook is loaded with top-tier parts, of course. This laptop also features a 2.8K (2880 x 1800) 120Hz OLED touchscreen, up to 4TB of SSD storage, and a bevy of ports. HP hasn't released pricing details yet but says the ZBook 14 Ultra G1a should be available by March 31, 2025.
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Best Windows laptops for 2025 so far: Tested, reviewed, and ranked
Investing in a Windows laptop is much more than finding a suitable MacBook alternative. Today's Windows laptops offer impressive versatility to break free from Apple's sleek but admittedly cookie-cutter mold. Variety is the spice of life when it comes to Windows machines, and thanks to their access to the latest and greatest processors from Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm, you'll be able to cater your computing to suit anything from peak productivity to powerful polygon-pushing performance in games -- especially when paired with Nvidia's newly announced RTX 50-series of discrete GPUs. Our roundup of Windows laptops breezes past the requirements for Microsoft's Windows 11, giving you no cause for concern over Windows 10's October 14, 2025, end-of-support date. Better still, the best Windows laptops will also include some of the best AI PCs and powerful machines that boast NPUs (Neural Processing Units) for further performance and efficiency gains. These laptops deliver the kind of battery life magic that once seemed exclusive to Apple's M-series MacBooks. Still, they also unlock the full potential of the Windows platform through impressive Copilot+ PC exclusive features and tools for smarter multitasking and AI-assisted creation. If you want multitasking muscle, AI-backed assistance, or beyond console-grade gaming graphics, it's a Windows laptop you're looking for. The Asus Zenbook S 14 (UX5406) is currently our pick for the best AI PC laptop, but it deserves more praise than that. It features the new Intel Core Ultra 200V series processor and even at its full price of $1,499, you are getting a compelling balance of performance, almost 14-hours of battery life, a stunning 14-inch OLED display, plus 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. Run whatever AI, productivity, or creative software you want and the Zenbook S14 should remain a multi-tasking machine on the go. In our review, staff writer Madeline Ricchiuto writes, "From its stunning design to its vivid OLED display panel, there's plenty to appreciate about the Asus Zenbook S 14." In our Laptop Mag battery test the Asus Zenbook S 14 lasted 13 hours and 51 minutes, which should let you leave the charger at home even for your worst day of work, school, or play. Speaking of on the go advantages, the Zenbook's scratch-resistant Ceraluminum ultralight chassis should keep it looking brand new even if you tote it everywhere with you. If you care about your laptops visuals, the Zenbook S 14's 3K (2,880 x 1,800) OLED display will leave you very happy. It is vividly colorful, capturing 82% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, which is an excellent result for the typically low-scoring OLED, and at 342 nits of brightness, it will hold up well in brightly lit environments. Unlike many ultraportables, the Zenbook S 14 doesn't skimp on the port selection with a pair of Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports, a USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port, an HDMI 2.1 port, and a 3.5mm headphone/mic jack. That should cover most people's needs and it throws down the gauntlet for ultrabooks that went USB-C/Thunderbolt-only. If you have greater performance needs, then something like the MacBook Air 13 M3 may be the answer at a similar size and weight, or if you are looking for a business-focused ultraportable, the Asus ExpertBook P5 is a strong choice. However, for a solid blend of performance, battery life, and price in a compact package the Zenbook S 14 is a standout choice. Acer's Swift Go 14 is the obvious choice for the best budget laptop right now. At a mere $749, it isn't the cheapest laptop, but none can match it in terms of value for money. While Laptop Mag reviewed the slightly upgraded $999 configuration, the main trade-off is moving from an Intel Core Ultra 7 155H to a Core Ultra 5 125H. If you stick to productivity work, browsing, and other general computing, you won't likely notice. The Go 14 weighs in at just 2.9 pounds. The metallic all-aluminum chassis gives off a faint sparkle that looks and feels far more premium than its price. Popping it open, the contrasting black chiclet-style backlit keyboard looks and feels excellent. Acer also gives you ports aplenty on this portable laptop with two Thunderbolt 4 ports, two USB Type-A ports, an HDMI port, a microSD card slot, a 3.5mm audio jack, and a Kensington lock slot. The display's color gamut is just below the mainstream average at 79.1 percent of the DCI-P3 (85.2 percent is average), but it beats the category average in brightness at 374 nits (354 is average). If you value a sharper image, you could also opt for the 2.8K display configuration. Performance with our review model was everything we've come to expect from the latest Intel Core Ultra. Our Geekbench 6.2 overall performance test scored 12,434, overtaking more expensive options like the MacBook Air