Lenovo Yoga 900 Challenges MacBook Air
Lenovo Yoga 900 Challenges MacBook Air
Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Lenovo Laptop Battery
Lenovo has just made the act of choosing an ultraportable notebook even more difficult by releasing the Yoga 900. The 13-inch notebook starts off at 2.8 pounds and is only.59 inches thick. It has a touchscreen that can turn in every direction possible. The Yoga 900 also runs a new 6th-generation Intel Core i5 or i7 processor. The device has surprised some critics and consumers.
CNET has given the Yoga 900 four stars.
“Lenovo clearly listened to feedback about last year’s high-end Yoga, keeping the excellent overall design but boosting the specs to match other premium 13-inch laptops.”
CNET adds that the speed of the Yoga 900 could be a little faster. They also said the battery with such as Lenovo 57Y6528 Battery, Lenovo FRU 42T4585 Battery, Lenovo L08L6C02 Battery, Lenovo 3000 G430 Battery, Lenovo 3000 G530 Battery, Lenovo IdeaPad Z360 Battery, Lenovo 51J0500 Battery, Lenovo FRU 42T4801 Battery, Lenovo FRU 42T4819 Battery, Lenovo ThinkPad W510 Battery, Lenovo ThinkPad SL510 Battery, Lenovo ThinkPad SL410 Batterylife was a little bit average.
Laptop Magazine also gave the Yoga 900 four stars.
“Lenovo’s flagship 2-in-1 is the total package when it comes to hybrids, featuring a stunning design, solid performance and a supersharp display.”
The review adds that even though there are other two-in-one devices, the Yoga 900 is just about the best you can buy now. They notice that the keys have a short travel distance, but still work well.
No matter how good the Yoga 900 is, Lenovo has a major PR problem to get past: The company used to install adware on new computers. TheNextWeb reported on the scandal earlier this year.
“The adware, named Superfish, is reportedly installed on a number of Lenovo’s consumer laptops out of the box. The software injects third-party ads on Google searches and websites without the user’s permission,” reported Owen Williams earlier this year.
Wired accused Lenovo’s response to the adware scandal as being clueless after the company claimed that it stopped shipping adware during the previous month and that customers didn’t need to worry about their laptops compromising their security. They quoted Robert Graham from Errata Security.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home