Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga 1st Gen 14-inch 2 in 1 Tablet Laptop, Windows Tablet, Intel Core i7, 8GB DDR3 SDRAM, 256GB SSD, OLED 2K Display, 20FQ005XUS Breathtaking Display Featuring Richer Colors, Sharper Contrast: The thin Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga features a 14-inch 2K (2560 x 1440) touchscreen display with OLED technology. Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Yoga Gen 4 - 2019. Những cải tiến vượt bậc so với phiên bản trước trên Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Yoga Gen 4 - 2019. Về cả thiết kế bên ngoài lẫn hiệu năng bộ xử lý bên trong đều hứa hẹn đem đến cho người dùng nhiều trải nghiệm tuyệt vời. Chúng ta cùng tìm Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga 20QF000KUS 4th Gen Intel Core i7-8665U 14 inches Touchscreen 2 in 1 Business Ultrabook (2560 X 1440, 16 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, Gray, 2.08kg, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit, UHD Graphics 620 - in) Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 7 August 2019. Well!! The product is good with awesome features provided and has a good processor speed Das Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga 2019 grenzt sich von der hoch gelobten Lenovo-ThinkPad-Serie ab. Diese Laptop-Serie findet bei vielen Benutzern unterschiedlicher Lebensbereiche besonders großen ThinkPad X1 Nanoは、第11世代インテル® Core™ プロセッサー搭載した、 1kgを切る軽量設計のノートPCです。 ThinkPad X1 Titanium Gen 1 ThinkPad X1 Titaniumは、超軽量プレミアムボディに、インテル® Evo™プラットフォームを搭載、パワフルなパフォーマンスを提供する13.5型 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga, análisis: review con características, precio y especificacio. Características. PANTALLA. LCD IPS QHD de 14 pulgadas de 300 nits. RESOLUCIÓN. 2560 x 1440 píxeles IGS5X. Processador Processador Intel Core™ i7-1185G7 da 11a Geração vPro 3,00 GHz até 4,80 GHz Sistema Operacional Windows 11 Pro Tela 14" WUXGA 1920x1200 WVA 500nits antirreflexo, 100% sRGB, baixo consumo de energia, ThinkPad Privacy Guard, toque Memória 32 GB Soldado LPDDR4x-4266 Alto falante Stereo, Dolby Atmos™ Placa de Vídeo Placa de Vídeo Intel Iris Xe Portas 1xUSB Gen 1, 1xUSB Gen 1 Sempre ligada, 2xThunderbolt 4 / USB4 40Gbpssupport data transfer, Power Delivery and DisplayPort 1xHDMI 1x Headphone / microphone combo jack Portas 1 x USB Gen 1, 1x USB Gen 1 sempre ligado, 2x Thunderbolt™ 4 / USB4 40 Gbps suporta transferência de dados, Power Delivery e DisplayPort™ 1 x HDMI Outros 720P HD IR/RGB híbrido com obturador de privacidade e detecção de presença humana Teclado Teclado Padrão Brasil Retroiluminado, Português BR Dispositivo Apontador UltraNav™ TrackPoint + TouchPad Conectividade Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201 11AX 2x2 vPro & Bluetooth Windows 2-in-1s—laptops that essentially can flip over to become a tablet—have become an interesting niche in the business computing space. Typically, these are the highest-end ultraportables on the market, but many people find the ability to have a more flexible machine to be worth a little extra weight and cost. That's what it takes to have a hinge the flips the screen over, plus the other elements needed to make it function well as a tablet, including a touchscreen. One of the machines I've been traveling with over the past two weeks has been the latest version of the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga. This is the fourth generation of the Yoga, and like previous generations, it comes across as a version of the ThinkPad X1 Carbon but with a hinge, pen, and touchscreen. Touchscreens are available on the X1 Carbon as well, and I have found them to be surprisingly convenient. This year's model has slimmed down a bit and been upgraded to the 8th-generation Intel Core processors Whiskey Lake. As I found when living with this year's X1 Carbon, that provides a small but meaningful update. What makes the Yoga different from the Carbon is the hinge, which lets you flip the machine over to use as a tablet or rotate the base beyond 180 degrees to use it as a stand for watching video. From a design standpoint, the X1 Yoga offers a 14-inch display with rather small bezels, so it takes up notably less space than last year. Measuring by by inches HWD, it is almost exactly the same footprint and just slightly thinner compared to the current X1 Carbon, although it comes in an "Iron Gray" aluminum chassis instead of the traditional ThinkPad Matte Black case. Compared with the X1 Carbon, the