Technology

Lenovo’s latest 2-in-1 crams Windows and Android into one device

[ad_1]

We’ve come close to figuring out the ideal 2-in-1 laptop, but no company has nailed it yet. Lenovo’s latest attempt, the ThinkBook Plus Gen 5 Hybrid, recognizes that Android has a better touch interface than Windows and that Windows has a better laptop interface than Android — and it combines the two to try to get the best of both worlds.

When you’re in laptop mode, the ThinkBook Plus Hybrid functions like a normal Windows laptop. But when you pull the display off the laptop, it turns into an Android tablet. The bottom half of the device — the Windows half — has an Intel Core Ultra 7 Processor, 32GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, and a 75WHr battery. The top half has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 processor, 12GB of RAM, 256GB of flash storage, and a 38WHr battery. They share the same 14-inch 2.8K OLED display.

The version of the laptop I got to try was surprisingly well balanced. It was a touch top-heavy but not nearly as bad as some other laptop / tablet 2-in-1s I’ve tried over the years. The converting process was also dead simple. Just yank on the tablet until it disengages. No weird switch or special process. The sample version I tried would sometimes need some coaxing to separate, but that should hopefully be fixed by the time the laptop launches in Q2 of this year.

The software side of things is what I’m especially eager to check out in a final version. Right now, the two computers pressed into one don’t really communicate much with each other. If you’re preparing a big presentation in Windows mode, you can’t just pop the tablet off and keep working on the presentation — you have to manually share or move files across the OSes. That could change, or at least get easier, closer to launch. As it stands, you’ve effectively got two computers in one: the Windows half for when you want to work, and the Android side for when you want to relish content on a 14-inch tablet.

The ThinkBook Plus Gen 5 Hybrid is expected to ship in Q2 of this year and will start at around $1,999.

Besides the fun 2-in-1, Lenovo also showed off the next generation of the Lenovo ThinkBook 16p. Now on Gen 5, with a 14th Gen Intel processor (up to an i9) and up to an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060, this 16-inch laptop has a series of magnets and pogo pins on the back that Lenovo is calling the Magic Bay. It allows you to slap accessories on the laptop, including a new 4K webcam introduced this year called the Lenovo Magic Bay Studio.

1/5

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button