Lenovo's new flagship Ultrabook doesn't quite bend to our will
"While it blows its predecessor out of the water in the looks
department, the Yoga 3 Pro has too many flaw to justify the slightly too
high price point. A triumph for design, but little else."
For
Slim and light
Attractive hinge
Improved tablet mode
Comfortable keyboard
Against
Quite pricey
Battery life
Build quality
Less powerful than the Yoga 2 Pro
The Yoga 2 Pro
was arguably the finest convertible Ultrabook money could buy when it
launched in late 2013 - and it continues to impress today. It was sleek,
packed a best-in-class QHD+ display and could transform into a
multitude of positions depending on how you wanted to use it. At
$1,099 (£1,099, around AUS$1,254), it was also relatively affordable
compared to competing Ultrabooks boasting displays with high pixel
densities. On the flip side, its battery life, unwieldy tablet mode and lack of 802.11ac
Wi-Fi meant that there was still plenty of room for improvement. By
addressing these concerns, I could see Lenovo returning with a smash hit
on its hands.
On paper, the Yoga 3 Pro promises to be just that, with
one look at the spec sheet revealing a machine for fans of both
convertible machines and Ultrabooks in general to lust after.
The Yoga 3 Pro's display is pretty reflective
Broad appeal?
One of the first devices to arrive with Intel's new Core M "Broadwell"
processor, which succeeds the company's battery-sipping Haswell
architecture, it has catwalk-thin dimensions and comes in a trio of
colours: Golden, Orange Clementine and Light Silver. It
has a designer (and not to mention brave) price tag to match, starting
at $1,299 (£1,299) for the entry-level model with a 256GB SSD. That
rises to $1,699 (UK and AUS price TBC) for the top-spec offering, which
doubles storage capacity and comes with the Pro, rather than regular
version of Windows 8.1. Cost also varies (somewhat inconsistently) depending on which colour you choose; you can view the full line-up on Lenovo's website.
Performing some benchmarksThere are a few notable competitors in that price bracket. One is Microsoft's Surface Pro 3, which will set you back $1,299 for the 256GB / Core i5 version, and Apple's 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina, which costs the same for the 128GB / Core i5 model. Then
there's the Yoga 2 Pro that, following a price drop that has seen it
fall to just $849 (around £530, or AUS$969), now represents serious
value for money. Although it's engineered towards gaming, another option
to consider is the Razer Blade, which we reckon is one of the best-crafted Windows laptops of all time.
Flexi-time
One
of the Yoga 3 Pro's most striking features is its watchband hinge,
which has been crafted from more than 800 individual pieces of aluminium
steel, according to Lenovo. There are now six hinges,
compared to the Yoga 2 Pro's two. They add a retro twist to an otherwise
modern design, and in addition to oozing elegance they occasionally
emit the sort of satisfying clink you might hear when slipping on an
expensive timepiece. Windows 8 Ultrabooks have for some
time struggled to escape the shadow cast by Apple's MacBook Air, but
Lenovo has found a way to stand out without aping the Cupertino
company's well-familiar design aesthetic - and it's refreshing to see.
The Yoga 3 Pro fits just about anywhereThis
stylistic choice is timely in more ways than one having arrived during a
year that has seen the tech industry pay more attention to fashion
trends (in the case of wearables like the Apple Watch, anyway - others remain stoney-faced at the idea.) But
it's not fashion for fashion's sake: the new hinge design makes the
device sturdier than the not-exactly-flimsy Yoga 2 Pro, and Lenovo says
that it also enabled its engineers to slim the device down to the point
that they did.
Flipping tech
That hinge allows
you to flip the lid 360 degrees into one of four different modes:
standard Laptop, Tent, Stand, and Tablet. Next to Laptop mode, Tent is
perhaps the most useful because it takes up the least room on the
surface area and makes it easier to interact with Windows 8.1 apps.
Tent mode gives some Windows 8.1 apps a new lease of lifeI
took the Yoga Pro 3 on a trip and found that the Tent position allowed
the device to double as an attractive alarm clock when positioned on the
hotel's bedside cabinet. The other modes have their uses
too; Stand provides the same benefits as Tent while providing more
rigidity, and Tablet, a bugbear on the Yoga 2 Pro due to that device's
thickness, is easier to handle on the Yoga 3 Pro due to it being
thinner, lighter and slightly longer in the body than the outgoing
machine.