hinge, screen, and integrated pen add almost half a pound to the weight, with the Yoga weighing 2 pounds, ounces 3 pounds, ounces with charger. For comparison, the Dell Latitude 7400 is slightly smaller with a similar display with less space below the screen and keyboard and weighs about the same with its normal battery. The Dell XPS 13 is notably smaller because it has a display instead of a 14-inch one, but also weighs about the same although the charger is smaller and lighter. The X1 Yoga has two USB-A ports, one USB-C/Thunderbolt for charging and peripherals, HDMI out, and a USB-C/proprietary Ethernet docking connector on the side. The power button is on the right side, and an included small stylus slides into a slot right in front of the power button. The stylus isn't quite as comfortable as the full-size pens that come with the Dell units, but they are far less likely to get lost. Other than the stylus, it's pretty similar to the X1 Carbon, including the familiar backlit ThinkPad keyboard, which I continue to like. One port missing from previous generations is a microSD slot which the Dell 7400 still has, which was handy for downloading photos. The processor has been upgraded from last year's Kaby Lake R processors to the Whiskey Lake version of the Intel Core processors both technically part of the 8th generation Core processors, with both standard and vPro versions available. For displays, there's now an option for a UHD 3840-by-2160 panel, which is new this year. It is currently out of stock on the website. The standard panel is a 14-inch 380-nit glossy multi-touch FHD 1920-by-1280 display, with a 180-nit WQHD 2560-by-1440 panel available for about $106 more. An FHD option with an ePrivacy Guard adds about $197. The prices are for ordering directly from Lenovo via its website as I'm writing this; retail prices may differ. All of these panels are glossy, probably on the assumption that if you're buying a 2-in-1, you'll spend more time watching videos in tablet or stand mode. I tested two units, one with the standard multi-touch FHD display, the other with a UHD display. The UHD screen did prove a little sharper when watching videos at a close distance, the display was notably warmer in color, and the extra resolution would come in handy for detailed editing of photos and videos, but for most people, the standard FHD one will be sufficient and it offers better battery life. For performance testing, the unit with the FHD display had a GHz Core i7-8565U processor, 8GB of memory and a 256GB SSD; while the UHD unit had a Core i7-8665U with vPro, 16GB of memory and a 1TB SSD. Overall, the performance was very similar to what I had seen with the X1 Carbon, with the slightly higher clock machine just a bit better in most tests. PC Mark 10 was an exception where perhaps the additional pixels of the UHD machine accounted for it being slightly slower despite the nominally faster processor. In either case, scores were notably better than I got with the competitive Dell Latitude 7400 which also had a Core i7-8665U, 16 GB and an FHD display. Compared with the newer Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 with an Ice Lake processor, the Whiskey Lake machines were slightly better on PCMark and Cinebench 20's CPU test, but notably worse at Open GL fps in Cinebench 15. The Ice Lake system was much faster 88 seconds compared with 122 on a Y-cruncher math test, probably because it supports new instructions, but the Whiskey Lake-based Yogas were much faster running a MATLAB portfolio simulation taking 49 minutes on the FHD model and 53 on the UHD model compared with 66 minutes on the Whiskey Lake-based Latitude 7400 and 71 minutes on the Ice Lake-based XPS 13 2-in-1. In practice, all of the machines are more than capable for basic e-mail, Office, and web browsing tasks and not recommended for playing high-end games; but the ThinkPads are notably better for higher-end modeling and other compute-intensive apps. On battery life, using PCMark 10's modern office battery test, the UHD version lasted nine hours, thirty-seven minutes; while the FHD one lasted twelve hours, nineteen minutes. Either is a big improvement over laptops from a few years ago, but the FHD one is particularly good. For comparison, the Dell Latitude 7400 I tested, which had an extra-large battery and thus weighed about 5 ounces more, lasted over 20 hours; that's the best I've seen on a machine of this size. The Ice Lake-based XPS 13 didn't do nearly as well. Though it's