Skip to main content

Asus Dresses up Notebooks in Bamboo

Asus Dresses up Notebooks in Bamboo

It looks like Asus’ fabled wood notebooks that have shown up at trade shows and on blog postings in the past will actually turn out to be more than just concepts and prototypes – they’re finally coming out for consumers. On Friday, the company announced its Asus Bamboo Series Notebook, a machine clad, as the name implies, in bamboo rather than plastic.

Although Asus selected bamboo for its sustainability (it can grow up to 12 inches in a single day,) it’s also pushing the material’s natural feel and tactility for notebook buyers. The company claims the bamboo cladding lends the notebook an “aura of spirituality, warmth and old world charm,” which must be more than can be said ABS plastic, anyway.

It’s no normal notebook inside, either. Asus has added its own proprietary Super Hybrid Engine, which supposedly cuts down power usage by 35 to 75 percent over comparable notebooks by monitoring hardware power requirements and adjusting them on the fly. Asus’ press release also claims it allows users to boost performance by 23 percent, but doesn’t elaborate on just how this happens.

The Bamboo Series will come in both 12.1- and 11.1-inch variants, weighing 3.46lbs and 2.76lbs, respectively. Hardware will vary slightly with each version, but both will get Intel Core 2 Duo processors, DDR2 RAM, and LED-backlit displays.

Asus has not yet announced a final release date or retail pricing for the machines.

Editors' Recommendations

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
Best gaming laptop deals: Alienware, Razer, Asus and more
An Alienware m16 gaming laptop in use on a desk, playing Baldur's Gate III.

If you're thinking of picking up a new gaming laptop, there are actually a lot of excellent choices out there, with some huge advances in the last few years that have made them thinner, more powerful, and even cheaper. In fact, some of the best gaming laptops can even compete with the best gaming desktops, so there are a lot of options out there depending on your budget and your needs. Either way, pretty much most modern laptops you buy will be able to play the best PC games without too much of a hassle.

To help you with picking something great, we've found deals from some of the best laptop brands and include Lenovo laptop deals, Acer laptop deals, Dell laptop deals, and HP laptop deals, although if you're looking for some more general deals, these laptop deals have some good options, too.
MSI Bravo 15 -- $750, was $1,000

Read more
Asus is axing one major feature with the ROG Ally X
The Asus ROG Ally X playing Armored Core VI.

Asus is giving up on one of the most unique aspects of the ROG Ally with its new model. The ROG Ally X is official, and as a string of teases and leaks suggested, it overhauls Asus' handheld gaming PC in every way. In the process of upgrading the device, though, Asus gave up on its XG Mobile ecosystem that made the original device stand out so much.

The original ROG Ally includes a large, proprietary connector for one of Asus' external XG Mobile GPUs. This allowed you to connect the handheld to a more powerful graphics card, as well as a slew of I/O (input/output), with a single cable. As we discovered while testing the XG Mobile, it doesn't work quite the way you'd expect. Driver conflicts don't give you the seamless experience Asus promised, and Asus is finally recognizing that fact.

Read more
Maybe Google hasn’t given up on Google Glass after all
Two people wear Magic Leap 2 AR headsets.

A close-up shot shows a person wearing Google Glass. Google

Google has been researching AR glasses for many years, but we’ve yet to see a consumer product launch. The backlash against the short-lived Google Glass Explorer Edition seems to have made the search giant overly cautious when it comes to consumer smart glasses.

Read more