M3 (12,087). It also scorched the competition for our Handbrake video encoding test at 5 minutes and 18 seconds, almost four full minutes under the category average (9:07), again besting the MacBook Air M3 (7:54). So what are the drawbacks? The battery life isn't bad, at 9 hours and 50 minutes in our testing, but it is well below top options like the MacBook Air M3 (15:21) or the Asus Zenbook 14 OLED (15:52). If you frequently travel or otherwise have difficulty plugging in, this could affect your decision. The built-in speakers are also less than stellar, so plan on some wireless headphones or earbuds. However, these are minor concerns for most users, so if you are looking for the best laptop value, consider the Acer Swift Go 14. See our full Acer Swift 14 Go (Intel Core Ultra) review More like this: Best budget laptops 2025 Asus has been on a roll with the Zenbook 14 OLED line for a few years, so it is no longer a surprise that this early 2024 Zenbook takes yet another significant leap forward. This is in no small part due to the new Intel Core Ultra chipset inside, which puts the Zenbook 14 OLED on par with any productivity and light content creation laptops on the market. It also absolutely blew the roof off our battery life test, with 15 hours and 52 minutes in our test. That's the longest a traditional Windows laptop has lasted in recent memory. Divining into some of the specifics on performance, it overtook the 13-inch MacBook Air M3 in multi-core Geekbench 6.2 (12,707 vs. 12,087). That wasn't its only win against the much-vaunted MacBook. The Zenbook also beat it in our Handbrake 1.6 test by converting a 4K video to 1080p in 6:36, over a minute faster than the Air M3's 7:54. The OLED display looks excellent in person, but the benchmarking put it in the middle of the road when it comes to the DCI-P3 color gamut at 79.8 percent, that's below the mainstream average of 85.2 percent and just slightly ahead of the MacBook Air M3 (77.8 percent). It is extremely color accurate with a Delta-E of 0.21, relevant for content creators. Display brightness is a weak point against its competition at 339 nits, which is not a terrible result, but it's something we want to see Asus address for the next model. The Zenbook weighs 3 pounds, not exactly an ultralight, but not something that will weigh you down too much when you're going from class to class or while commuting. Overall, the Zenbook 14 OLED ticks just about every box we like to see for a student laptop while going above and beyond with its performance and battery life. This laptop should comfortably last through four years of college or for a high school student preparing to head to college in the next year or two. See our full Asus Zenbook 14 OLED (Q425M) review More like this: Best laptops for college 2024 The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (Gen 9) kicks the old challengers to the curb with its powerful Intel Core i9-14900HX processor and an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 GPU with 12GB of VRAM. While performance is a big factor for a great gaming laptop, it isn't the only factor, the bright and vivid display, loud audio, and responsive keyboard make for an unbeatable combo. Did I mention you can often find it for less than $2,500 directly from Lenovo. In our review, staff writer Madeline Ricchiuto said, "The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i is a gamer's gaming laptop," which nicely sums up this outstanding, but not overpriced choice for gamers. Let's dig into the details and our extensive testing of this laptop a bit. The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i averaged 105 frames per second on the Far Cry 6 (Ultra, 1080p) benchmark, which was enough to inch past the MSI Vector 16 HX (98 fps) and its previous gen (97 fps) but blew past the Alienware X16 R2 (88 fps). The Red Dead Redemption 2 (Medium, 1080p) benchmark kept things closer, with the Pro 7i at 96 fps, the Vector 16 at 104 fps, the X16 R2 at 90 fps, and the Pro 7i Gen 8 at 69 fps. Don't ignore the display when buying a gaming laptop, it's almost as much of the experience as the performance. Lenovo certainly heeded our guidance there with the glorious 16-inch, 2560 x 1600, 240Hz panel delivering an amazing 108.7% of the DCI-P3 color gamut and 456 nits of brightness. This is as immersive as it gets without putting on a VR headset. If you are regularly gaming on the go then a good keyboard is crucial as well, and the widely spaced keys combined with a crisp and springy actuation force will allow you to avoid packing a cumbersome gaming keyboard. While the best gaming headset is still worth purchasing for online gaming, if you are strictly worried about audio output, the Legion Pro 7i offers the Harman Super Linear Speaker System. Packed with two woofers, two tweeters, and a smart amp, it's a strong standalone acoustic experience. At nearly 6 pounds, the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i Gen 9 is a little heavier than we'd like, and the 4 hours and 29 minutes of battery life aren't going to win any awards either, but if you want maximum performance, you'll need to keep it plugged in anyway. The Intel Core Ultra version of the HP Spectre x360 14 takes everything we've loved about this laptop line in recent years and turns it