Quote from: fmyhr on May 04, 2021, 14:54:33
Thanks for this review. I'm glad to know about this inexpensive 8-core AMD notebook, even if the input devices and screen are subpar. And as usual I very much appreciate your quantitative testing for display backlight PWM, brightness, color accuracy, and laptop surface temperature measurements, etc. In contrast to some other commenters, I don't have a problem with your overall % score, for this notebook or in general. Any such single score necessarily obscures the particular reasons to prefer or avoid a particular device. Anybody interested should read your thorough reviews. I see no particular reason to try to incorporate price into your % score -- prices vary greatly between different markets and different sales anyway. You could perhaps try to assign a separate value score, as one commenter suggests -- but individuals can easily do this on their own, armed with your thorough review and their current knowledge of the notebook's current price in their local market. In short: thank you for your in-depth reviews.
And back to this laptop: it's a great choice for someone who wants a very powerful CPU in a cheap package and is willing to overlook or work around the weak input devices and screen. Although why Lenovo couldn't make the HDMI at least v2.0 is beyond me...!
I see no reason why one would purchase this device, when there are much better offerings in the same price range. For example, they could just wait for HP to update their Envy x360 13 AMD to 5000 series AMD. The Envy x360 13 is a laptop that was fully recommended for the average person by many youtubers and qualified reviewers (Linus Tech Tips, The Verge, CNET etc.). It has a higher level of performance due to higher power limits, and has none of the drawbacks that his device has. (It has a 300 nit (upgradeable to 400), much better build quality, and it's the same price.)