Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Tablet
Razer Blade Stealth
ASUS ROG XG Station 2
Dell Latitude 13 7000 Series
The Thinkpad line of
laptops has a legendary reputation for reliability that stretches back
all the way to its IBM days.
It is run through a number of military specification tests that ensure that it is capable of surviving in the most demanding enterprise environments.
Lenovo announced a new device at CES that incorporates the best features of the Thinkpad line into a detachable tablet form factor.
The 12-inch screen connects to a full
keyboard complete with the iconic TrackPoint nub via a hinge.
Lenovo is also offering a number of optional modules that can be used to extend the capability of the Thinkpad Tablet such as battery packs, 3D imaging cameras and even a pico projector.
HP Spectre x360It is run through a number of military specification tests that ensure that it is capable of surviving in the most demanding enterprise environments.
Lenovo announced a new device at CES that incorporates the best features of the Thinkpad line into a detachable tablet form factor.
Lenovo is also offering a number of optional modules that can be used to extend the capability of the Thinkpad Tablet such as battery packs, 3D imaging cameras and even a pico projector.
The
2016 version of HP’s Spectre x360 laptop features a 1TB SSD, Core i5 or
i7 processors, Iris graphics, 12-hour battery life and audio by Bang
and Olufsen. But this is all pretty standard for a laptop these days.
What makes it stand out it is its stunning OLED display. The superior
contrast ratios and truer blacks offered by OLEDs are unmatched by any
other kind of display technology.
Better still the difference is actually noticeable unlike other incremental upgrades we have been seeing in recent years. Lenovo also had a device from its Yoga line with an OLED display at CES but unlike the Spectre it runs on low voltage Intel processors – which are alright for a lot of people, but not quite the complete package in terms of mobile computing power.
Better still the difference is actually noticeable unlike other incremental upgrades we have been seeing in recent years. Lenovo also had a device from its Yoga line with an OLED display at CES but unlike the Spectre it runs on low voltage Intel processors – which are alright for a lot of people, but not quite the complete package in terms of mobile computing power.
Razer Blade Stealth
The
Razer Blade Stealth is our new favorite gaming laptop. There were
multiple models on show at CES that could easily outclass it in an
all-out specs war, but this high performance machine also comes in a
form factor that is – true to its name – razor thin.
It also continues
the trend of modular expansion of processing capabilities by providing
an external GPU that can be connected over USB-C. The standard set of
Razor goodies including programmable keyboard,
ASUS ROG XG Station 2
As
laptops get skinnier by the day, expect more and more of their power to
be transferred into external hot swappable accessories. This device
isn’t technically a laptop. But it is a mobile computing solution that
can turn the puniest of laptops into a gaming powerhouse. ASUS’ Republic
of Gamers XG Station is an external dock into which you can plug your
own NVidia or AMD graphics card. The device interfaces with the laptop
via USB-C and only works with ASUS laptops for now.
Dell Latitude 13 7000 Series
Continuing
the trend of impossibly thin laptops with impossibly powerful
processors, Dell’s 13-inch Latitude 7000 is a business class laptop line
which features a design that is less than an inch thick but still
manages to pack a full Core i7 processor, 512GB SSD and 16GB of DDR4
RAM.
The barely there bezel further adds to its
barely there proportions and Infinity display completes a package that
will be at home in the boardroom and the bedroom
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