not tops in this test, I'm quite happy with the battery on the Yoga—I can do a full day of note-taking, web browsing, and email at a conference without worrying about it. Compared with the X1 Carbon, the Yoga has a bigger speaker on the top of the keyboard, as the bottom facing ones will be covered if you flip the machine into tablet mode. Overall, I thought sound quality was quite good. Recommended by Our Editors As a tablet, the Yoga has its pros and cons. The pen is fairly small, but it's very convenient to carry with you, as it easily slides into a slot on the side in front of the power button. It seemed to work well to draw or mark up pages. However, as with all Windows convertibles, it's still a bit heavy compared with the iPad or Android tablets, and more importantly, there still aren't very many tablet applications for things like reading newspapers and magazines offline. The 720p webcam has a physical privacy switch which covers it, though it's a bit narrower than the one on the X1 Carbon. Overall, the webcam worked fine for video conferencing. I was also quite happy with the embedded fingerprint reader as well as using the camera for face recognition unlocking in Windows Hello. The X1 Yoga is a premium tablet and priced accordingly. A unit with a Core i5-8265U processor, 8GB of memory, 256 GB of storage and an FHD panel is about $1,600 as I price it today; the FHD unit I used with a Core i7-8565U is $182 more. The UHD version isn't available right now, but my guess is it would be about $2,600 with all the options my model had though I doubt most people would need the 1 TB SSD. So this is a very high-end machine, albeit in line with the Dell 7400. For that money, though, you're getting arguably the highest-end 2-in-1 on the market, with excellent performance, terrific battery life, a great keyboard, and the ability to use it as a tablet. It's not a machine for the masses, but it is a great example of the state of the art. Here's PCMag's review and slideshow. Get Our Best Stories! Sign up for What's New Now to get our top stories delivered to your inbox every morning. This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time. The 2018 edition of Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Yoga earned the title of "best two-in-one for business" from CNET last year. For 2019, Lenovo slimmed the machine's profile by a few millimeters and reduced its weight by a few ounces and outfitted it with a new CNC aluminum chassis, slimmer bezels and Intel's updated eighth-gen processors and a couple of cool privacy options. It's still our favorite premium business two-in-one. The Good The fourth-gen Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga continues to be one of the best two-in-one convertibles for business thanks to an abundance of hardware options and security features all wrapped up in a thinner, lighter aluminum frame. The Bad Only one of the four display options has Lenovo's screen privacy feature, and battery life is predictably shorter with the UHD-resolution display. The Bottom Line With its updated components, new privacy options and updated aluminum chassis, the ThinkPad X1 Yoga keeps its crown as a top business 2-in-1. That said, while battery life has improved for some configurations, it's noticeably short if you opt for the 14-inch 4K UHD-resolution display with Dolby Vision HDR400. It's a beautiful display, but probably not worth the power penalty for most users, and Lenovo thankfully offers three other options including a low-power 380-nit full-HD display that should deliver much better battery options are the name of the game here. The base price is around $1,200, but the X1 Yoga can be configured to more than $2,500. However, unless your needs are specific, you're better off going with a preconfigured model like my review sample. It was loaded with all the high-end components offered and didn't break the $1,900 mark. Joshua Goldman/CNETLenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 4 Base As reviewedPrice $1,142$1,880Display size/resolution 14-inch 1,920x1,080 touch display14-inch 3,840x2,160 HDR touch displayPC CPU Intel Core Intel Core i7-8665U with vProPC memory 8GB DDR4 SDRAM 2,133MHz16GB DDR4 SDRAM 2,133MHzGraphics 128MB dedicated Intel HD Graphics 620128MB dedicated Intel UHD Graphics 620Storage 256GB PCIe NVMe Opal SSD1TB PCIe NVMe Opal SSDNetworking Intel 9560 vPro 2 x 2, Bluetooth 9560 vPro 2 x 2, Bluetooth system Windows 10 Home 64-bitWindows 10 Pro 64-bit The X1 Yoga is