Final Words

When looking at convertible laptops, Lenovo likely has the most prolific number of convertible devices and they fall under the Yoga line. When they came up with the Yoga hinge, it set the bar for convertible devices. It keeps the balance and usability of a traditional clamshell Ultrabook, but adds in the ability to use it in three additional touch modes. For the Yoga 3 Pro, Lenovo has refined this experience again, with a thinner, and lighter laptop. The watchband hinge is both stylish and functional. They have kept the high resolution display of the Yoga 2 Pro, but improved the overall efficiency of the device which allowed them to keep similar battery life with a smaller, and therefore lighter battery.

Moving to Core M may seem like a step backwards in performance. However when you compare most workloads to the outgoing Core i5 Yoga 2 Pro, the Yoga 3 Pro can hold its own against it, and even surpasses it in many benchmarks. Core M is more than just a lower power SoC. It is also about packaging. The size of Core M as compared to Broadwell-U is quite a bit smaller in all dimensions, including the Z axis, which allows for more space for other components around it, and a thinner overall device. When you look at the Yoga, and realise it is not just a notebook computer, the extra reduction in thickness is appreciated. It is still a bit big to use as a tablet, but it is better as a tablet than the outgoing model.

From left to right: Broadwell-Y (Core M), Broadwell ULT/ULX and Haswell ULT/ULX

The GPU side is certainly a regression though. Core M’s very restrictive TDP of just 4.5 watts means that the GPU is limited a lot quicker than Haswell-U or Broadwell-U GPUs are. It has the same basic architecture as the Broadwell-U GPU, and therefore it should have similar performance if given the headroom for this. Intel still has some work to do on the GPU side to make it more efficient, and they lag some of their competitors there, although less so with HD 5300 than the woeful Atom N2840’s Intel HD Graphics. They have made some headway here, but still have some more room to improve.

As a tablet, the Core M powered Yoga 3 Pro will run circles around other tablets when performing CPU tasks. The GPU is a bit behind, but it is ahead of the iPad Air already, so it is not a slouch. The CPU is miles ahead though, even when compared to the Apple A8X which is consistently the best ARM based tablet CPU.

The display, which was a defining feature of the Yoga 2 Pro, is a slightly different model of the Samsung RGBW IPS LCD. It offers the same great viewing angles and crisp text as before, but it also suffers from being uncalibrated. It would be nice to see Lenovo include an ICC profile, or better yet to switch to the Sharp IGZO display which has proven to be the current LCD to beat right now. The one real drawback of the Samsung display is the terrible black levels, which give a mediocre contrast ratio and is very noticeable when watching movies on the Yoga 3 Pro. A switch to a true RGB model like the Sharp would fix that glaring issue. The steady march of progress means that Lenovo sitting still on their display means that they have been passed by their competitors.

Lenovo has fixed their biggest issue with the Yoga 2 Pro though, and that was the wireless performance. The move to a Broadcom 802.11ac solution has moved them from the bottom to the top of our test, and it was sorely needed. My wife still owns and uses the Yoga 2 Pro every day, and her one major complaint is the wireless performance. The new model solves that and then some.

For 2015 though, Lenovo has some serious competition. If you are after a pure Ultrabook, the Yoga 3 Pro is likely not the frontrunner right now. Lenovo does have other offerings, such as the non Pro version of the Yoga, and the ThinkPad Yoga, which do come with Broadwell-U and would have better performance for heavier workloads. However I have yet to see a better convertible laptop yet. Other OEMs have taken the Yoga style hinge and incorporated it into their designs, and we will see more of these as time goes on.

The Yoga 3 Pro is at least as good as the Yoga 2 Pro, which is a compliment. After owning the Yoga 2 Pro for over a year, it is still incredibly handy to be able to flip the display around and use it as a touch device. The new Yoga 3 Pro improves the overall design, and makes it even thinner and lighter than the outgoing model. The Yoga 3 Pro is even thinner than the just announced MacBook, and although it is also a bit heavier, it does include a touch digitizer and Gorilla Glass over the display, all the while coming in at $1150, around $150 cheaper than the MacBook.. Apple has also seen that Core M, especially the just released 5Y71 model, is enough performance to not have any regression over Haswell-U which powered all of the Ultrabooks last year. If battery life is not your biggest concern, then the Yoga 3 Pro is certainly worth checking out. It offers incredible versatility due to the design, and it has made some nice improvements for the new model.

Battery Life, Wi-Fi, Speakers, Noise, and Software
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  • edzieba - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    I'd be a lot more accepting of RGBW (and RGBG) subpixel-arrangement displays if they didn't do the shady thing of counting only two subpixels as one pixel (meaning a single addressable pixel cannot reproduce the whole display gamut).
  • fokka - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    i agree, but how else would you "count" subpixels on a RGBG matrix? and as far as i can see, the RGBW even uses 4 subpixels per pixel, or did i miss something? of course the whole pixel gets quite long this way, which isn't ideal for sharpness, but on a 1800p display i don't even care anymore.
  • zepi - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    So this thing has 4 subpixels for each pixel, but the display controller only takes R,G,B as input from computer for each pixel?

    Well, I guess it is an acceptable way of increasing brightness for high-dpi displays to keep the power consumption low.
  • peterfares - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    No, it has TWO subpixels per pixel. RGBW theoretically sounds nice if it was 4 subpixels per pixel, but with just two then it ruins everything. Color reproduction, sharpness, black levels, etc. A 1080p RGB looks pretty much as good.
  • fokka - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    ok, now i'm completely confused. there i thought it used 4 subpixels, where do you get it used only two?

    my dissent for pentile only grows, it could be so easy with 1080/1200p, 1440/1600p RGB, but no, someone always has to cheat in this stupid dick measuring contest.
  • lolTyler - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    "Luckily Lenovo has sorted out the color reproduction for the Yoga 3 Pro, just like they did with the Yoga 2 Pro a few months into its life."

    No, they did not fix this on the Yoga 2 Pro. I have all the BIOs updates and all the power management updates. Lenovo's idea of "fixing" this issue is turning your machine to the most power hungry mode and cranking your brightness to 100%, thus giving your machine ~1 or 2 hours of battery life. That's the only way to get correct yellows, otherwise, you get mustardy variations.

    Lenovo will not recognize that the problem still exists and just closes threads or sweeps customer complaints under the rug. I do not know what this is like on the Y3P, but it's still fudged on the 2.
  • Brett Howse - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    The one that we tested was produced after they "fixed" it, and our i1Pro shows that they did indeed fix this issue. http://images.anandtech.com/doci/8289/Saturation.p...

    I can't comment on the ones produced before the fix though. They could still have an issue but I don't have one to even look at.
  • Regular Reader - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    I'm going to pick some random nits: why the hell do PC makers still slap those stickers on their machines? OK ok, I know AMD is still around, so maybe Intel wants to make sure people know what's "inside", but why the "Intel Ultrabook" sticker? Why Windows or Office badges? This garbage just muddies up these machines, and they don't always come off nicely. It's such a waste of time and material. What average person on the street doesn't know a non-Apple laptop comes with Windows? Some may argue that there are now cheapo Chromebooks out there, but Windows and Chrome clearly do not look the same.

    That is all. Please return to your regularly scheduled comments.
  • fokka - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    i can only agree here and add: if you want your machine look cheap, put a bunch of stickers on it.
  • peterfares - Friday, March 13, 2015 - link

    PenTile screen means the screen is still garbage. I'd rather a 1080p RGB than this abomination.

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