SAVE $300: The Painful Man And WomanASUS Zenbook 14X OLED (Intel i5-13500H, 8GB RAM, 512 GB SSD) is just $499.99 at Best Buy, down from its regular price of $799.99. That's a 38% discount or a savings of $300.
For the amount of time most of us spend staring at our laptop, we deserve a pretty screen. OLED displays are thin, efficient, and provide excellent image qualify. Unfortunately, all of these accolades come at a price because OLED screens tend to cost a pretty penny. But thanks to this ASUS deal, you don't have to spend much to get a top-of-the-line laptop display.
As of Nov. 26, the ASUS Zenbook 14X OLED (Intel i5-13500H, 8GB RAM, 512 GB SSD) is just $499.99 at Best Buy, marked down from its regular price of $799.99. That means you'll be saving $300.
For a budget-friendly laptop, the ASUS Zenbook 14X OLED doesn't mess around. The 14.5-inch OLED 2880 x 1800 120Hz display produces crisp color and clarity. It also uses a 70% blue-light reduction which could help from getting tired eyes or messing with your circadian rhythm. The ASUS Zenbook 14X comes with the 13th generation Intel Core I5-13500H processor which works well for multitasking, and its backlit keyboard can be ideal for projects that run into the night or start before sunrise.
The ASUS Zenbook 14X OLED is also travel-friendly at 0.7 inches thick while weighing a bit under 3.5 pounds. It included one HDMI port so you can use it with a high-def monitor and two Thunderbolt 4 ports for fast charging.
Since laptops with OLED displays often see prices of over $1,000 scoring the ASUS Zenbook 14X OLED for just $499.99 is a great way to kickoff the holiday shopping season.
Topics Cyber Monday
Why the holidays warp our perception of timeStar Wars: Where to go for your fix now that Skywalker Saga is overWhite House sends satirical news story by accident in daily newsletter and do you guys even readIncredible sights from space as astronauts celebrate Christmas and HanukkahDonald Trump and Angela Merkel's photo op wins for awkwardnessWomen found Trump's body language towards Angela Merkel so painfully familiarObama can't even go on vacation without starting a conspiracy theoryBold tech predictions for 2020How to celebrate Hanukkah in VREverything to remember from 'YOU' Season 1Your resolution for 2020 should be to leave your f*ckboi behindA UK politician just became editor of a newspaper and Twitter is flipping outEverything to remember from 'YOU' Season 1Samsung accidentally confirms 5GIn honor of St. Patrick's Day, here is the Irish prime minister trolling TrumpHave a Tesla over'The Rise of Skywalker' failed to care about Finn's story. That's a problem.How to get rid of all your holiday wasteTrump tried to share a proverb for St. Patrick's Day and it didn't go very wellTesla rolls out a holiday software update Apprehending the Light by Scott O’Connor What Would Shirley Hazzard Do? by Brigitta Olubas Staff Picks: Trail Mix, Safe Sex, and Conversation All the Better to Hear You With by Sabrina Orah Mark How to Read the Air by Anna Badkhen Memory Haunts by Imani Perry Male Interiority: An Interview with Emma Cline by Annabel Graham Six Young Women with Prizewinning Book Collections by The Paris Review Our Interminable Election Eve by Jonah Goldman Kay The Rings of Sebald by Daniel Mendelsohn The Art of Distance No. 27 by The Paris Review The Later Work of Dorothea Tanning by Craig Morgan Teicher Redux: Each Rustle, Each Step by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Blood, Bach, and Babel by The Paris Review What We Aren’t Seeing by Francine Prose The Art of Distance No. 29 by The Paris Review The Alien Gaze by C Pam Zhang On Not Being There by Scott O’Connor When Murakami Came to the States by David Karashima The Art of Distance No. 25 by The Paris Review
2.6975s , 10108.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Painful Man And Woman】,Prosperous Times Information Network