Specifications and build quality
The Yoga 3 Pro gets a QHD+ display, which totes the same
3200 x 1800 pixel resolution found on the Yoga 2 Pro. You'll want to
adjust the magnification settings in Windows 8.1 to 150% or higher make
fonts and text clearly legible. Sticking to higher
resolutions gives you more desktop real-estate to edit multimedia files
and snap documents side-by-side. In some scenarios it can be a real
productivity boon, but overall the resolution still feels like overkill
at 13 inches. One option is to lower the resolution to
2048 x 1152 (16:9), a notch under the native resolution, which keeps
everything looking sharp while remaining readable with magnification set
to 100%.
The display's 300 nits is sufficiently bright for indoor
use, but slightly too dim for outside conditions. It's an IPS panel
with very good viewing angles - a crucial factor for a device designed
to be used in many positions.
You'll need a charger nearby most of the timeThe
Yoga 3 Pro is one of the most portable Ultrabooks around, coming in 17%
slimmer and 14% lighter than the Yoga 2 Pro, by Lenovo's measurements. It
weighs just 2.62 pounds, making it lighter than the 13-inch MacBook
Air's 2.69 pounds, and it's slightly thicker along the middle of the
left and right edges, as opposed to the tapered design of Apple's
machine. It's roughly the same weight as Samsung's Series 9 900X3C, and only the ageing Toshiba Portege Z930/Z935 and Sony Vaio Pro 13 come in lighter in the 13-inch category, at 2.50 pounds and 2.34 pounds respectively.
Build inequality
The
Yoga 3 Pro measures 13 x 9 x 0.5 inches (W x D x H), and it's
astounding just how svelte, portable and slim Lenovo has made it. It
can easily be picked up from any edge with the lid at any angle with
ease; however, doing so can expose the Ultrabook's questionable build
quality, raising the question of whether Lenovo has made it too thin. The
lid possesses an alarming amount of flex along the left and right-hand
edges, and picking it up using the frame's bezel produces a rippling,
discoloured effect.
Stand mode is great for touchscreen interactionAt
no point did I feel like the lid would snap, or even that it might
cause substantial damage, but the undesired effect made me constantly
aware of the need to be gentle when flipping it into different
positions. The Ultrabook's base also suffers from slight
flex when force is applied to the left and right areas of the clickpad,
an action that makes it creak more than a pensioner's knees. I'm in the thinner = winner camp when it comes to Ultrabooks, but there is an argument
that it can be detrimental for devices to be too slim, especially if
it's at the expense of build quality, and Lenovo treads a fine line with
the Yoga 3 Pro.
Slim, and fairly annoying to openThe
Yoga 3 Pro is made of a smooth plastic with a dimpled effect on the
base and under the display frame. Both the lid and base have a tapered
edge, which helps keep it steadfast when in tent mode and prevents it
from slipping. Picking the machine up when the lid is
closed is another matter. Lenovo made the decision not to include a
recessed section or lip along the machine's front edge, and as a result
attempting to open it from the front can be a maddening experience -
even with two hands (forget using one - the lid is simply too light). I
eventually clocked on that it's far easier to open the lid by placing
my index finger on each of the machine's sides to hold it steady and
using my thumb to prise it open. Is it a big deal? No. Could it have
been easily avoided? Without doubt.
Ports and connectivity
The
Yoga 3 Pro is an impressive feat of engineering, but sacrifices clearly
had to be made for it to be so thin at the expense of its I/O
capabilities. Due to the watchband design, there is no
room for ports at the rear of the device. Instead they have been lumped
into the thicker middle section along the machine's left and right-hand
edges.
The Yoga 3 Pro's power port looks just like USBOn
the left-hand side is a power port, which doubles as a USB port. The
power connector itself has a slightly curved lip to prevent you from
plugging into another USB port, which could damage the laptop. Next
to that is a USB 3.0 port and a full-size SD card connector.
Unfortunately not enough room remained for a full-sized HDMI port, so
you'll have to make do with using an adapter. It's not a huge deal, but
slightly irritating if you output to a HDMI monitor regularly.
A handy volume rocker is on the right-hand edgeThe
standout communications protocol onboard is 802.11ac Wi-Fi, which was
sorely missing from the Yoga 2 Pro. I found that connectivity held
solidly throughout my time with the review model. Bluetooth 4.0 is also
present for pairing speakers, peripherals and other devices.
Performance and battery life
Benchmarks
Cinebench (Multi-Core): 13.3fps
3D Mark 11
Ice Storm: 25,839
Cloud Gate: 2,738
Sky Diver: 1,406
Fire Storm: 329
PC Mark 8
Home: 1147
Work: 2,393
Battery life test
Power saver: 5 hours 15 mins
Balanced: 4 hours and 30 minutes
High Performance: 2 hours and 57 minutes
reviewsense Light Use battery test: 7 hours and 10 minutes
For
the wad of cash you'll spend on the Yoga 3 Pro, it's not enough for it
to look good - it has to perform too. It may be able to flex, but as
powerlifters know, it's pointless doing so in the absense of muscle. Under
the hood is Intel's Core M-5Y70 CPU, which is clocked at 1.1GHz (turbo
boost to 2.6GHz). As I've mentioned, it's based on Intel's Broadwell
architecture, which brings the benefit of allowing manufacturers to make
their Ultrabooks fanless (and thinner and quieter as a result). The
Yoga 3 Pro isn't fanless, but it still runs very quiet. You'll
occasionally hear its internal fan whirring away under heavier CPU or
graphic-intense workloads.
