![]() ![]() The Dial works well, but its placement highlights a design flaw. More generally, the Dial is controlled with the ProArt Creator Hub utility, just one of several apps bundled with the Studiobook. In addition, the Dial mimics the Microsoft Wheel and can be controlled using the Microsoft Wheel settings page. When apps like those in Adobe’s Creative Suite are front and center, the Dial provides a wider variety of functionality, such as changing brush size, zooming, changing brightness and contrast, and more. When it’s just Windows, the Dial allows changing brightness and volume. Speaking of the Asus Dial, that’s a peripheral that looks just like it sounds, a dial that’s pressed down to activate various functionality based on which apps are in the foreground. The Asus Dial set below the keyboard on the left side adds a bit of futurism to an otherwise basic design. Or, it would if not for the Intel, Nvidia, and Asus logo badges on the lower left, which I hate to see on such an expensive laptop. The palm rest and keyboard deck blend in together, and just some status lights in a notch cut into the palm rest add anything to break it up. The Studiobook’s aesthetic is more laid back, with a solid black color scheme and a simple embossed ProArt logo on the lid. Anyone concerned about avoiding bacterial infection can take heart but note that the coating does nothing to protect against viruses like COVID-19. Asus has applied its antimicrobial coating to the keyboard, palm rest, and touchpad, which kills 99% of bacteria. The Studiobook feels like a premium laptop and one that’s built for serious work. Unsurprisingly, given the heavy chassis, the hinge opens with one hand and remains in place while working with just the tiniest wobble. The all-aluminum Studiobook is built like a tank, just as rigid in its lid and chassis as the standard for great build quality, Apple’s MacBook Pro. It’s not terribly heavy for a large laptop at 5.29 pounds, but that’s still a pound heavier than the Dell XPS 15. Compared to the Dell XPS 17, it’s almost an inch deeper despite having a smaller display, and it’s quite a bit thicker at up to 0.94 inches compared to the XPS 17’s 0.77 inches. The ProArt Studiobook 16 OLED is a large laptop thanks to a chassis that extends beyond the display. A laptop made for creators Mark Coppock / Digital Trends For example, a similarly configured Dell XPS 17 is considerably more expensive at $3,749. That makes the laptop a premium machine but not overly expensive for a portable creator’s workstation. The review unit was the high-end configuration, priced at $3,000, with 64GB of RAM, a 2TB SSD, and an Nvidia RTX 3000 Ada GPU. The ProArt Studiobook 16 OLED starts at $2,000 for an Intel Core i9-19380HX CPU, 16GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 GPU, and a 16-inch OLED display. There are a lot of people with other laptop brands with the same problem.14.02 inches x 10.67 inches x 0.82-0.94 inchesġ6.0-inch 16:10 3.2K (3200 x 2000) OLED, 120Hzġ080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello I think this is a general issue with the Intel HD graphics drivers, for those who have switchable AMD graphics. If this doesn't work, try installing the latest Intel drivers either from Intel or from HP and set the key again. I did however have the latest drivers installed from Intel. I didn't need to uninstall drivers or anything. Set it to 0000ffff (if this doesn't work, try 0000f940)Īnd that's it. Note the original value just in case you need to set it back (my original value was 0000f000) Mine was located here: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Control\Class\\0000 Open the registry editor (regedit.exe) and find the FeatureTestControl value. This is what fixed it for me, described in this website ( ) posted earlier in this thread. I know some people have the issue that there is no option to change the brightness at all. I have the problem where changing the brightness has no effect (ie - the brightness scroll bars move, but brightness doesn't change). Business PCs, Workstations and Point of Sale Systems.Printer Wireless, Networking & Internet.DesignJet, Large Format Printers & Digital Press.Printing Errors or Lights & Stuck Print Jobs.Notebook Hardware and Upgrade Questions.
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