Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Lenovo Yoga 700 review

Lenovo Yoga 700 review

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Lenovo’s Yoga series is simultaneously one of the most odd and most practical attempts at the convertible laptop/tablet. Its 360-degree fold-back screen means it’s almost completely uncompromised as a laptop, and can also be used in a variety of touchscreen configurations.

The most recent addition to the line is the Lenovo Yoga 700. It includes the latest Intel processor at its heart, but is otherwise a mid-range device: it's larger, heavier and less luxurious than the Yoga 900.

However, this 14-inch model with adapter like IBM Thinkpad G40 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad Y550 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad Y710 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad Y730A AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad Y450 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad Y530 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad U110 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad U330 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad U350 AC adapter, Lenovo IdeaPad U450 AC adapter, Lenovo 3000 Y510 AC adapter, Lenovo 3000 G430 AC adapter is available in options that include an Nvidia graphics chip and its storage drive is an easy-to-upgrade 2.5-inch SATA model. These qualities make it an intriguing option for those looking for a slightly more versatile convertible that doesn’t break the bank.

The heart of this machine is an Intel Core i7-6200U processor, which includes the very latest 14nm Skylake technology and Intel HD 520 graphics, which should combine to make light work of most workloads, as well as some gaming. All this while consuming less power than ever – although the real-world results of these improvements are only likely to be a few per cent of extra performance and battery life over last year’s Yoga 3 in normal use.

You can also spec up the Yoga 700 with an Nvidia GeForce GT 940M. Although a pretty modest graphics chip, it will double the performance of the Intel graphics and turn this laptop from one that’s capable of playing older games at low resolution and 30fps to one that can play older games at a high frame rate. It will just about be able to play the latest games, too, if you keep the resolution down.

Whip off the bottom of this laptop and you can see the 2.5in SATA drive. Lenovo has only made this laptop available with SSDs, but there's nothing to stop you from adding a hard drive if storage capacity is a priority over speed, or you could upgrade to a larger SSD – Lenovo only offers up to 256GB – or add a combined SSD and HDD.

You can also access the single SO-DIMM memory slot, again giving you the option of a future upgrade from the 8GB (DDR3 1,600MHz) that comes with all the available models.

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