As given in its name .we can say it a laptop but actually is a device which can be used as laptop.
The Lenovo Yoga 3 Pro 's design, with its watchband-like single hinge constructed of more than 800 individual pieces of steel and aluminum and fanless chassis measuring a mere 12.8mm thick, is strikingly different from its predecessors. The Yoga 3 14, on the other hand, is the computer manufacturer sticking with what works.
Like past models, the Yoga 3 14 looks like a standard thin-and-light clamshell, but its two hinges allow you to rotate the screen 360 degrees back, turning it into a tablet. What's new for the line is the 14-inch screen size, which is all the more impressive because Lenovo squeezed it into a body roughly the size of a 13.3-inch model.
Also, instead of the Intel Core M processor found in the Pro, you get a choice of fifth-gen Intel Core i5 or Core i7 processors( Broadwell) . The Pro's performance with the Core M was underwhelming as was the system's battery life. That wasn't the case here with the Yoga 3 14, which turned in both excellent battery life and performance for a sub-$1, 000 convertible.
Configurations start at$799, but the build for this review was$919. In the UK, the pricing starts £650, but is £800 as reviewed. For Australia buyers, the price as reviewed is AU$1, 299, though it comes with half the storage with a 128GB solid-state drive. If you can afford to spend a bit more, you can currently get a Yoga 3 14 with a 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-5500U, 8GB of memory, 256GB SSD and a 2GB Nvidia GeForce GT 940M graphics card for$1, 049.( This configuration isn't available in the UK and costs AU$1, 899 in Australia
Thanks for reading
Amit yadav