Lenovo’s CEO Yang Yuanqing CEO has been very vocal on cross-platform integrations. So this CES wintenessed the brand going into full integration mode with Yoga, the world’s first multimode notebook. It's not a tablet, not a laptop either. It's both.
Its 360-degree hinged screen can go all the way back, so you can touch and prod your heart out on the 13.3 inch capacitive multi-touch screen.
Spec wise, Yoga has an 1600x900 screen, going with 8 GB of RAM and a 256 GB SSD drive. The prospects of this device look even better in light of 8-hours of running time.
Lenovo's second showcased could be thouhght of as the K1 IdeaPad's successor. The former had deserved aplace as a very decent tablet, and its successor steps into Asus Transformer's territory with a detachable keyboard and a massive 20 hour battery life. That’s 10 for the tablet and an extra 10 with the keyboard attached. Connectivity options are not scarce, with USB, Micro USB and SD Card slots on offer.
The Ideacentre A720 was the big offering in the Desktop range, and boy is it a looker. Sleek, slim, and yes, a hinge to give it the tabletish touch that seems to be all the rage right now. We definitely will revisit the A720 soon.
