The 11 Best Laptops Of 2016

Though a smartphone can handle more and more of your daily workload, it still can’t replace a tried-and-true notebook when it’s time to hunker down.

But which to get? That’s the eternal question.

Unfortunately, 2016 didn’t make the answer any clearer. With laptop sales steadily declining, no one manufacturer could get everything right.

While several very good notebooks launched in the last year, there wasn’t One True Laptop you could point to and say “this is the best machine for most people” the way you could about the MacBook Air years ago. Every good notebook seemed to have one or two nagging annoyances — be it missing ports, an awkward design flaw, some overactive fans, or a price that’s just too high — that kept it from being great.

But if you need a new laptop, you need a new laptop. There are still some notebooks that are well worth a look, from the budget to the ultra-premium. As 2016 comes to a close, here are our favorites.


#11 Acer Chromebook R11: basic and affordable

Done right, a Chromebook is a better value for most budget buyers than a cheap Windows laptop. Lots of people do most of their computing in a web browser, and Chrome OS can get more out of weaker hardware.

The problem is that every Chromebook on the market has some glaring weakness. The Acer Chromebook R11 is no exception, but for well under $500, it’s about as competent as it gets. Just be sure to buy the model with 4 GB of RAM.

Pros:

  • Convertible and lightweight
  • Keyboard, trackpad, and battery life are fine
  • Display is colorful, and touch screen is vital for Android app support

Cons:

  • 11-inch display is too small for some and has a low 1366×768 resolution
  • Can’t fire up too many tabs at once
  • Not the most sturdily built device

#10 Dell Chromebook 13: best Chromebook on the market

The one Chromebook that really soars is the Dell Chromebook 13. It looks, feels, and acts like a quality machine. It’s also priced like one — relatively speaking. But if you can handle the premium, it’s still one of the best budget laptops you can buy. The Chromebook 13 is no longer available on Dell’s website but you should be able to pick it up on eBay for under $500.

Pros:

  • No real issues with performance
  • Excellent battery life — about 10-12 hours on average
  • Sharp design with good keyboard

Cons:

  • A bit too expensive for an OS that’s still inherently limited. Base configuration costs $430; adding a touch screen costs at least $630.

  • #9 Acer Aspire E5: the mid-range all-rounder

    The Acer Aspire E5 may never turns heads, but it meets enough of the requirements for a good, affordable notebook. It’s not great, but it’s good enough. That’s a victory for the money.

    Pros:

    • Sharp 1080p display
    • Core i5 chip, 8 GB of RAM, 256 GB solid-state drive, and (older) Nvidia graphics processor mean capable performance for the money

    Cons:

    • 15-inch display is a TN panel; colors are duller than those of an IPS screen like the one on the Dell Chromebook 13
    • Have to delete a good amount of preinstalled bloatware to get the most out of it
    • Design isn’t anything special, and battery life is just OK
    • Core i5 chip is technically sixth-gen (“Skylake”) model, though the difference between that and the newer seventh-gen (“Kaby Lake”) isn’t massive

    #8 Asus Zenbook UX330UA: best Ultrabook for the asking price

    Most people looking for an everyday laptop will want an Ultrabook. They’re slim, light, and easy to pack, yet loaded with enough power to run through most non-developer needs. The Asus Zenbook UX330UA is one of the most affordable options that’s also competent.

    Pros:

    • Quality 1080p display, latest-gen Core i5 processor, 8 GB of RAM, and 256 GB solid-state drive are all good value
    • Decent, backlit keyboard, healthy array of ports (USB-C included), and fingerprint scanner (for faster logins)
    • Battery life is good with this configuration, and the aluminum lid looks sharp

    Cons:

    • No touch screen on this configuration
    • Speakers are weak, and the whole thing isn’t constructed as tightly as the higher-priced options below; slight bit of wobbliness to it
    • Hard to find at below $700 as of this writing. You may also want to consider last year’s model — that has a backlit keyboard and sixth-gen chip, but those aren’t massive losses, all told.

