Quote from: Dorby on January 12, 2021, 16:46:02
Interesting... Apparently a ThinkBook Yoga has upgradeable ram, wi-fi and dual ssd which is better than most Thinkpad Yogas, and still retains all the ports except for full SD, which is better than all Ideapad Yogas. And unlike some Ideapads, both USB-C ports seem to fully support PD 3.0, DP 1.4 and GbE.
Only 1 year base warranty, 60Wh battery, no matte touch, LTE or IR are not big issues considering this price. TB4, built in Wacom AES and spill-resistant keyboard are great additions.
Of course, I'm mostly curious how the keyboard of the 14s Yoga compares to the Thinkpad X13 Yoga and Ideapad Yoga 7i 14. Would've liked to see some comparison in this review as I'm sure most people are wondering about the same thing with these new ThinkBooks.
Another fact to note, I believe this is the first 2-in-1 Yoga from Lenovo without a "Sensors" section under specifications page in the PSREF website. No accelerometer and gyroscope sensors that are always present, even on most low-end 2-in-1 laptops.
No official Linux support from Lenovo either it seems, from PSREF.
Overall a very good Intel convertible ultrabook. Wish there were more hardware options like i3-1125G4 CPU, 16GB base soldered memory (for dual-channel 32GB) and a QHD 500-600nits display.
This device looks really interesting. I think the part of the problem is intel and their vpro CPUs, which only have the older iGPUs.
The internal competition for this would be the L13 Yoga G2 as it has the same CPU options. It also has TB4, nearly the same weight, while being smaller, and only has a 46Wh battery, but has a better keyboard layout.
Also there's the Yoga 6. Has AMD, two USB As and Cs, but only one supports charging unfortunately.