Unfortunately, the move to Broadwell has had a negative
impact on processing power compared to the Yoga 2 Pro. Last year's
Ultrabook scored around 1,000 points more in PC Mark's Home and Work
benchmarks. The Yoga 2 Pro's HD 4400 also scored slightly higher than
the Yoga 3 Pro's HD 5300 in 3D Mark's more demanding Fire Strike and
Cloud Gate benchmarks. However, the newer entrant performed better in
the Ice Storm test, which simulates light gaming use to test the GPU. The
system runs cool most of the time. When it does begin to warm up under
heavier loads, heat is concentrated to the top right-hand corner of the
base, and I never found it to heat up to the point where it was
uncomfortable.
It's light enough to be taken everywhereOther
specs include 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD from Samsung, which make for a
nippy machine that boots up and shuts down almost instantaneously.
Performance in Windows 8.1 apps is smooth, with the Yoga 3 Pro able to
handle anything you can find in the Windows Store. Graphics
duties are taken care of by Intel's integrated HD 5300 solution,
meaning only modest gaming is on the menu. Games running Valve's Source
Engine (such as Team Fortress 2, or Half-Life 2) will manage a healthy
40 - 50 FPS on lower resolutions with details turned down. A more
demanding title in Skyrim, on the other hand, only managed an average
(and borderline unplayable) 30FPS on 1280 x 720. Most
tasks on the desktop can be undertaken without any sign of slowdown;
1080p videos play with a hitch (including when outputted to a larger
monitor or TV), and medium-sized images in GIMP around 300MB in size can
be scaled and resized with delays into tens of seconds, rather than
minutes.
Battery strife
The Yoga 2 Pro's middling
battery life was one of the main pain points of last year's outing, and
poor performance has once again reared its head on the Yoga 3 Pro. The
move from Haswell to Broadwell was expected to increase efficiency, and
while Lenovo states nine hours of continuous use, you won't hit that
unless you use the machine very conservatively. Our
Light Use battery test: viewing websites, holding a couple of Skype
calls, watching a few YouTube movies, editing documents and images (and
so on) allowed the battery to run for just over seven hours. That was
with Lenovo's battery power management panel set to 'Power Saver',
brightness on 75%, keyboard back-lighting, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi all
switched on.
Battery management software helps prolong battery lifeFor
further analysis, I also ran PC Mark 8's punishing Home Battery Life
test under all three of Lenovo's power management settings, with
brightness set to 100% and Bluetooth and Wi-Fi switched on. As
expected, all three yielded lower results then the manual Light Use
test, with particularly dismal results from the High Performance
setting. Where the Yoga 2 Pro managed roughly 3 hours 10 minutes under
the same conditions, the Yoga 3 Pro went for just 2 hours and 57
minutes. This is not an Ultrabook that will go anywhere
near all day if you want to use the display on full beam. Whether this
is down to Lenovo's poor battery management software or Intel's Core M
processor will become clear when more Ultrabooks based on Broadwell hit
the market. On the plus side, charging times aren't so
bad. Set Lenovo's charging assistance software to Normal Mode and juice
is restored up in around 2 hours 30 minutes. A second option,
Conservation Mode, will top up from empty in around four hours but is
less taxing on the battery level, which Lenovo reckons can help extend
battery life if frequently used.
Keyboard and clickpad
I
was impressed with the Yoga 2 Pro's keyboard, and the Yoga 3 Pro's is a
more-than-solid offering with well-spaced chiclet keys that possess a
decent amount of travel. It's here that the laptop's thin profile comes
in as an advantage. Because it sits so low, it almost
feels like you're typing on the surface that it's resting on, allowing
the wrists to rest at a comfortably low position. Its keys are once
again shaped like those from Lenovo's Thinkpad line of devices, with a
square top edge and rounded bottom.
