Monday, October 27, 2014

Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 11e Chromebook

Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 11e Chromebook
Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Acer Laptop Battery
Metal and polycarbonate construction and solid hinges make this the sturdiest Chromebook I've ever handled. The Yoga multimode hinge is a revelation, giving the Chromebook tablet functionality with the same convertible design that has come to dominate Windows laptops. The thing is heavy, but it also feels substantial, thanks to MIL-SPEC-rated rugged construction. The hinges have been strengthened, and the entire device hardened against humidity, vibration, temperature, and dust. Around the edge of the glass-covered display is a rubber bumper that provides some protection to the display, and the display itself is covered with DragonTrail glass, which is both scratch- and crack-resistant.
basic 1,366-by-768 resolution seen on most Chromebooks, but it benefits from an In-Plane Switching (IPS) panel, which makes for good color and viewing angles. The contrast also seems to be better than that of most competitors, resulting in very readable text, whether it's at arm's length (in Laptop mode) or held close (in Tablet mode). The display also has touch capability, with excellent accuracy in any mode with battery such as Acer AS07A31 Battery, Acer AS07A51 Battery, Acer Aspire 4520 Battery, Acer AS07B72 Battery, Acer Aspire 5520 Battery, Acer BTP-43D1 Battery, Acer TravelMate 220 Battery, Acer BTP-58A1 Battery, acer BTP-60A1 Battery, Acer TravelMate 240 Battery, Acer AS10B5E Battery, Acer AS10B75 Battery.
The keyboard is also one of the best I've used, whether on a Chromebook or standard laptop. Gone are the shallow keys that barely move when pressed and rattle loosely in their frames. These chiclet-style keys have real travel, and provide some resistance when pressed, creating a typing experience that feels far more substantial than other inexpensive systems can offer. It's one of Lenovo's best keyboards, complete with sculpted keycaps and automatic keyboard shut-off when in Tablet mode.
The Chrome keyboard layout has a couple of small changes from the standard Windows or Mac setup—the Caps Lock key is now a dedicated Search key, the function keys have different functions, and there's no Delete key, just Backspace—but the basic QWERTY layout is the same. Just below the spacebar is a multitouch clickpad, which supports Chrome gesture controls, like two-finger tapping and scrolling.
On the left side of the system is a power connector, a USB 2.0 port (with sleep-and-charge capability), an SD card slot, and a headset jack. On the right is a Kensington lock slot, a full-size HDMI-out port, and a USB 3.0 port. The USB 3.0 port isn't the usual bright blue, but the same dark gray as the USB 2.0 port on the other side, so you'll need to remember which port is which if you want to take advantage of USB 3.0's faster data transfer speeds. There are also physical buttons on the right side of the laptop for Power and Volume.
The 16GB of onboard storage is identical to most Chromebooks like the Editors' Choice HP Chromebook 11 (Verizon LTE), though the Acer Chromebook C720P-2600 has 32GB. Google instead expects you to rely on cloud storage, such as Google Drive, for storing all your documents, photos, and media. To help you along, there's 100GB of free Google Drive storage for two years included. Chrome OS has links and shortcuts to Gmail, Google Drive, and other Google services like Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides, Play Music, Hangouts, and others. Sign in with your Google account, and it will automatically sync all of your bookmarks and extensions, and you can add further functionality with any of the thousands of apps and plugins Google offers for Chrome. Lenovo covers the system with a one-year warranty.

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