Updated 5 hours ago

Hands on: Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga review

CES 2012: Incredibly thin convertible Windows 8 Ultrabook-tablet hybrid

January 10th | Tell us what you think [ 3 comments ]

lenovo-yoga

The Lenovo Yoga will see the light of day when Windows 8 launches

Just when we thought Lenovo had already finished outing new kit here at CES 2012, here comes the aptly-named IdeaPad Yoga. It's a notebook which has a 360 degree flip-and fold-design so you can use it whichever way you want it.

There are four 'modes' effectively – standard notebook, converted tablet, 'stand' and 'tent'.

But it's not a pie in the sky prototype; the 13.1-inch 1600 x 900 touchscreened Yoga is exactly the kind of machine that Intel's Mooly Eden was shouting about yesterday, taking the Ultrabook to the next level with touch and a convertible design so it can be a tablet when you need it. It's like Microsoft's vision for the Tablet PC from 2002. Only good.

You can check out TechRadar's video of the Yoga below:

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

It's a reasonably standard Ultrabook weight at 1.47kg, while the device measures an incredible 16.9mm thick. Despite the small dimensions, the hinge feels strong and Lenovo says that is one of the things it thought most about with the design - it has patented the hinge itself.

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

The convertible is powered by an as-yet undefined Intel Core processor, but we're dreaming of the possibility it could have a forthcoming Ivy Bridge next-gen chip inside. We do have other spec details though – 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD.

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Those kind of figures mean that the Yoga won't be slotting under Intel's Ultrabook target price of $999. Indeed, it'll be considerably more than that.

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Of course, the key component here isn't the hardware – it's Windows 8, which can be touch-based when the tablet is in viewing or converted mode and a standard laptop when in desktop mode.

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Lenovo has also thought about other details, too – there's soft touch rubber paint for gripping the device and a leather cover on the palm rest. Side buttons are designed for use in all modes.

What's most exciting is that we'll be seeing plenty more devices like this during 2012. We can not wait.

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

Hands on: lenovo yoga review

 

Your comments (3) Click to add a new comment

simon_m


January 11th

3. I love the imagination that's come back into design. I still think the tablet 'revolution' will be short lived, but what it has done is really wake up the laptop market and laptop designers to the myriad design possibilities that have been too-long ignored. This is a fascinating chapter in personal computing, and if not a total paradigm-shift, it'll certainly make a better market for everyone.

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bradavon


January 10th

2. It's a nice idea but it'll way to big and heavy to use as a tablet and the keyboard would just get in the way. The Asus Transformer Prime is perfect in this respect and one running Windows 8 would be very interesting indeed. Lets hope Asus is working on it.

These hybrid devices almost always end up being "Jack of all trades, master of none".

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gavmeister


January 10th

1. with it full folded over in tablet mode the keys will face outwards. will there be some sort of protective cover to protect the keys?

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