up a notch. In addition to the useful 2-in-1 form factor, it has a gorgeous 2.8K OLED touchscreen display for creating or viewing content. The laptop weighs 3.2 pounds, which is pretty light for a 14-inch 2-in-1. However, thanks to Intel's power-sipping CPU, it still crushed our battery life test, with over 11 hours on a single charge! That's one of the best results we've ever seen from a 2-in-1. Despite its frugal battery usage, the Intel Core Ultra and Arc GPU blew our reviewer away, putting up better Geekbench and 3D Mark results than many heavier clamshell laptops. So why isn't it perfect? While the display is bright and colorful, we've seen better benchmarks from competitors. However, the rest of the package makes it impossible to argue with the HP Spectre x360 14 as the best 2-in-1 around, which is why the notebook earned 4.5 stars and our coveted Editor's Choice award. See our full HP Spectre x360 14 (2024) review More like this: Best 2-in-1 laptops 2024 The Dell XPS 13 9345 is the first generation of Copilot+ PCs powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon X Elite chipset. This gives you access to various AI-fueled Windows features that promise to enhance your laptop's work and play. Even if you aren't sold on the AI revolution just yet, this laptop offers a potent combination of features. The battery life is the undeniable star of this show, coming in at 19 hours and 1 minute and an even more astounding 20 hours and 51 minutes after we installed the BIOS 1.7.0 update. The average premium laptop reached 11 hours and 13 minutes in this test. If you are a student or a frequent traveler who needs to stay powered up on the go, the Dell XPS 13 9345 is unmatched. Lest you think that battery life comes from a power-sipping processor, the Snapdragon X Elite also delivers an incredible 14,635 multi-core score in the Geekbench 6.3 overall performance test. That obliterates the premium laptop average of 8,927 and its nearest competitors like the MacBook Air M3 (12,087) or Zenbook 14 (12,707). It's not the perfect laptop, though. Two ports will leave some users searching for a docking station or USB-C hub. The display is rather dull, at just 66.9% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, and our reviewer found the keyboard cramped. While the Dell XPS 13 9345 remains the longest-lasting laptop we recommend to most people, if you are in the market for a business laptop, the Lenovo ThinkPad T14S Gen 6 narrowly outlasted it at 21 hours and 3 minutes. See our full Dell XPS 13 9345 (Snapdragon X Elite) review More like this: Laptops with the best battery life in 2024 The Asus ExpertBook P5 is a near-perfect business laptop that covers the needs of 99% of business users at an affordable price. The feature list includes a fast and efficient new Intel Core Ultra 7 258V processor, over 14 hours of battery life, a 144Hz display, all the RAM a multi-tasker could need, and enough ports for you to skip the USB-C hub or docking station. In our review of the ExpertBook P5 (P5405), our managing editor, Sean Riley, said: "The 144Hz refresh rate is the most eye-catching spec...if you spend all day on your laptop, it is easier on your eyes as it reduces the almost imperceptible flicker of your laptop display." Combine this with the 465 nits of brightness, and you have one of the most formidable business laptop displays around. The new Intel processor and ample RAM make the Asus ExpertBook P5 a productivity workhorse if you use a typical combination of office apps and browser-based tasks. Suppose you need more robust performance for photo or video work, 3D rendering, on-device LLMs, or similar tasks. In that case, you may consider an affordable workstation like the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 or one of the best laptops for Photoshop. To put the ExpertBook P5's performance in perspective, it scored 11,259 in our lab's Geekbench 6 overall performance test. That's roughly 9% higher than the average premium laptop's score of 10,308 but 7-12% behind some of its competitors like the Asus Zenbook S 14, MacBook Air M3, and HP EliteBook Ultra. That's close enough that performance alone shouldn't tip you to them over the ExpertBook P5. Another highlight of the ExpertBook P5 is the webcam. If you are regularly on video calls, you'll appreciate its color accuracy and sharp focus. No more toting around one of the best webcams in your bag. The ExpertBook P5 also has excellent thermal management, so it won't scorch you if you need to work from your laptop or on a plane. After playing back a video for 15 minutes, the hottest temperature recorded on it was 95.4 degrees Fahrenheit. By comparison, the HP Elite x360 1040 G11 reached 103.1 degrees on the underside. The Zenbook S 14 and Zenbook S 16 reached 97.7 and 105.5, respectively, and the Dell XPS 13 reached an alarming 120. See our full Asus ExpertBook P5 review. We review new laptops every week, but we don't make the best laptop selections lightly, so there aren't weekly changes to our picks. Here's a look at our recently reviewed laptops that didn't make the cut for this page, some were still excellent, while others missed the mark completely. Over a year, we review over 100 laptops, covering every price point and use case. Whether you're looking for a productivity