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Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon review

If you're looking for a thin-and-light Windows laptop with a premium build, powerful CPU and an OLED display, you must definitely pay attention to Honor's lineup. The business's MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon is a notch above the established models in its class - the Dell XPS 13, the Asus Zenbook 14, the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x, and of course, the Apple MacBook Air.
We'll tell you what makes the MagicBook Art enhanced but it's crucial to start off with the price - at €1,699, it's cheaper than almost all of those rivals, and Honor is running a killer promo that gets you the 1TB/32GB laptop with a gift haul that includes the Honor Pad 9 tablet, and the Honor Earbuds X6 for €200 off at €1,499. Only the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7X can match that price (it's €1,499 at the time of this article on Amazon).
The Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon comes in a single configuration with 32GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD. You can get it only in the silky smooth Starry Grey color - Honor is seemingly keeping the textured Emerald Green we enjoyed on the Intel-powered version of this laptop off European shores. The laptop ships with a 65W charger and USB-C cable.
A word on the Intel-powered MagicBook Art 14. It seems Honor isn't planning on selling it outside of China, pushing the ARM-powered laptop internationally instead. But even though you won't have to choose between the two it makes sense to compare them as they are so closely related.
The Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon is impressively made. The machine weighs approximately [website], which is quite the feat given the laptop's nearly 15-inch display. The laptop is also just 1 cm thick (not counting the rubber feet) at its thinnest point - [website] at its thickest.
Honor managed to achieve such an impressive weight with a mixture of lightweight materials. The chassis is made out of magnesium alloy. The keyboard is a titanium alloy. The two fans are made of aluminum. The antenna and vapor chamber cooling system are integrated. The result is a [website] laptop that weighs 490g (33%) less than the [website] MacBook Air, 160g (14%) less than the Dell XPS 13, 260g (21%) less than the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7X, and 370g (27%) less than the high-end Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition. It is truly impressive. Very few devices weigh less and manage to stay with the MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon specs-wise - the Huawei MateBook X Pro 2024 and the new Asus A14.
But it's not all about the weight. The display has an even [website] bezel all around. Honor managed it by displacing the camera to its own magnetic module. The tuck-away camera module is undoubtedly innovative. It sits flush inside the left corner of the laptop and can be popped in or out by a finger press. The module attaches very securely in the laptop body, and it can be tucked in whichever way you want - even with the pins outward (though you shouldn't do that).
It's a clever way to deal with the camera on a laptop but it does push the two ports on the left side of the MagicBook Art 14 a bit further down. It's an unbalanced look that may irk some.
Honor applied a vine leaf concept to the design. There's a subtle curve to the frame, thickening at the point of connection to the magnetic camera.
The Starry Sky paint job is very smooth. Honor calls the surface velvet-like and skin-friendly. The coating is UV cured to achieve smoothness and then has been micro-arc oxidized. We can attest that the finish feels very pleasant to touch but have somehow managed to scuff it in a few places. This could be negligence on our part or a possible weakness of the finish, we cannot be perfectly certain.
The MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon ships with a [website] OLED panel with a squarer-than-average 3:2 aspect, up to 120Hz refresh rate, and a promised brightness of 700 nits.
The FullView 10-bit display is 3120x2080px and has 10-point touch. The panel covers 100% of the DCI-P3 gamut, as well as a DeltaE (ΔE) rating of below [website] The panel does 4320Mh PWM flicker-free dimming and even got TUV Rheinland to certify for low blue light emissions.
The display is glossy but does have an anti-reflective coating applied. It does alleviate some of the reflections but this is still a relatively reflective panel. The screen surface is also weirdly wavy - looking at reflections on the display at an angle produces wavy lines. The Huawei MateBook X Pro 2024 has a straighter display surface, for instance. it's not a problem, just something we noticed.
