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ASUS Chromebook CM14 packs Kompanio 540 power and 23-hour battery

ASUS is refreshing its budget Chromebook lineup with the CM14, a 14-inch ChromeOS laptop that leans on MediaTek’s Kompanio 540 and a huge battery to handle everyday tasks with ease.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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May 9, 2026, 1:54 AM EDT
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ASUS Chromebook CM14 (CM1406) laptop
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ASUS is giving its budget Chromebook lineup a pretty meaningful refresh with the new Chromebook CM14 (CM1406), and it is clearly aimed at students, casual users, and anyone who wants an all-day battery machine that does not feel like a cheap plastic brick.

At its core, the new CM14 is all about pairing a modern, efficient ARM chip with a surprisingly premium-feeling chassis and some thoughtful quality-of-life touches. ASUS is using MediaTek’s Kompanio 540 processor, which is designed specifically for Chromebooks and promises better single-core, multi-core, and graphics performance along with noticeably improved power efficiency over the older Kompanio 520 found in previous CM14 generations. MediaTek itself pitches this chip as a step up for student and everyday devices, with claimed gains of up to 50 percent in CPU single-core performance, 30 percent in multi-core workloads, and up to 75 percent better graphics versus the 520, plus up to 35 percent longer battery life.

In practical terms, that should translate into exactly the kind of use cases this Chromebook targets: a lot of browser tabs, Docs, Sheets, Classroom or Workspace, video calls, streaming, maybe some casual games or education titles like Minecraft Education or Tinkercad, without the system grinding to a halt as soon as you multitask. Earlier CM14 models could feel a bit stretched if you pushed them with many tabs, so this silicon refresh is important to keep that “cheap Chromebook” lag feeling at bay.

ASUS is also leaning hard on battery life, claiming up to 23 hours on a charge depending on the configuration. If that number holds anywhere close in real-world use, it means a student or lightweight worker could realistically leave the charger at home for a full day of classes plus evening streaming and still be fine. The Kompanio 540’s efficiency is a big reason why laptop makers, including competitors like Acer, are embracing it for student-focused Chromebooks, where “it just keeps going” matters more than raw horsepower.

Visually, the new CM14 tries to escape the usual boring school-laptop aesthetic. ASUS is offering it in three colors: Platinum Silver, Forest Blue, and Blue Aura, all with matching keyboards, so the whole device looks cohesive instead of “black keyboard slapped on a grey shell.” The chassis uses a vent-free design, which both looks cleaner and reduces dust ingress, helped by the fact that a power-efficient chip like Kompanio 540 can run cool enough to skip aggressive visible venting and loud fans. The diamond-cut trim is a small detail, but it gives the machine a slightly more premium vibe than the usual matte plastic rectangle you might expect at this price.

On the front, you are looking at a 14-inch WUXGA display, which means 1920 x 1200 with a taller 16:10 aspect ratio, rather than the older 1080p 16:9 panels. That extra vertical space is genuinely useful for Google Docs, websites, and classroom platforms because you see more content before scrolling. ASUS quotes up to an 86 percent screen-to-body ratio, so the bezels are relatively slim for a budget Chromebook, making the machine feel more modern and compact. There are configurations with a standard anti-glare panel at 300 nits and an upgraded variant that hits 400 nits with 100 percent sRGB coverage and in-cell touch support, which will be the one to look for if you care about brighter outdoor usability or color-sensitive work like basic photo editing.

The hinge opens a full 180 degrees, so you can lay the laptop flat on a desk for sharing content in a group, which is handy in classrooms, meetings, or collaborative sessions. It is not a 2-in-1 convertible, so you do not get tent or tablet mode, but that is an acceptable trade-off here given the pricing and focus. What stands out more is that ASUS includes a full-size HDMI 1.4b port, which is still rare at the entry level, where you are often stuck living the dongle life. Being able to plug into a classroom projector, TV, or external monitor without an adapter will matter a lot in education environments and for anyone using this as a cheap home office machine.

