Fortunately, Lenovo is no stranger to strange laptops – the Half-e-Ink Yoga Book C930 comes to mind, just like last year’s ThinkBook Plus. The fact that the company has led it from the concept phase, through development, to store shelves should give new Lavie fans hope; this is good proof that Lenovo is committed to it. In the short term, however, if you want a Lavie machine, you need to settle on Lenovo and NEC’s Lavie Pro Mobile.
At first glance, the Pro Mobile is just as practical as the Mini whimsical. The fact that it includes Intel’s i7-1165G7 disk drive with 16GB of LPDDR4x RAM and integrated Xe graphics should give the Pro Mobile the hassle of handling the most workload for fighters, but let’s be honest: the real draw here is just how portable this thing is. In addition to a 13.3-inch screen and a six-row keyboard with a key spacing of 1.5 mm, the Pro Mobile (partially carbon fiber) body weighs a shadow of less than two pounds and is only 0 , 66 centimeters thick. The only downside? Lenovo says you can expect up to ten hours of use of the Pro Mobile’s 49Wh battery, which is not great at all for a $ 1,700 laptop.