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Reviews of Lenovo Yoga Book 10.1-inch

Testseek.co.uk have collected 357 expert reviews of the Lenovo Yoga Book 10.1-inch and the average rating is 76%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Lenovo Yoga Book 10.1-inch.
Award: Most Awarded November 2016
November 2016
 
(76%)
357 Reviews
Users
(75%)
2398 Reviews
76 0 100 357

The editors liked

  • The Yoga Book's versatility is unmatched in both the laptop and tablet worlds combined – in that it actually collides the two. Full-on touch laptop keyboards are something we in the TechRadar office used to joke about when seeing devices like the 2014 Thi
  • Clever design
  • Superb build quality
  • Unique usability
  • Decent battery life
  • Ultra-slim
  • Very light
  • Truly ultraportable
  • Strikingly futuristic design
  • High build quality
  • Ample battery life
  • Stylus works great
  • This is a very slim
  • Very light hybrid laptop
  • Available in both Windows 10 and Android versions. The backlit touch keyboard vanishes at the touch of a button and the included stylus works well on both the Wacom surface and with an ink tip on actual paper
  • Outside the box thinking
  • Halo Keyboard isn't the keyless gimmick you might think
  • Multiple usage scenarios with touch panel input and included Real Pen stylus
  • Learns as you go
  • Thin and lightweight design
  • Minority Report styling
  • Awesome double-act keyboard and drawing pad
  • Decent performance and battery life
  • Super thin and lightweight
  • Fantastic note-taking device
  • Fantastic build quality
  • Clever writing technology
  • Good battery life
  • Compact
  • Sturdy build
  • Innovative form factor transcends the 2-in-1
  • Note-taking is excellent
  • Accurate stylus
  • Close to stock Android install
  • Insanely thin and light
  • Futuristic design
  • Innovative input methods

The editors didn't like

  • There isn't a lot that we outright don't like about the Yoga Book
  • But there are downsides which detract from an otherwise potentially revolutionary device. For one
  • It appears to us that Intel's Atom chip is holding the Yoga Book back from its true poten
  • Performance can be sluggish
  • Screen needs more punch
  • Audio lacks cohesion and dynamics
  • Typing feel is poor
  • Relatively low-power last-gen CPU
  • Huge price tag
  • Software/firmware needs development
  • HALO Keyboard is finicky and frustrating
  • No digitizer on the screen
  • No USB TypeC
  • The keyboard isn't suited for more than minimal typing
  • There's only a single Micro-USB port for accessories and charging
  • And the Atom processor is slower than mainstream laptops. The hefty pen
  • Extra tips and paper pad are a lot of additional gear to ca
  • Keyboard often misses first press
  • Slow microUSB 2.0 takes years to recharge
  • Limited power
  • Some will never get over Halo Keyboard's learning curve
  • Overly complex and convoluted for many
  • Where to keep the Real Pen stylus (and why the physical change of
  • Get ready for plenty of typos (at first)
  • Multi-window isn't perfect yet
  • Few dedicated drawing apps on Android
  • Slightly sluggish performance
  • Slow performance
  • No cloud note syncing
  • Buggy software
  • Keyboard is hard to use
  • Typing without keys feels strange
  • Processor isn't powerful enough for a full laptop
  • We don't know if it will get Android updates
  • Underpowered
  • Too dependent on Halo Keyboard
  • Windows 10
  • Limited connectivity options

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Reviews

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  Published: 2016-10-25, Author: Leigh: , review by: pickr.com.au

  • About as thin and light as tablets get, Strong aluminium-magnesium casing, Offers a few ways to control the tablet, Keyboard is adaptive and will change the hit area of each key gradually to better match how you type, Charges easily through microUSB
  • Getting used to the keyboard takes a very long time, and even when you do, expect a very high error rate, Home row indicators are flat and therefore useless, Keyboard cannot be detached, Can't use the stylus on the screen, only the keyboard surface, Buggy
  • When we first saw Lenovo's YogaBook back in September at the IFA show in Berlin, there was excitement: here we had a potential game changer delivering a new keyboard experience that does something more. We've seen this dual input idea executed in differen...

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(70%)
 
  Published: 2016-10-18, Author: Melissa , review by: goodgearguide.com.au

  • Abstract:  Lenovo's Yoga Book is for people who have never been content with just a keyboard and mouse to express their ideas. People who prefer to scribble on notepads or napkins. Who draw pictures to illustrate ideas or create art. The $550 Yoga Book facilitates t...

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  Published: 2016-10-18, Author: Alex , review by: gizmodo.com.au

  • But it would be perfect for the Yoga Book. This ultra thin device feels like the future of mobile computing, and it's so close to being good that it's maddening when it's bad. With some tweaks to the keyboard and an operating system that doesn't even exis...

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  Published: 2016-10-18, review by: cnet.com.au

  • This is a very slim, very light hybrid laptop, available in both Windows 10 and Android versions. The backlit touch keyboard vanishes at the touch of a button and the included stylus works well on both the Wacom surface and with an ink tip on actual paper
  • The keyboard isn't suited for more than minimal typing, there's only a single Micro-USB port for accessories and charging, and the Atom processor is slower than mainstream laptops. The hefty pen, extra tips and paper pad are a lot of additional gear to ca
  • Lenovo's slim Yoga Book two-in-one is great with a pen, but its faux keyboard keeps it from being a practical laptop...

 
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(70%)
 
  Published: 2016-09-06, Author: Campbell , review by: gizmodo.com.au

  • Abstract:  Lenovo's Yoga Book is, hands down, the most interesting and innovative gadget that I got hands-on time with at the IFA 2016 trade show in Berlin this week, at an event where everything purports to be innovative. In the same way that the original Microsoft...

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  Published: 2016-10-18, Author: Melissa , review by: pcworld.co.nz

  • Abstract:  Lenovo's Yoga Book is for people who have never been content with just a keyboard and mouse to express their ideas. People who prefer to scribble on notepads or napkins. Who draw pictures to illustrate ideas or create art. The $550 Yoga Book facilitates t...

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  Published: 2019-07-26, Author: Monit , review by: in.pcmag.com

  • Abstract:  Best tablets of 2016 We didn't get many tablets this year, and these are the best ones from the lot.

 
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  Published: 2017-02-24, Author: Shintu , review by: exhibit.tech

  • The Yoga Book offers a glimpse of the future in a laptop design. There are lots of reasons to seriously consider the Yoga book; first, it looks cool, it's a sleek little computer with a Halo Keyboard that looks innovative and also a convertible that can b...

 
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-
 
  Published: 2017-01-30, Author: Nimish , review by: techpp.com

  • Abstract:  R emember Harvey Dent? The charismatic district attorney of Gotham City (yeah, yeah, THE Gotham City where you find THE Batman) has a traumatic experience and thanks to a mutilated face, goes mad, and becomes a criminal known as Two-Face. But no mere crim...

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  Published: 2017-01-16, Author: View , review by: fonearena.com

  • Abstract:  Working in the technology industry, we often get a chance to try out bleeding edge tech. While a lot of this tends to be centred around smartphones, traditional PCs too have seen the benefits. From the near bezel-less Dell XPS series to the Touch Bar equi...

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