workhorse, a badass gaming system, or a multimedia machine to kick back and watch a movie or two, we can help you find your ideal match. To make our best laptops of 2025v list, the system needs to score at least 4 out of 5 stars on our reviews and deliver on the things shoppers care about most. Our evaluations focus on design and comfort, display quality, keyboard and touchpad, performance, battery life, and value. Our expert reviewers also test each product to see how it looks, feels, and performs in everyday situations. Because we see so many different notebooks, we can compare each to its direct competitors and give you an idea of how it compares to the average laptop in its price band. When we bring a laptop into our laboratory, we aim to see how it would work if you brought it into your home or office. While we use industry-standard benchmarks such as Geekbench and 3DMark, we focus heavily on real-world tests that we have developed in-house. To test endurance, the Laptop Mag Battery test surfs the web at 150 nits of brightness until the system runs out of juice. We use a giant spreadsheet macro that matches 65,000 names with their addresses to judge pure processing power, the Handbrake video transcoder converts a 4K video to 1080p, and the Geekbench 6 synthetic test. We measure graphics prowess with both 3DMark Ice Storm / Fire Strike and a series of games, including Assassin's Creed: Mirage, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, and Red Dead Redemption 2, just to name a few. We use a colorimeter to measure screen brightness and color gamut, while other instruments help us determine a laptop's key travel and ambient heat. For more details on our benchmarking procedures, see this page on how we test laptops. Laptop Mag reviews over a hundred laptops annually, from paperweight ultralights to everyday workhorses to lumbering gaming notebooks that scorch the frame rates of even the hottest AAA games. We're not just experts in the laptop field; we go one step further by meticulously testing smartphones, tablets, headphones, PC accessories, software, and even the latest gaming technology. We are 100% independent and have decades of experience to help you buy with confidence. Laptop Mag has been testing and reviewing products for three decades and continues to deliver trustworthy reviews you can rely on. Our experienced team of writers and editors scour all information about the laptop and put it through its paces to determine which is best for you. But before they start, the testing team subjects each system to a rigorous regimen of synthetic and real-world tests to see how a system handles the type of work and games you're most likely to throw at it. Future Publishing, one of the world's largest technology publishers, enforces our editorial trustworthiness. As a company, we have unrivaled experience across every tech sector -- and we're the group's specialist for all things mobile tech.
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The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025 unveils a range of innovative laptops and tablets with AI integration, emphasizing trends in lightweight design, power efficiency, and educational technology.
The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025 has once again proven to be a showcase for cutting-edge technology, with a particular focus on AI-integrated laptops and tablets. Industry experts and reviewers have noted significant advancements in chip architecture and power efficiency, leading to refined and innovative designs 1.
One of the standout devices at the event was the ThinkPal T100 AI Learning Tablet, which has garnered attention for its potential in educational settings. Priced at $249 for the base model and $339 with a detachable keyboard, this tablet incorporates AI-integrated software and a camera to analyze students' homework 1. The device offers features such as:
LG's Gram Pro 16 made waves at CES 2025 for its impressive combination of power and portability. Key features include:
The laptop's integration of Copilot+ PC marks LG's entry into the AI-enhanced computing space 1.
Razer has pushed the boundaries of gaming laptop design with its latest Blade 16 model:
These specifications promise high-performance gaming in a more portable form factor 1.
CES 2025 has highlighted several key trends in the laptop and tablet market:
AI Integration: Devices like the ThinkPal T100 and LG Gram Pro 16 showcase the growing importance of AI in consumer electronics 1.
Sustainability: Acer's Vero 16 laptop incorporates recycled materials, including oyster shells, demonstrating a commitment to eco-friendly design 1.
Performance and Portability: The Razer Blade 16 and LG Gram Pro 16 exemplify the industry's push towards powerful yet lightweight devices 1.
Budget-Friendly Options: MSI's Cyborg A17 gaming laptop aims to provide affordable gaming performance with a unique transparent design 1.
Looking beyond CES, the Windows laptop market is evolving to meet diverse consumer needs. Key developments include:
As the industry continues to innovate, consumers can expect Windows laptops to offer increasingly sophisticated AI integration, improved performance, and enhanced user experiences in the coming years.
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