![]() ![]() The stand itself is obviously made of aluminum, but the other casing parts are mostly plastic. The stickers point in direction of the conspicuous cylinder with the stand hinge, which Lenovo states is to provide more room for the battery and more volume for the exterior, front-facing speakers underneath it. The prices of our Yoga and LG's G Pad range at about a low 300 Euros (~$371), while prices of 500 Euros (~$619) or more were demanded for the others at their time of release. For comparison, the 9.7-inch iPad Air (2013) weighs 464 grams. The following order emerges in terms of weight: Lenovo: 619 grams Asus: 584 grams LG: 512 grams Samsung: 469 grams Sony: 425 grams. However, it only has a resolution of 1280x800 pixels and a rather weak combination of a Snapdragon 400 APQ8026 and Adreno 305 GPU. ![]() The LG G Pad 10.1 V700 also participates in this race. Asus provides the Transformer Pad TF701T that, like the Galaxy Tab, has a resolution of 2560x1600 pixels but is powered by an Nvidia Tegra 4. ![]() ![]() The especially slim Sony Xperia Z2 tablet has the same resolution as the Yoga Tablet 2 and is shipped with the Snapdragon 801 APQ8074AB including Adreno 330 graphics. The first device is the higher-resolution Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 that sports a Samsung Exynos 5420 Octa and ARM Mali-T628 MP6 GPU. The review sample naturally has to live up to these assertions.Īn identical format and recent test in our lab was our primary criteria for selecting the comparison devices. Lenovo places special focus on the sound system by Wolfson Master HiFi and Dolby surround sound, a long battery life, and the primary camera's quality in its presentation. Our review sample was shipped with Android 4.4.2 KitKat, which Lenovo has modified. Our silver Wi-Fi only model is based on Intel's Atom Z3745 quad-core with integrated Bay Trail Graphics, features 2 GB of RAM, 16 GB of flash storage, and an IPS screen with 1920x1200 pixels. An overview of the 8 and 10-inch devices with this feature can be found on the corresponding Lenovo website. The manufacturer dubs the four modes for operating the device Stand, Tilt, Hold, and Hang, and it summarizes the construction with the term Multi-Mode Design. Tablets with a built-in stand for erecting or hanging up the device have been a unique feature of Lenovo's Yoga tablet line to-date. For the original German review, see here. ![]()
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