essentially the business version of Lenovo's premium Yoga C940. With dual 360-degree hinges and the included active pen, it's not only great as a laptop, but also for giving presentations, marking up documents or collaborating on projects without someone having to awkwardly hover over privacy is a concern, you can shut down the mics entirely, and built into the thin display is a webcam fitted with a physical shutter that slides to block the camera. Lenovo offers two newer privacy features on this model as well PrivacyGuard and PrivacyAlert. The former makes it difficult for people to the sides of your display to see what you're looking at it from head on. The latter will actually pop up a notification on your screen if someone is shoulder surfing while you're working. PrivacyGuard is unfortunately only available on one of the four display options and PrivacyAlert requires an optional IR camera in the laptop. A fingerprint reader comes standard and it stores and processes your print on its own system-on-a-chip SoC for better protection of your system and print from hacks or malware. Other security features include self-encrypting SSDs and Intel vPro processors, discrete TPM and FIDO authentication. The match-on-chip fingerprint reader comes standard. Joshua Goldman/CNETRegardless of the configuration, you get the same durable build quality that Lenovo says meets 12 military-grade requirements and goes through more than 200 quality checks. You also get the same great keyboard. It's spill-resistant and has a two-level backlight. It's without a doubt one of the most comfortable keyboards you'll find on a laptop this thin and you likely won't have to adjust to using it. With a vestige of past ThinkPads, you'll still find Lenovo's TrackPoint in between the G, H and B keys, and the left, right and scroll mouse buttons below the space bar. Although many will likely end up using its reliable Windows Precision Touchpad, I find the TrackPoint comes in handy in cramped plane, train or bus X1 Yoga has two Thunderbolt 3 USB-C ports, two USB gen 1 ports and a full-size HDMI output. Sitting directly next to one of the USB-C ports is a connector for Ethernet using an included dongle, but also an optional side mechanical dock. There's a combo headphone/mic jack, too. The included Pen Pro tucks into a charging garage on the right side so it's always handy. Joshua Goldman/CNETAlso tucked into the body's right side at the front is Lenovo's ThinkPad Pro Pen with 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivity. It charges in its garage, getting up to 100 minutes of battery life with just 15 seconds of charging. It's a nice, responsive little pen and its seamless storage in the body makes you wonder why other pen-enabled laptops and tablets can't have something performance, faster chargingPerformance on my X1 Yoga was excellent, which isn't much of a surprise given its maxed-out configuration Intel Core i7-8665U vPro processor, 16GB of 2,133MHz RAM and a 1TB PCIe NVMe SSD. For day-to-day office chores like email and word processing, though, you'll be fine with the entry-level config running a Intel Core i5-8265U. If your days usually have you handling more intensive tasks - such as working in large databases or spreadsheets or creating multimedia presentations - or you just want more headroom for the future, go ahead and get the life, though, is a bit disappointing. Lenovo claims up to 18 hours, but that's not for the more powerful configuration I tested with the UHD-resolution display which ran for 6 hours, 7 minutes in our streaming video test. With power and screen brightness adjustments, you can get more work time out of it, but basically, if you want the best battery life, skip the 4K HDR display. The thing that saves it, though, is that the USB-C port can charge the laptop to 80 percent in only an hour - perfect for recharging on those airport layovers - or you can run the X1 Yoga off an external battery the Gen 3 model, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga is the slim, light two-in-one you won't mind getting from your IT department. While it would be nice if PrivacyGuard and PrivacyAlert were standard features, it's at least good to have the options. It being slightly thinner and lighter only makes this flexible, durable convertible more appealing. Watch this Lenovo updates the crown jewels of its ultraportable portfolio at CES 2019 0137 Score Breakdown Design 8Features 9Performance 8Battery 8

lenovo thinkpad x1 yoga 2019