This laptop was selected for me as a work laptop. Overall, I've been pretty satisfied with it.
Manufacturer: Lenovo
This laptop was selected for me as a work laptop. Overall, I've been pretty satisfied with it.
I got this for work a couple of weeks ago. It runs quickly and smoothly. I don't have any particular complaints about it. The finger print scanner is useful in my opinion. Time will tell how long it lasts but it seems hardy enough. It arrived way before expected which was ideal as I use it for work.
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
If you're a ThinkPad fan and want a 2-n-1, buy this one – if not, there are other, better options
Solid build quality; Excellent battery life; Good keyboard; touchpad; and TrackPoint input; Thin and light for a 14-inch 2-in-1
Expensive; 360-degree swivel action is loud and harsh; Full HD display is only average
The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga is a bit larger than its competitors with 13.3-inch screens, but its extra bulk pays off in comfort. The larger 14-inch screen is easy on the eyes, and the comfy keyboard pampers your fingertips.
Comfortable backlit retractable keyboard; Built-in rechargeable stylus; Full complement of ports, including Thunderbolt 3
Less battery life than the competition; Requires dongle for Ethernet; Fingerprint magnet
The ThinkPad X1 Yoga ticks most boxes for a well balanced business laptop. But as a hybrid, it does have limited functionality. The OLED display based ThinkPad X1 Yoga is the only variant that we'd recommend from the X1 Yoga lineup.
Classy all-black look with matte finish; Good performance and comprehensive connectivity; Keyboard and touch pad are a joy to use
Limited hybrid functionality with non-detachable screen; pricey
I haven't used a Lenovo laptop as my main computer for years. In fact, the last time I touched a Lenovo laptop for more than a few hours was when I used to manage a fleet of them in a corporate environment before joining The Verge .
Beautiful OLED display; Chiclet keyboard; Light and portable
Unreliable battery life; Aging; boring design; Unnecessary nub and trackpad buttons
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
but still expensive. Today's ThinkPad X1 Yoga configuration preserves most of the major plusses of our previous review unit while dropping the price nearly in half. Is this the true sweet spot in the convertible PC market
clever case and keyboard design; rigid build; fast system performance; excellent keyboard and touchpad; very good port selection for its class; fast and accurate fingerprint sensor; bright; attractive display which lacks only in color gamut; active stylus included; 3-year warranty standard
still rather expensive; screen is highly reflective; limited extensibility
That being said if you're simply looking for a well-rounded laptop that can do a bit of everything you'll likely be far better served by the IPS variant. Sure the visuals are great, but they're hard to justify if you're not really going to get a ton of use out of the display.
Vibrant colorful OLED display; Excellent performance; World-class keyboard; Tons of great features
Expensive
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