The panel is rated at 700 nits in HDR mode. We measured a consistent above-540 nits overall with nearly 600 nits in the bottom part of the screen in SDR mode. When viewing HDR content, the screen ramped up to around 750 nits. The SDR results are around 50-60 nits more effective than what we got with the Intel MagicBook Art 14, while the HDR brightness was equal.
These screen modes work only when you've turned the global Windows HDR setting off. Once you turn HDR on, the screen reverts to its Native setting, meaning vivid colors, deep blacks, and the maximum possible contrast. The issue with this is that saturation is over the top when the screen is in Native mode. Photos, whether in the browser or through the Windows Photos app are overly saturated to the point that they don't look good. Putting the screen in sRGB mode fixes the issue.
Honor and Huawei keyboards have long been excellent for typing but the MagicBook Art 14 is a step above. We can't really say we can appreciate the titanium build but the keys feel slightly softer and more dampened than on the MateBook X Pro 2024.
The keys have the standard [website] key travel and are very well-spaced. Avid gamers will scoff at the smaller Up and Down arrow keys, but that's the only complaint that we could think of.
The trackpad supports up to 5 fingers, though Windows currently tops out at 4. There are several proprietary gestures through Honor's pre-installed software like the knock to screenshot. They all get short demo videos and you can decide whether to enable them or not.
This laptop has a six-speaker spatial audio setup and three microphones, and they're doing an excellent job. There's enough volume to fill a room and there are even some hints of bass underneath, making the sound full.
You get a fingerprint scanner with Windows Hello support inside the power button and it works without issues. It supports fingerprint caching so a single press will power on the machine and automatically log you into Windows once it boots to the login screen.
The magnetic 1080p camera doesn't feature IR sensors for Windows Hello. Quality-wise, it's a good enough webcam but nothing special. The image quality is okay but there's no HDR, for instance.
The field of view of the webcam is very wide and you can set it to track your face across the frame. You can also play around with virtual backgrounds.
Doing calls through the MagicBook Art 14 is a great experience. Callers reported that they heard us fine through the laptop's trio of mics and appreciated the active noise cancellation.
One area where the ARM-powered version is inferior to the Intel one is ports. You get the same physical ports - two USB-C on the left, one USB-A, an HDMI, and a [website] on the right. On the Intel machine, one of the USB-Cs on the left side is a Thunderbolt 4/USB 4 unit with 40 Gbps of throughput. On the Snapdragon model, both USB-C ports are USB [website] Gen 2 with 10 Gbps of bandwidth. The USB-A is [website] Gen1 with 5 Gbps.
Technically, you can run into limitations if you want to charge the machine and connect to a monitor using the same USB-C cable. On the upside, the HDMI is [website] with 4K@60Hz support, giving you an alternate monitor connection option. However, the lack of true USB 4 connectivity makes a single-cable solution impossible.
Snapdragon X Elite processor and battery life.
The Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon ships with an ARM-based Snapdragon X Elite SoC. The processor has 42MB of cache, and 12 Oryon cores with a [website] peak clock in multi-core more and a peak single-core speed of [website] The Adreno GPU is rated for 46 TFLOPS (floating point operations per second), while the Hexagon NPU has 45 TOPS (tera operations per second). In comparison, Intel's latest Core Ultra 7 258V's NPU brings 47 TOPS, while AMD's Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 has up to 50 TOPS.
The Snapdragon X Elite is the X1E-80-100 variation of the chip, with the [website] peak clock speed. There are two more powerful versions of the X Elite - the same number of physical cores, but higher clock speed. The X1E-84-100 and X1E-00-1DE with a multi-core peak clock speed of [website], and a single-core peak clock speed of [website] and [website], respectively. We don't expect the up to 300MHz to deliver a huge benefit. While we're on the topic - there are two other Snapdragon X chips - the X Plus with 8 or 10 Oryon cores, and the X with 8.
The Snapdragon chip supports the latest Wi-Fi 7, as well as Bluetooth [website].