    #7 Dell XPS 13: old but reliable

    The Dell XPS 13 has been widely considered the best mainstream notebook for a couple of years now, and its latest update yields no reason to think different. It hasn’t fixed some of its nagging annoyances, but even if the competition has caught up, it still excels where it matters most.

    Pros:

    • Puts the display of a 13-inch notebook into the body of an 11-inch one
    • Tremendously compact, but has most of the necessary ports (sans HDMI)
    • Wonderful display, fast and comfy keyboard, competent touch pad, and superb battery, lasting well over 10 hours on average
    • Aluminum lid is handsome but not ostentatious; carbon fiber interior gives a soft resting spot for hands
    • No worries with performance, and has newest Kaby Lake chips

    Cons:

    • Very little has changed in recent years
    • Webcam on the bottom bezel is eternally terrible, and a fingerprint scanner would be nice
    • Not as thin as many competitors
    • Touch has become a genuinely delightful aspect of Windows 10; you have to drop at least $1,300 and sacrifice battery life to get that here

    #6 HP Spectre x360: The XPS 13 usurper

    The HP Spectre x360 got a makeover earlier this year and came out as the best convertible for most people. If you want the two-in-one design, it should be your starting point.

    Pros:

    • Like the XPS 13, it has an upscale look that’s efficient with its space
    • Battery life is outstanding (though a little behind the non-touch XPS, as expected), the keyboard and touch pad are above average, and the speakers are great
    • There’s a fingerprint scanner, and the webcam is in the right place
    • The newest Core chips help it stay strong and speedy
    • Its $2299 starting tag isn’t cheap — but it gets you a touch screen, 256 GB of SSD storage and a Core i5 chip. You have to pay more to get comparable specs out of the XPS 13.

    Cons:

    • Though there are two USB 3.0 ports, there’s no SD card slot and only one traditional USB-A port. (The XPS, by contrast, has one Thunderbolt 3 port, an SD slot, and two USB-A ports.)
    • Fans can make it louder than the XPS under duress
    • Pressing the touch screen can push the hinge slightly out of place
    • Comes with a 1080p resolution, though that’s fine for most

    #5 Lenovo Yoga 910: large and stylish

    Hanging right with the Spectre x360 is the 13.9-inch Lenovo Yoga 910. If you want a larger display or you like its look more than that of the Spectre, it’s another elegant convertible with plenty to like.

    Pros:

    • Good looks, supremely thin bezels fit a 14-inch screen into a 13-inch laptop’s body, and has the same classy “watchband” hinge we’ve seen in past Lenovo devices like the Yoga Book tablet.
    • Very quick performance (a hair faster than the Spectre, in our general tests), beautiful display, fast keyboard, and supremely long-lasting battery

    Cons:

    • Borrows the XPS 13’s awful bottom-bezel webcam placement
    • Shrinks the right shift key to fit in the whole keyboard
    • Port selection isn’t great — just two USB-C ports, a USB 3.0 port, and a headphone jack. Neither of those USB-C ports are Thunderbolt 3 either, so no way to fulfill its “one port fits all” promise.
    • Thin, but naturally a bit more to carry around than the Spectre and XPS
    • Not cheap: pricing starts at just shy of $2000

    #4 Razer Blade Stealth: powerful and fun

    I can’t recommend the Razer Blade Stealth over the Dell, HP, or Lenovo models above, but it’ll hold plenty of appeal to the right kind of user, and justifiably so.

    Pros:

    • Very well made. Black aluminum finish is slick and substantial, and the hinge that holds everything together is tight. Thicker than a MacBook, but not fat.
    • Keyboard backlighting can be customized to display several fun colors and patterns
    • Fast, with a seventh-gen Core i7 chip in all but the lowest-end model
    • 12.5-inch touch screen looks great and carries a very sharp 2560×1440 resolution by default
    • Reasonably priced for a flashy “gamer-inspired” laptop.

