ASUS U35Jc: Jogging in Place
by Dustin Sklavos on September 30, 2010 3:00 AM ESTThe More Things Change...
...the more they stay the same. The ASUS U35Jc seems to be in many ways a series of trade-offs with the U30Jc, and that's disappointing because it really should have just been an improvement. The U35Jc sports a slightly faster processor, sheds a pound of weight thanks to ditching the optical drive, has a slimmer body, and marginally improved backlighting on the screen. Unfortunately, it also boasts a lower battery life and a mobile GPU with a lower memory speed on an already overworked 64-bit bus. If you opt to enable the ASUS "Super Hybrid Engine" which locks the processor speed at a pretty low setting, you can probably mitigate the battery issue somewhat, but we didn't need that on the U30Jc to post better numbers.
Taken on its own, the U35Jc can be pretty tempting. The keyboard is comfortable and sensible, and the brushed aluminum cover is both attractive and functional. Build quality is solid, and frankly the machine is damn light. You get excellent battery life—nearly six hours surfing the internet—and the performance is there to do just about anything you want with it. ASUS achieves what they set out to: build an ultraportable with good performance and good battery life without tipping the scales.
The problem is that the U35Jc can't be taken on its own. Notebooks aren't designed in a vacuum, and seeing gripes we had with the U30Jc go largely unanswered in the U35Jc results in the same kinds of issues Jarred brought up recently in his review of the ASUS N82Jv: it's hard to recommend something when it seems like the company is just standing still. ASUS took the optical drive out of the U30Jc, moved a couple things around, and called it a new model. Alternately, they took the slimmer U35Jc, and then stripped off the bamboo, USB3, and WiDi. Either way, that's not what progress looks like.
As a result, the only copelling reason to choose the U35Jc over the U30Jc is if the extra pound and slightly larger size of the U30Jc are a huge deal to you. For about the same money, you lose a negligible 133 MHz on the processor and gain an optical drive (an optical drive that ASUS turns off while running on the battery anyhow). The U35Jc is more of the same at a time when we were already fairly happy with what they produced. It's a product that retains the nagging issues of its predecessor and in many ways offers less. Is it a bad laptop? Certainly not; it's a decent laptop but next time we want to see some real improvement.
What we'd like to see is the U30Jc and/or U35Jc, with an improved LCD, USB 3.0, and a GeForce GT 415M. $900 to $1000 for such a system would be more than acceptable, because LCD quality really does matter. The U35Jc is fairly priced at $800, with good build quality and reasonable performance. It's just that it should have launched simultaneously with the U30Jc and left the decision of size/weight and the optical drive up to the user six months ago. Today, it's 95% the same as its predecessor, only six months late (five months since the laptop first started shipping).
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Evleos - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
I believe the 84wh battery belong to the black model, which also got a 640gb harddrive. The model you got (cheaper, different product number) got an 8-cell 64wh battery.Evleos - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
U35JC-RX040V = the one you got.U35JC-RX070V = the one with 84wh battery.
JarredWalton - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
http://images.anandtech.com/galleries/795/asus-u35...jonup - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
The battery on the picture says 15V*5600mAh => 84WhWhen I first looked at the spec table it says 11.1V => 11.1*5600mAh=62Wh<84Wh
Either way something does not make sence. I see other people caught up to that too.
... continuing reading...
JarredWalton - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
I see. Fixed the table now.XiZeL - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
here in portugal all u30jc models come with a i5 450m CPU , wouldnt that reduce battery life (8 cels: 5600 mAh)neoflux - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
I think you mean Intel Wireless DISPLAY (http://www.intel.com/consumer/products/technology/...:D
SteelCity1981 - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
1gb of Ram on that GeForce 310m card that only supports 64bit bus is nothing more then a marketing gimmick towards novice gamers that don't know alot about gaming hardware.JarredWalton - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
Sorry... blame the editor on that one. I usually say "WiDi" and somehow got the wrong words when I typed it out. :)Tros - Thursday, September 30, 2010 - link
I disagree:Right-arrow key smack-dab next to "End".
Enter, a slip-away from Pg-Dn.
That entire "scroll-control" section needs to go back to IBM-style, in the upper-right corner, where it's guaranteed the same feel-based-clarity as the lower-left side of the keyboard.
Or they could borrow the idea of using fn and the arrow-keys as scroll controls.
I really don't see mimicking the right side of the keyboard as the right-side of your trackpad as intelligent.