Looking at benchmarks, the Snapdragon X Elite is a fine performer. Importantly, it scores around 30% enhanced than the Intel Core Ultra 7 155H in single-core and multi-core tests and around 20% enhanced in graphics tests. Essentially, you're giving nothing away, performance-wise, by going with the Snapdragon MagicBook Art 14 rather than the Intel one (if, for the sake of argument, you had a choice of buying either).
Benchmark Test Result Geekbench 6 Single-Core 2824 Geekbench 6 Multi-core 14493 Geekbench 6 GPU Vulkan 28340 Geekbench AI CPU Single-precision 1106 Geekbench AI CPU Half-precision 1728 Geekbench AI CPU Quantized 3474 Geekbench AI NPU Quantized 27051 Cinebench 2024 Single-Core 121 Cinebench 2024 Multi-core 593.
The SoC posted solid numbers in Cinebench 2024's single and multi-core tests as well. The built-in Micron SSD isn't the fastest. It's also showing PCIe [website] speeds, not current-gen PCIe [website] ones that are double the speed.
We ran our usual 1-hour stress test on the MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon and the Snapdragon X Elite showed good sustained performance under load. The chip was briefly up to its peak multi-core speed of [website] and, within a few seconds, throttled down to [website] After the fans ramped up, the processor settled at around [website] and stayed there for the remainder of the test. The fans were going full blast for the entirety of the test, but we'd call them inaudible beyond 1 meter in a normal office environment.
In comparison, the Intel Core Ultra 7 155H we tested in the MagicBook Art 14 managed to sustain around [website] It was also slightly warmer to the touch - the palm rest area was [website]° C compared to the 26° C of the Snapdragon model. Another key point is real-world performance - the Intel machine can't reach its full potential on battery, while the Snapdragon one can.
If we compare the two SoCs on efficiency, per Cinebench 2024's Multi Power Efficiency test, the Snapdragon X Elite scores around 22 Points Per Watt, while the Intel Core Ultra 7 155H reaches 14 PPW.
A big benefit of the Snapdragon chip is the instantaneous operation of this machine - open the lid, and the screen has lit up before you've even seen it fully. It's great!
Because this is an ARM-based laptop, you'd need to think about your apps. Windows on ARM has come a long way, and you'd be surprised how many apps now have an ARM-ready version. The popular apps are mostly covered - Microsoft's Office suite, LibreOffice, 7-zip, Viber, Signal, Slack, WhatsApp, Dropbox, GIMP, Adobe's Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere Pro, Davinci Resolve, Luminar Neo, VLC, Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, Avast, TeamViewer, you name it. And if your specific app isn't yet fully ARM-ready, chances are it's in development.
What about emulating X86 apps? Here's where Prism comes in - it's Windows 11's emulation layer that translates X86 apps to run on the Snapdragon X Elite. It's seamless - you just install an app like you would on an Intel or AMD-powered computer, and it works. There's code translation going on in the background, but you wouldn't even notice it most of the time. It's in more demanding apps that the emulation can cause a launch delay or a performance hiccup, but we rarely noticed those.
We even installed Steam with a few games and they worked. However, performance was noticeably worse than on the Intel Core Ultra 7 155H. Age of Empires II Definitive Edition is a relatively easy game to run on modern hardware but it hovered below 60fps in our test. It held a steady 100fps on the Intel-powered Art. On the upside, we never got an app or game that simply refused to work.
You have integrated Copilot with a dedicated key on the keyboard. Copilot works on-device to give personalized answers and is deeply integrated with Microsoft apps such as Outlook and Microsoft 365.
It can generate formulas, create charts and graphs, summarize key points in emails, and transcribe meetings in real time. Live Caption can generate subtitles to videos in 44 languages in real time too.
Honor Connect brings screen-sharing and cross-OS drag-and-drop of app windows between the laptop and an Honor Android tablet. With Honor Share, you can share files, images, and videos between Honor devices cable-free.