    Cons:

    • Not a gaming laptop, but looks like one. Green snake logo and glowing keyboard are playful, but don’t exactly scream “adult office professional.”
    • Keyboard is on the stiff side, bezels are enormous, and battery life is only passable, not great
    • One of our review units suffered from noticeable coil whine when pushed, which made it uncomfortably noisy
    • Only two USB-A ports and no SD slot

    #3 Microsoft Surface Book: as ‘premium’ as Windows laptops get

    You don’t have to pay the premium for the Microsoft Surface Book over an XPS 13 or Spectre x360, but if you’re a professional with money to burn, it’s the closest thing Windows laptops have to a luxury brand.

    The new Performance Base model makes it a little bit better. Its high price and lack of IT-friendly ports make it hard to see it as much more than a status symbol, but a good laptop is a good laptop all the same.

    Pros:

    • Handsome magnesium alloy finish, striking rolled-up hinge, Surface Pen stylus, detachable 13.5-inch touch screen and its taller, 3:2 aspect ratio — all of that is still there and keeps this one of the most wholly original laptops on the market
    • Strong performance, vibrant screen, fast and clicky keyboard, and responsive touch pad
    • The new additions are good — built-in Nvidia graphics card allows for moderate (but not VR) gaming, and bolstered battery life got me around 11 hours with average use

    Cons:

    • Performance Base starts at obscene $4399 but technically uses last-gen Core i7 and mid-tier GPU
    • Fully detaching the screen doesn’t feel as natural as simply rotating it, a la the Yoga. Windows is still undersupported as a tablet OS, and the whole device is still weirdly top-heavy because of design.
    • No USB-C port
    • Still doesn’t close totally flat
    • Not huge, but a bit thicker and heavier than every other high-end model here

    #2 Apple MacBook Pro: innovative and well constructed

    If you follow the PC market with any regularity, chances are you have an opinion on the new Apple MacBook Pro. You might think it’s bad! It certainly gives longtime Mac users reason to be angry.

    But devoid of context, and away from the pressure of being a MacBook, it’s still just a nice piece of machinery. Apple has lost its grip as maker of The Best Laptop, but if you’re a Mac fan with a deep wallet, there’s much more good than bad here.

    Pros:

    • Phenomenally well made, with a smooth aluminum frame that exudes quality
    • Slimmer and lighter footprint makes it easier to carry
    • Display is still gorgeous and now brighter than before
    • Massive track pad is second to none
    • New TouchID scanner is convenient
    • macOS is still easy to get around
    • Touch Bar is well thought out for what it is
    • Performance boosts aren’t great, but it’s not like the whole thing is slow

    Cons:

    • Ditching every established port type besides USB-C is bound to result in dongle hell, even if Apple puts four USB-C ports on there
    • Inconsistent battery life is often below Apple’s estimates
    • Ultra-low-travel, MacBook-style keyboard is markedly improved but a step back from the previous MacBook Pro model
    • Looking down at the Touch Bar inherently slows down your workflow and is dependent on future developer support
    • Virtually non-upgradeable, always and forever
    • With the MacBook Air left for dead, Apple no longer sells a good Mac for the average buyer

    #1 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga: the best laptop display we’ve seen


    The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga is a fine laptop in its own right, but it doesn’t really ascend to the level of top-tier notebooks until you equip it with an OLED display. Then it becomes a thing of luxury. The tech is clearly in its early days with this form factor, but once you’ve lived with it, it’s hard to go back.

    Pros:

    • In short, the X1 Yoga’s 14-inch screen is tremendous, with pitch blacks and lush colors. When it’s right, it makes routine Netflix sessions feel exciting.
    • Of the three OLED laptops out there, the fully rotatable Yoga design supports the tech best. Just flip the display around, and you have a futuristic mini TV right then and there.
    • Superb keyboard
    • Solid battery life
    • Steady performance

    Cons:

    • Though Lenovo makes some fixes, Windows hasn’t been fully tuned to support OLED, and the tech itself can wash out images at an angle
    • OLED comes at a premium — the base model uses a last-gen Core i5 processor, yet costs $1,600 to $1,800
    • Design is sturdy and dependable but doesn’t have the flair of a MacBook Pro or Surface Book despite the high price
    • No USB-C port, though most others you could want are there
    • Lenovo has had trouble keeping the OLED model in stock, so you may have trouble finding it

    This story originally appeared on Business Insider.


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