Port selection is otherwise sensible: two USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C ports that support power delivery and DisplayPort 1.4, one USB-A port for legacy accessories, a 3.5mm audio jack, and a Kensington nano lock slot for physical security in institutions. Interestingly, ASUS has repositioned the ports further up the left side of the chassis, explicitly to free space for mouse movement, which sounds like a minor detail but will be appreciated by right-handed users who constantly bump cables while working at cramped desks. Wireless is up to date as well, with options up to Wi-Fi 7 with Bluetooth 5.4 on some configurations, something that lines up with MediaTek’s platform support and the general move toward faster, more reliable connectivity on student Chromebooks.

Inside, the RAM and storage options are aligned with typical Chromebook expectations: up to 8GB of LPDDR5x memory and up to 128GB of eMMC storage. That is not going to turn this into a video-editing workhorse, but for ChromeOS, 8GB is usually sufficient for many tabs and app combinations, and eMMC is a cost-effective choice that keeps prices in check. You will want to avoid the lowest RAM configurations if you are planning to juggle heavy web workloads or Android apps side by side; the top-spec memory option will age better in a world where web apps keep getting heavier.

ASUS is also making a big deal out of serviceability, which is something more manufacturers are finally paying attention to, especially in education fleets. The CM14 bottom cover uses just four screws, and they are captive, so technicians or school IT staff are less likely to lose them on a crowded bench. There is also a new screwless battery latching system that uses a bracket instead of traditional screws, so swapping the battery can be done tool-free, making mid-life refreshes easier and cheaper. Combined with testing to the US MIL-STD-810H standard, which involves drops, vibration, temperature, and humidity tests, ASUS is clearly positioning this as a machine that can survive years of being tossed into backpacks and used across classrooms.

On the audio and camera side, the CM14 keeps things straightforward: stereo 2W speakers, integrated digital microphones, and camera options up to full HD with a physical shutter for privacy. For a budget Chromebook, the privacy shutter is a welcome addition, especially in schools where parents, teachers, and administrators are more concerned than ever about webcams being left on or hijacked. Do not expect mind-blowing sound here, but for video calls, YouTube, and casual streaming, it should be more than adequate.

Another interesting hook for this launch is the inclusion of a three-month Google AI Pro trial with every eligible ASUS Chromebook CM14. Google recently rebranded and expanded its AI subscription, and AI Pro now includes 5TB of cloud storage across Drive, Gmail, and Photos, along with deeper access to Gemini across Google’s apps like Docs, Sheets, and Slides. For CM14 buyers, that means you can immediately start using Gemini to draft documents, summarize readings, generate project ideas, or help with basic research, all integrated within the same ecosystem where Chromebooks already shine.

Beyond storage, AI Pro also unlocks higher usage limits and more advanced features in tools like NotebookLM, which can help students and professionals manage large collections of notes, generate summaries, and create audio overviews of material. For a budget laptop, bundling a serious AI productivity subscription, even for three months, is a smart way for ASUS and Google to show people what the “AI laptop” pitch actually feels like in everyday use, rather than just marketing buzzwords.

If you look at where the broader Chromebook market is going, the new CM14 fits neatly into a trend: cheap does not have to be miserable anymore. MediaTek’s Kompanio 540 is being adopted in multiple student-focused Chromebooks precisely because it offers that balance of usable performance, quiet fanless designs, and long battery life that schools and budget buyers care about most. ASUS’s twist is to wrap that in a slightly more polished design, add a better screen option, throw in HDMI, and make sure IT departments can service the hardware without a headache.

Of course, there are still trade-offs. This is not going to compete with high-end x86 laptops or premium Chromebooks in raw performance, and based on earlier CM14 reviews, heavy multitaskers who push lots of demanding web apps may still hit its limits. The base display configurations will not match the best IPS panels or OLED screens for color and contrast, and eMMC storage is slower than NVMe SSDs. But in the segment ASUS is targeting, those compromises are expected, and the company seems to have spent its budget on the right priorities: battery life, durability, serviceability, and a “nice enough” everyday experience.

For students, families, and Chromebook-first users who want a machine that looks better than the usual school-issued hardware, feels modern, lasts all day essentially, and plugs into classrooms or home setups without a pile of adapters, the new ASUS Chromebook CM14 is shaping up as a very approachable option. The addition of a serious AI subscription trial through Google AI Pro is a bonus that makes this launch feel a bit more future-facing than your typical spec bump.


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