In our Intel-based Honor MagicBook Art 14 review, we hypothesized that the model with the Snapdragon X Elite would be able to squeeze more battery life out of the 60Wh battery, and we were correct. The MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon lasted 8:00 hours in our browsing loop test (at 400 nits) and 10:00 hours in our YouTube video loop test (400 nits, 80dB). That's one hour more in the browsing test and nearly three and a half hours more in the YouTube test than the Intel model. Moving to ARM truly brings all the benefits and very few compromises, even at this early stage.
Charging the laptop from 0% to full took around an hour and a half, and it got to 43% in the first 30 minutes.
The Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon is an outstanding laptop. It masterfully mixes premium specs with great manufacturing quality to create a machine with a true edge over its competition.
At the time of this article, the 32GB/1TB MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon retails for €1,499 with an Honor Pad 9 and Honor Earbuds X6 thrown in for free. At that price, it's notably cheaper than the Dell XPS 13 MacBook Air and Huawei's MateBook X Pro 2024. We'd argue it also packs superior specs - the [website] display that's also a match in terms of tech - 120Hz and 700 nits of brightness - is about as elite as you can get these days. And aside from the Huawei, the MagicBook Art 14 is lighter at just [website].
There are two head-on rivals the Honor needs to worry about - Lenovo's Yoga Slim 7X and Asus' A14 UX3407. Both have 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage, OLED displays, and the Snapdragon X Elite SoC. Both laptops are also exactly the same price - €1,499. However, you get 70Wh batteries on both and enhanced ports - the Yoga Slim 7X packs three USB4 Gen 3s, while the Asus A14 has two. The Yoga is a bit heavier (though not heavy), while the Asus is even lighter at just under 1 kilo.
Lenovo and Asus have a superior availability in international markets and more recognizable brand names with non-tech folk. That could play a factor despite Honor's killer tablet-and-buds bundle. Then there's Honor's own retail footprint - at the time of this article, you can get this machine in China, France, Germany, and Italy.
Honor MagicBook Art 14 Snapdragon is a tremendous laptop that doesn't compromise. It's a 'have your cake and eat it too' type of solution. It's improved than the Intel-powered unit in every way that matters - improved performance and longer battery life, the same excellent display, body, and price. Being an ARM-based laptop does mean there are some hypothetical issues along the way, but those concern non-mainstream customers - they will hardly notice any downside.
ARM model is superior than the Intel one in every conceivable way.
Snapdragon X Elite is quieter, smoother, and prolongs battery life.
Strikes an excellent balance of size and weight.
Color-accurate OLED display with 500 nits of SDR and 700 nits of HDR brightness.
Good port selection - USB-C, USB-A, HDMI.
No USB4/Thunderbolt 4 is a real drawback.
Camera slot pushes USB-C ports to the middle of the laptop.
SSD not quite up to PCIe [website] standards.
We may get a commission from qualifying sales.
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Pixel 9a leaked image shows Google isn't moving the mid-ranger design needle

, reveals what appears to be a low-resolution official render from the front of the Pixel 9a . While the image is blurry, it gives us a sense of the screen size and bezel situation. The corners of the phone resemble those of the A recent image leak , reveals what appears to be a low-resolution official render from the front of the. While the image is blurry, it gives us a sense of the screen size and bezel situation. The corners of the phone resemble those of the Pixel 9 and 9 Pro.
A larger front-facing camera is also noticeable. Antenna lines, essential for connectivity, are visible on the sides of the device. The wallpaper displayed is from the "Swirling petals" collection, a new one not currently available on the Pixel 9 series. The Pixel Launcher, which controls the phone's home screen and app organization, looks the same as before. This is to be expected, as major launcher updates usually come with new Android versions and flagship phone releases.
