Lenovo U1 Hybrid: Part Laptop, Part Tablet, All Awesome
Posted on 05. Jan, 2010 by tworld in Computer
Lenovo, the company behind the rock-solid Thinkpad line of laptops (a personal favorite of at least one Switched staffer), has unveiled (intentionally or not) a boatload of new machines ahead of this week’s CES festivities. We’ve seen a couple of uncharacteristically shiny Thinkpads, as well as the business class X100e netbook, but by far the most interesting thing is the IdeaPad U1 Hybrid.
At first, glance, it doesn’t appear all too different than other entries in the IdeaPad lineup of laptops — it has an 11.6-inch screen, a CULV Core 2 Duo and 4GB of RAM for all-day battery life and enough horsepower for light photo editing, plus Windows 7 and a 128GB SSD. But when you pop the screen out of its housing, it transforms into a multi-touch tablet running Linux on a Snapdragon processor (the same type found in the new Nexus One from Google) and a 16GB SSD for storing your most essential data.
The U1 Hybrid won’t be available until June, and will start at $999. We’ll be sure to get some hands-on time with this unique mashup once the floor at CES opens
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Joe
Jan 22nd, 2011
If you drop the laptop on accident, then the screen wil easly pop off and break, also what if, after a while of taking the screen off and putting it back on the latch of the laptop the holds the screen breaks or loosens so the screen will no longer stay on.