Went over to check out this headphones deal and saw the massive banner advertising $700 off their current price of $1,999 for this laptop. Only other place I could find with stock of this is JB at $1,998.
Wasn't in the market for one, but have googled the reviews and they seem pretty good: review and review. In summary, at the $1,299 pricepoint this looks like really good bang for portable gaming buck.
Banner says online only, so guessing you can't walk into their Parramatta store to purchase at the same price? Postage is free though. Might pop in to see it in the flesh and then order online. Not sure when the deal expires. Will update on look/feel and expiry when I go in and find out tomorrow.
Link to Asus info page is here
Obligatory specs rehash below those to lazy to click through :) Have a great weekend all!
Brand: Asus
Model: G550JK-CN474H
Condition: New
Operating System: Windows 8.1
Screen: 15.6" Full HD IPS (1920x1080)
Processor: Intel i7-4710HQ 3.5GHz
Memory: 8GB RAM
Hard Drive: 1TB HDD
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX850 2GB
Optical Drive: Super-Multi DVD
Camera: HD Web camera
Networking: 802.11ac (Dual Band) and 10/100/1000 Mbps
Bluetooth: Bluetooth V4.0
Card Reader: SD MMC
Ports: 1 x HDMI Port, 1 x mini Display Port, 3 x USB 3.0 Port(s), 1 x Headphone-out & Audio-in Combo Jack
Battery: 59WHrs, 4S1P, 4-cell Li-ion Polymer Battery Pack
Color: Black
Dimensions: 38.3 x 25.5 x 2.77 (W x D x H)
Weight: 2.70 KG (with 4 cell battery)
Warranty: 1 Year Warranty
@tc4101:
Nexus 10 released in 2012 that I own has a 2560 x 1600 screen resolution, so a higher PPI than Macbook Retina and I've been rocking it for over 2 years, I can tell that it isn't that much better than 1080p.
VGA to 1080p was a huge leap, not in the same league as this. Even maths proves it:
VGA: 640x480 = 307200 pixels
Full HD: 1920x1080 = 2073600
Macbook 13: 2560x1600 = 4096000
Macbook 15: 2880x1800 = 5184000
Full HD has 6.75 more pixels than VGA while the Macbook 15 has 2.5 more pixels than Full HD. So the jump isn't as big. Maths aside, the higher the resolution you get, or higher PPI, the less your eyes will notice. So even a jump from Full HD to UHD screens won't be that great.