The low resolution of the leaked image makes it difficult to make definitive statements, but it seems the bezels on the left, right, and bottom of the screen are the same size. The top bezel, however, looks slightly larger. This hints at the Pixel 9a might have a similar screen design to the 2024 Pixel phones. The low resolution of the leaked image makes it difficult to make definitive statements, but it seems the bezels on the left, right, and bottom of the screen are the same size. The top bezel, however, looks slightly larger. This hints at themight have a similar screen design to the 2024 Pixel phones.
Pixel 8a has an [website] screen-to-body ratio. For comparison, high-end phones often have ratios over 90%. The It should be noted that thehas an [website] screen-to-body ratio. For comparison, high-end phones often have ratios over 90%. The iPhone 16 Pro Max , for instance, has a [website] ratio, and the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra boasts a [website] ratio.
The implication here is that Google may again be prioritizing cost-effectiveness over maximizing screen real estate. This could be a point of consideration for consumers looking for a phone with a truly edge-to-edge display. If the leaked image is accurate, the Pixel 9a 's design might not represent a major leap forward in terms of screen aesthetics. This is a common strategy for manufacturers aiming to provide competitive pricing in the mid-range market.
In my opinion, this isn't something that should deter many buyers from going with an "a" series Pixel, as it is to be expected that certain shortcuts will be taken to keep the price lower than a flagship. Google clearly has a winning formula here with their mid-ranger, and as it's commonly introduced, "if it isn't 'broke,' don't fix it."
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Market Impact Analysis
Market Growth Trend
2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7.3% | 8.8% | 9.3% | 10.3% | 10.8% | 11.2% | 11.3% |
Quarterly Growth Rate
Q1 2024 | Q2 2024 | Q3 2024 | Q4 2024 |
---|---|---|---|
10.6% | 10.8% | 11.1% | 11.3% |
Market Segments and Growth Drivers
Segment | Market Share | Growth Rate |
---|---|---|
Smartphones | 42% | 8.7% |
Mobile Applications | 26% | 14.5% |
Mobile Infrastructure | 17% | 12.8% |
Wearables | 11% | 18.9% |
Other Mobile Tech | 4% | 9.4% |
Technology Maturity Curve
Different technologies within the ecosystem are at varying stages of maturity:
Competitive Landscape Analysis
Company | Market Share |
---|---|
Apple | 24.3% |
Samsung | 22.7% |
Huawei | 14.2% |
Xiaomi | 11.8% |
Google Pixel | 5.4% |
Future Outlook and Predictions
The Honor Magicbook Snapdragon landscape is evolving rapidly, driven by technological advancements, changing threat vectors, and shifting business requirements. Based on current trends and expert analyses, we can anticipate several significant developments across different time horizons:
Year-by-Year Technology Evolution
Based on current trajectory and expert analyses, we can project the following development timeline:
Technology Maturity Curve
Different technologies within the ecosystem are at varying stages of maturity, influencing adoption timelines and investment priorities:
Innovation Trigger
- Generative AI for specialized domains
- Blockchain for supply chain verification
Peak of Inflated Expectations
- Digital twins for business processes
- Quantum-resistant cryptography
Trough of Disillusionment
- Consumer AR/VR applications
- General-purpose blockchain
Slope of Enlightenment
- AI-driven analytics
- Edge computing
Plateau of Productivity
- Cloud infrastructure
- Mobile applications
Technology Evolution Timeline
- Technology adoption accelerating across industries
- digital transformation initiatives becoming mainstream
- Significant transformation of business processes through advanced technologies
- new digital business models emerging
- Fundamental shifts in how technology integrates with business and society
- emergence of new technology paradigms
Expert Perspectives
Leading experts in the mobile tech sector provide diverse perspectives on how the landscape will evolve over the coming years:
"Technology transformation will continue to accelerate, creating both challenges and opportunities."
— Industry Expert
"Organizations must balance innovation with practical implementation to achieve meaningful results."
— Technology Analyst
"The most successful adopters will focus on business outcomes rather than technology for its own sake."
