Similarly, HP's Spectre x360 13.5, for being a convertible and boasting a 3:2 aspect ratio display. Schenker's Vision 14, however, excels itself somewhat in our comparison field by its design, dedicated GPU, and RAM slots. However, you can lower expenses by looking out for Lenovo's frequent discounts.ĭespite many perks, our review shows a few flaws remaining from its predecessor, while the competition comes up with powerful devices: Asus' Zenbook S 13 OLED featuring the new Ryzen 6800U from AMD, Dell's XPS 13 Plus, and also Apple's MacBook Air featuring the M2 chip. In the States, prices start at US$2,070 ( now on sale for US$1,760) - for an already high-end SKU -, and in Australia, the cheapest model costs AU$2999. At Lenovo UK, the latter is an extra £110, while our SKU is a total of £1,564. On top of a 1 TB PCIe 4.0 SSD, you get a 3K OLED 90 Hz display in our tested SKU, but at Lenovo US, you don't have a choice but to take the 4K OLED screen with a lower 60 Hz refresh rate (also applies to Canada). It does not exist in an AMD version like the Yoga Slim 7. The term "Ultrabook" has now been replaced by Intel with "Evo Laptop", but we still use the former here and there.Ĭompared to the predecessor, you can now choose up to 32 GB of RAM, while our SKU features 16 GB and a fast 14-core Intel processor, with the Core i5-1240P as the only alternative. Whilst our Yoga Slim 9i (or just Slim 9i, as it's called in the US) is beyond doubt a classic clamshell-style laptop of upper mid-range with high-end aspects, which you can already spot by looking at the fancy 3D glass lid. Lenovo's Yoga Slim 9i is a 14-inch laptop with a 3K OLED 90 Hz display and a fast Intel Core i7-1280P. But who's going to keep track of the Yoga series? Yoga 9, Yoga Slim 7i Pro, Yoga Slim 9i, Yoga 7, Yoga Slim 7 Carbon, and Slim 7 ProX, some being a convertible, while others aren't.