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Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga X1 G2 Core i7-7500U 256GB 14in

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What do you think about Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga X1 G2 Core i7-7500U 256GB 14in

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3.9
29 reviews
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7%
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41%
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crn.com.au
★★★★★
8 years ago

Question: What do you do once you've created the last word in business ultraportables? One that's already "dripping with features that professionals will love", to quote our review of the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon .

IT PRO
★★★
★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga review

A well-endowed 2-in-1 hybrid that doesn't come cheap

Built-in 4G; Comfortable keyboard; Lengthy onsite warranty; Robust build quality

Iffy touchpad and touchstick; Screen brightness could be higher; Expensive

Tweak Town
★★★★★
7 years ago

Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Yoga might be a super slim power house, but it's also loaded to the brim with an exceedingly high amount of features designed to impress.

Huge Performance in a Small Package; Beautiful Screen; Tablet Mode and Stylus; Great for Travel; Solid Security

Not Much Storage Expansion; High Cost

TechRadar UK
★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga review

As far as laptop ranges go, there's very little introduction needed for the ThinkPad family. First produced by IBM more than twenty years ago, Lenovo acquired the entire range a decade later.

QHD display; Impressive performance; Very well-built machine; Active Pen bundled by default

Pricey; Battery life is disappointing; No bigger battery option available; Fan almost always on during benchmarking

ThinkComputers
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Review

Final Thoughts I've been a huge fan of ThinkPad laptops, I've used many over the years and as I said they are pretty much the benchmark for a business laptop. With that said I also have a pretty big love affair with Lenovo's Yoga range.

– Perfect mesh of Lenovo's ThinkPad and Yoga lines; – Thin and light; – Just the right amount of ports; – Can be used to take notes out of the box; – Keys retract when in tablet mode and are still resistant

– Priced at a premium

SlashGear
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Review - an ultrabook unlike any other

Ultrabooks are a wonderful thing, but they're known to require compromise: you get this (usually thin and lightweight construction), but you have to sacrifice that (let's say battery life and durability).

PC World
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga review: This 2-in-1's OLED screen will color your computing world

Rich, vibrant color. Real black. You don't realize how much you've missed them until they pop up again, as they do on Lenovo's new X1 Yoga.

Great performance; Excellent keyboard; clickpad; and eraserhead

Shipped without proper NVMe SSD driver

Computer World
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga: The shape of convertibles to come

If you like the look of Lenovo's recently unveiled Yoga 910 and its 13.9-inch screen but need something a bit lighter, you may want to check out the 14-in. ThinkPad X1 Yoga . Both are convertible touch-screen laptops that fold back to become tablets, but the OLED display on the higher-end model...

OLED screen with rich, vivid images; thin and lightweight; backlit keyboard; includes stylus; good security features

Expensive when compared to similar systems; doesn't use newer USB-C port; screen doesn't completely lock flat when used as tablet

PC World
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga review: This 2-in-1's OLED screen will color your computing world

Rich, vibrant color. Real black. You don't realize how much you've missed them until they pop up again, as they do on Lenovo's new X1 Yoga. I can't overstate just how much nicer its OLED display looks compared to the cold LCD screens we've grown accustomed to.

Indian Express
★★★★★
7 years ago
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga review

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga, arguably the lightest business 2-in-1 in the world, has finally made its way to India. Here is our full review.

The X1 Yoga has a stunning screen, mostly because it is 2K and one of the brightest displays you will see at 300 nits; This is the hero of this device as you will always have the screen in front as you use the different forms the laptop can take, especially when it is in the tablet mode.

Despite the stunning screen, the audio is underwhelming to put it mildly; With the screen facing you in the presentation form or in tent mode the audio is a bit more audible, but otherwise you will need headphones or an external speaker to enjoy this

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