The Yoga 3 Pro's keyboard is super comfortableOnce
caveat in this area is the lack of a F-row of keys, which is a curious
and frustrating omission for an Ultrabook with a "Pro" moniker. There's
plenty of room between the top of the keyboard and the hinges to squeeze
one in, and the empty space winds up looking a little barren. Even
if a F-row wasn't included, pushing the keys higher up the keyboard
would have allowed Lenovo to make the clickpad slightly larger. As
things are, it's merely adequate, with a smooth texture that's a magnet
for fingerprints. I occasionally found that clickpad's
sensitivity was a little on the low side and failed to register swipes
if not enough pressure was applied. Clickpads, like keyboards, are
subjective, and I prefer ones that are rock solid and highly sensitive
(in terms of physical pressure required, not the cursor speed in
Windows). The MacBook Pro line has led the line in this
area, and those on Fujitsu's Lifebook line of business Windows 8.1
notebooks tend to perform similarly well. As someone who has become
accustomed to a MacBook Pro clickpad, I often became frustrated at the
Yoga 3 Pro clickpad's imprecise nature.
Multimedia and apps
The
Yoga 3 Pro's speakers are typical of most 13-inch laptops: loud enough
to fill a small room, but sorely lacking in bass, so a dedicated
external set will be required if you're planning on using it to provide
the soundtrack at parties. On the front of the frame is a
720p webcam, which produces a video image clear enough for Skype calls
and is comparable to a mid-range smartphone camera. In
terms of bundled Lenovo software, the company has given its adaptive
"Harmony" software, which is designed to adapt to how you would use the
machine over time, a short in the arm. Reading an e-book, for example,
will see it automatically change the brightness and colour temperature
according to environment lighting. It can also apply a
sepia-like on-screen filter to writing apps such as Evernote, which is
designed to simulate a book's page. I found it more distracting than
useful, though I don't doubt that it would reduce eye strain when used
for hours at a time.
Verdict
The Yoga 3 Pro is undoubtedly a stunner: it's almost
perillously thin, offers supreme portability and is genuinley useful in
certain scenarios when flipped into its various modes. If you value
those attributes above all else, there is nothing out there quite like
it. Such originality is a dual-edged sword, because
you'll have no choice but to pay through the nose to get it. Moreover,
questionable build quality, poor battery life and lower perforance than
last year's model are ovearbearing negatives that you should be aware of
before pledging your hard-earned.
We liked
The
Yoga 3 Pro is thin and light with a strikingly original design, making
it arguably most attractive Windows 8.1 Ultrabook out there. Its display
isn't one of the brightest we've laid eyes on, but its QHD+ resolution
means that text, images and UI elements look pleasingly crisp and
provide plenty of desktop real-estate for productivity or general tasks,
in addition to light gaming.
Its excellent IPS display means that content can be
easily viewed from all angles and shared with a friend when flipping the
convertible into one of its four different modes. For
those that like to be productive, the lack of an F-row of keys only
slightly detracts from what is an excellent keyboard to type on. It's
satisfying to use thanks to its incredibly low profile and decent sized,
well-spaced chiclet-style keys. It may not be an
absolute beast in the power department, but a fast-performing SSD means
that you're never waiting long for it to boot up and shut down, and
Windows apps open and close in a snap.
We disliked
It
can't be escaped: this is a fairly pricey Ultrabook with only very
average battery life. Sure, if you set the display to 25% brightness and
read a couple of websites a day then you may well hit those nine hours
that Lenovo promises, but is that the experience you want on something
that costs upwards of a grand - and then some? Not only
does the Yoga 3 Pro have poorer battery life than the Yoga 2 Pro, our
benchmarks show that it's less powerful too - in both the CPU and (in
more taxing conditions) graphics departments. It's
incredibly pretty and portable, but that thinness has been achieved at
the expense of build quality. The lid is overly flexible and highly
sensitive to LCD discolouration no matter how or where you grab it. It's
also awkward to open in the absence of a recessed lip. You
may fall in love with that superb keyboard, but only if you can get
along with not having a dedicated row of F-keys. And while the clickpad
operates smoothly enough, it becomes caked in fingerprints too easily
and is slightly finicky with how much pressure it wants you to apply.
Final verdict
The
Yoga 3 Pro ultimately fails to live up to its high price tag once you
get past the attractive exterior. There are too many drawbacks for it to
be recommended to anyone other than the style conscious crowd and those
who must have the latest model at any cost. On the other
hand you can look past its caveats and simply want one of the thinnest
and lightest Windows 8.1 machine on the market for everyday computing
tasks - whether that's browsing the web, light gaming or productivity
work - you'd be hard pressed to find find anything like it. But
before you put your hands into your pockets, it's worth noting that the
Yoga 3 Pro is one of the first Core M devices to race out of the traps,
and others are expected to follow soon. Thinner and lighter is set to
become the norm, and with fanless designs on the horizon, we should
expect to see even more experimental models that won't break the bank in
the near future.