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Reviews of Lenovo Yoga Book 10.1-inch

Testseek.com 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

  • Good
  • Extremely thin and light
  • More comfortable than a Windows tablet
  • Digitiser for artists and students
  • Not too expensive
  • Well Built
  • Nice display
  • Good battery life

The editors didn't like

  • Weak overall performance
  • Extremely limited connectivity
  • Not suitable as an everyday computer
  • Slow processor
  • Keyboard / touchpad implementation is not perfect
  • MicroUSB port only

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Reviews

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  Published: 2016-11-09, review by: androidheadlines.com

  • Thin and light which makes it super portable, Versatile with different modes of use, The design is stunning, Great build quality with a solid feel, The Halo Keyboard works extremely well, The Create Pad offers up a nice way to take notes even in the tradi
  • Poor camera performance, Getting used to the Halo Keyboard might be challenging for some at first, Opening the Yoga Book could be easier, Multi-window doesn't work with some rather popular apps
  • The Lenovo Yoga Book has a lot going for it, with plenty of useful features and a great design that will surely turn heads with the cool illuminating Halo Keyboard. At $500 though, the Yoga Book is a pricey Android 2-in-1 tablet device that some might f...

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  Published: 2016-11-07, Author: Brian , review by: wired.com

  • A truly beautiful little gadget. Incredibly adaptable. A better stylus and digitizer than you'd expect for the price. Makes a stab at the future
  • The Halo keyboard is barely usable. Being pretty good at a lot of things is no substitute for being great and something

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(60%)
 
  Published: 2016-11-05, Author: Emily , review by: newatlas.com

  • Abstract:  There's an analogy to be made between the Lenovo Yoga Book and its namesake practice. Done well, yoga provides functional fitness for any task at hand. When poorly executed, it's frustrating and injurious. Yoga Book lands somewhere in between.This novel 2...

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  Published: 2016-11-05, Author: Ed , review by: tabletpcreview.com

  • Dedicated writing/drawing area ideal for taking notes, Modern, flexible design, Good value,
  • Virtual keyboard not well suited for long typing sessions, Limited sidebyside multitasking, No biometric security
  • The Lenovo Yoga Book's dedicated writing/drawing area makes it ideal for the user that wants a two-in-one for frequent note taking. Its virtual Halo Keyboard is fine for light email and word processing, plus this is a fine computer for casual games, ebook...

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(87%)
 
  Published: 2016-11-05, Author: Sebastian , review by: notebookcheck.net

  • design and stability, firm hinge, touch keys' good feedback, touchpad very comfortable to use, sketch & write on paper, battery's all-day runtime, bright, high-contrast panel, decent 8 MP camera
  • few interfaces, no DIN A5 paper size, sluggish eMMC, no maintenance options
  • The Yoga Book is attractive thanks to the natural writing input via paper on the one hand. On the other hand, it is a full-blown Windows device. Users can forward their creative workings or notes to their habitual desktop apps or edit them to a limited de...

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(86%)
 
  Published: 2016-11-03, Author: Chance , review by: chipchick.com

  • Real Pen stylus performs well and doesn't need to be charged, can write in pen and get a digital copy at the same time, extremely thin and light, premium build, great battery life
  • Large bezels, no quick charging, tablet-level processing power, touch keyboard touchpad can be slow or unresponsive, Prev3 of 3Next
  • … Prev1 of 3Next...

 
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  Published: 2016-10-25, review by: phonearena.com

  • Hugely ambitious design attempts to bridge your digital and analog workflow, Superthin build looks great, and elaborate hinge offers a lot of flexibility (pun intended), Pricing isn't too bad – and $500 includes keyboard and pen, unlike something like an
  • Performance is uppermidrange at best, Display falls short of other Lenovo tablets, Software's a bit glitchy, Halo keyboard takes a lot of practice to type on reliably, Speaker positioning less than ideal, Slow time to fully recharge
  • It's impossible to fault Lenovo for what the company tried to do here: it saw an opportunity to reinvigorate the hybrid tablet market with a device that runs familiar software (albeit with a new multitasking-friendly twist), that supports some really usef...

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(65%)
 
  Published: 2016-10-22, Author: Brian , review by: techcrunch.com

  • Abstract:  No mainstream electronics manufacture is making more interesting, innovative and downright bizarre products than Lenovo. Between its contorting efforts under the Yoga banner and the modular handsets being produced by Motorola, the Chinese company is takin...

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-
 
  Published: 2016-10-22, Author: Engadget , review by: engadget.com

  • Sleek, compact design, Unique pen-and-paper integration, Long-lasting battery
  • Very difficult to type on, Some software glitches in the Android version, Middling performance
  • The Lenovo Yoga Book, available with either Android or Windows, is a compelling hybrid device -- at least on paper. It ditches a physical keyboard for a touch-sensitive surface that does double duty as a keyboard and digital sketchpad. With the includ...

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(67%)
 
  Published: 2016-10-19, Author: Keith , review by: networkworld.com

  • Abstract:  The scoop: Yoga Book (Android version tested), about $500 (Windows 10 version costs $550), by Lenovo. What is it? The Yoga Book takes its name very seriously – it looks more like a paper-based notebook in size and weight than a traditional computer “note...

 
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(90%)
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