This week ASUS has introduced its ZenBook Flip UX360CA convertible notebooks, the company’s first ZenBook with 360° hinge based on the Skylake-based Intel Core M processor. The system sports a 13.3” display in FHD or QHD, an ultra-thin design, and a 54 Wh battery: an impressive combo for a machine running an ultra-low-power CPU. What is important is that the price of the new ZenBook Flip will not break the bank.

ASUS was one of the first manufacturers to introduce convertible laptops with 360°-rotatable display hinge several years ago. The company’s VivoBook Flip notebooks are positioned as the entry-level convertibles, whereas the current ASUS ZenBook Flip high-end machines are positioned as performance workhorses aimed at professionals, equipped with Core i7 processors, high-resolution displays and lots of memory. By contrast, the new ZenBook Flip UX360CA sits somewhere between: it features a Core M CPU, moderate specs and relatively affordable pricing, something that consumers will be glad to see.

The ASUS ZenBook Flip UX360CA is based on the dual-core Intel Core M processors (the Core m3-6Y30, the Core m5-6Y54 or the Core m7-6Y75) with two Skylake cores, ninth-generation of Intel's integrated graphics (HD 515, Gen9), and SpeedShift technology. The processors run in 'cTDP Up' mode, which pushes their power consumption to 7W for an increase in base and turbo frequencies (the MacBook does this). Due to the Core M line of processors, the ZenBook Flip UX360CA is a fanless design, hence, it should be quiet. The systems come equipped with 8 GB of LPDDDR3-1866 memory as well as 128 GB, 256 GB or 512 GB of storage using SATA M.2 SSDs. Depending on configuration, the ZenBook Flip UX360CA may be equipped with a QHD+ (3200×1800) or a FHD (1920×1080) touch-sensitive display panel with 72% NTSC and full sRGB color gamut.

As for input/output capabilities, the ZenBook Flip UX360CA offers everything one would expect from a modern laptop: a 3.5mm connector for headsets, two 1.6 W speakers, an array of microphones, two USB 3.0 Type-A ports, one USB 3.0 (5 Gbps) Type-C port (with quick-charging capability for smartphones), one SDXC card reader, a 720p webcam, one micro-HDMI output, dual-band 2x2 802.11ac Wi-Fi as well as Bluetooth 4.1.

ASUS ZenBook Flip UX360CA at a Glance
  General Specifications
CPU SKU Intel Core
m3-6Y30
Intel Core
m5-6Y54
Intel Core
m7-6Y75
7W cTDP Up
Base 1.1 GHz 1.2 GHz 1.3 GHz
Turbo 2.2 GHz  2.7 GHz  3.1 GHz
GPU SKU Intel HD Graphics 515 (GT2)
24 EUs, Gen 9
Base 300 MHz
Turbo 850 MHz 900 MHz  950 MHz
DRAM 4 GB (optional) or 8 GB LPDDR3-1866
SATA
M.2 SSD
128 GB
256 GB
512 GB
Display 13.3-inch 3200×1800
13.3-inch 1920×1080
Ports 1 × TRRS
2 × USB 3.0 Type-A
1 × USB 3.0 Type-C
1 × micro HDMI
1 × SD card reader
1 × AC adapter plug
Network 2x2 802.11ac with BT 4.1
Battery 3-cell, 54 Whr
Dimensions H: 13.9 mm/0.55 inches
W: 323 mm/12.71 inches
D:  220mm/8.66 inches
Weight 1.3 kilograms/2.866 lbs
Colors Icicle Gold
Mineral Grey
Price UX360CA-DBM1T: Intel Core m3-6Y30, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD, FHD $699
UX360CA-DBM2T: Intel Core m3-6Y30, 8 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, FHD $799

Like other ZenBook notebooks, the ZenBook Flip UX360CA is thin (13.9 mm/0.55 inches), light (1.3 kilograms/2.866 lbs) and made of aluminum with concentric circle design on the display lid. The system is also equipped with a 3-cell 54 Whr battery rated to enable up to 12 hours of battery life.

One of the most important aspects of the ZenBook Flip UX360CA with FHD touchscreen is its price: $699 for the model (UX360CA-DBM1T) with 256 GB SSD and $799 for the model (UX360CA-DBM2T) with 512 GB SSD. These models are available with Mineral Grey finish. The more expensive models with QHD+ displays feature Icicle Gold or Mineral Grey styles and will be more expensive when they become available.

Source: ASUS

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  • Qiasfah - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    Interesting that this laptop has an AC power plug. Does it support charging the laptop through the Type-C connector?
  • Geranium - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    Bezel under the screen looks ugly. But spec is good for a light laptop.
  • nirolf - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    Maybe, but other than that the specs look really good.I see no big compromise, a good price. I want to see a review on this one!
  • Impulses - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    With too little bezel there it'd probably be too close to the surface it lays on when the keyboard is facing down (left mode of the trio pictured).
  • WorldWithoutMadness - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    The screen looks like a tablet slapped unto a weird metal case with some plastics to secure it.
  • Impulses - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    Larger battery than the now classic UX305 (still a great value), better arrangement of ports, even more config options, plus the 360 hinge... For basically the same price? Looks like an instant winner unless they screw something up badly or I'm missing something.
  • Impulses - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    Personally I'd still like to see dedicated Page Up/Down keys or a right hand Fn button... Am I the only one bugged by needing two hands to use Page Up/Down on a laptop?
  • Impulses - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    I goes on the former 305 you can currently get an m5 or better with a lower TDP for that same price, so there's that trade-off.
  • ImSpartacus - Friday, July 8, 2016 - link

    That's a good way to put it. This one is probably one to watch.
  • Roland00Address - Saturday, July 9, 2016 - link

    Not the $699 model, but a cheaper model is going to only have 4gbs of ram instead of 8gb standard on the UX305 based off the table Anandtech posted.

    Now the question if they do release a 4gb model will they still stick with the Core m3 6Y30 cpu or will they downgrade to the Skylake Pentium 4405Y which is a drop in replacement using the same motherboards and everything as the m3 6Y30.

    What is the pentium 4405Y you may ask, it is the budget cpu that uses the same motherboard as the m3 6Y30. It is a skylake 1.5 ghz dual core but with hyperthreading (rare but this is the exception to the general rule), with the same graphics as the m3 6Y30. What you gain with the m3 6Y30 is that it can turbo up to 46% faster (2.2 ghz vs 1.5 ghz). Now the list price which is not really what OEMs pay due to volume discounts for the cpus is $281 for the core m3 6Y30 and the m5 6Y54 while the Pentium 4405Y list price before volume discounts is $161 or a 120 dollars cheaper.

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