— Research Director
Areas of Expert Consensus
- Acceleration of Innovation: The pace of technological evolution will continue to increase
- Practical Integration: Focus will shift from proof-of-concept to operational deployment
- Human-Technology Partnership: Most effective implementations will optimize human-machine collaboration
- Regulatory Influence: Regulatory frameworks will increasingly shape technology development
Short-Term Outlook (1-2 Years)
In the immediate future, organizations will focus on implementing and optimizing currently available technologies to address pressing mobile tech challenges:
- Technology adoption accelerating across industries
- digital transformation initiatives becoming mainstream
These developments will be characterized by incremental improvements to existing frameworks rather than revolutionary changes, with emphasis on practical deployment and measurable outcomes.
Mid-Term Outlook (3-5 Years)
As technologies mature and organizations adapt, more substantial transformations will emerge in how security is approached and implemented:
- Significant transformation of business processes through advanced technologies
- new digital business models emerging
This period will see significant changes in security architecture and operational models, with increasing automation and integration between previously siloed security functions. Organizations will shift from reactive to proactive security postures.
Long-Term Outlook (5+ Years)
Looking further ahead, more fundamental shifts will reshape how cybersecurity is conceptualized and implemented across digital ecosystems:
- Fundamental shifts in how technology integrates with business and society
- emergence of new technology paradigms
These long-term developments will likely require significant technical breakthroughs, new regulatory frameworks, and evolution in how organizations approach security as a fundamental business function rather than a technical discipline.
Key Risk Factors and Uncertainties
Several critical factors could significantly impact the trajectory of mobile tech evolution:
Organizations should monitor these factors closely and develop contingency strategies to mitigate potential negative impacts on technology implementation timelines.
Alternative Future Scenarios
The evolution of technology can follow different paths depending on various factors including regulatory developments, investment trends, technological breakthroughs, and market adoption. We analyze three potential scenarios:
Optimistic Scenario
Rapid adoption of advanced technologies with significant business impact
Key Drivers: Supportive regulatory environment, significant research breakthroughs, strong market incentives, and rapid user adoption.
Probability: 25-30%
Base Case Scenario
Measured implementation with incremental improvements
Key Drivers: Balanced regulatory approach, steady technological progress, and selective implementation based on clear ROI.
Probability: 50-60%
Conservative Scenario
Technical and organizational barriers limiting effective adoption
Key Drivers: Restrictive regulations, technical limitations, implementation challenges, and risk-averse organizational cultures.
Probability: 15-20%
Scenario Comparison Matrix
Factor | Optimistic | Base Case | Conservative |
---|---|---|---|
Implementation Timeline | Accelerated | Steady | Delayed |
Market Adoption | Widespread | Selective | Limited |
Technology Evolution | Rapid | Progressive | Incremental |
Regulatory Environment | Supportive | Balanced | Restrictive |
Business Impact | Transformative | Significant | Modest |
Transformational Impact
Technology becoming increasingly embedded in all aspects of business operations. This evolution will necessitate significant changes in organizational structures, talent development, and strategic planning processes.
The convergence of multiple technological trends—including artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and ubiquitous connectivity—will create both unprecedented security challenges and innovative defensive capabilities.
Implementation Challenges
Technical complexity and organizational readiness remain key challenges. Organizations will need to develop comprehensive change management strategies to successfully navigate these transitions.
Regulatory uncertainty, particularly around emerging technologies like AI in security applications, will require flexible security architectures that can adapt to evolving compliance requirements.
Key Innovations to Watch
Artificial intelligence, distributed systems, and automation technologies leading innovation. Organizations should monitor these developments closely to maintain competitive advantages and effective security postures.
Strategic investments in research partnerships, technology pilots, and talent development will position forward-thinking organizations to leverage these innovations early in their development cycle.
Technical Glossary
Key technical terms and definitions to help understand the technologies discussed in this article.
Understanding the following technical concepts is essential for grasping the full implications of the security threats and defensive measures discussed in this article. These definitions provide context for both technical and non-technical readers.