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Samsung unveils a 12.4-inch rollable OLED panel
4:28 pm | May 23, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

During the annual Display Week trade show in Los Angeles, Samsung showcased a potentially revolutionary 12.4-inch rollable OLED panel. Surely, this isn't the first time we see a rollable concept, but Samsung's invention is a step ahead of the competition as it's the largest one so far and it rolls in a tiny scroll. The panel can go from 49mm to 254.4mm, that's an impressive 5x scalability compared to the current sliding screens that can only go up to 3x their original size. Samsung Display says it was able to achieve this by using an O-shaped axis mimicking a scroll. The company calls...

Samsung unveils a 12.4-inch rollable OLED panel
4:28 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

During the annual Display Week trade show in Los Angeles, Samsung showcased a potentially revolutionary 12.4-inch rollable OLED panel. Surely, this isn't the first time we see a rollable concept, but Samsung's invention is a step ahead of the competition as it's the largest one so far and it rolls in a tiny scroll. The panel can go from 49mm to 254.4mm, that's an impressive 5x scalability compared to the current sliding screens that can only go up to 3x their original size. Samsung Display says it was able to achieve this by using an O-shaped axis mimicking a scroll. The company calls...

Samsung to start buying OLED panels from LG for its TVs
10:21 pm | May 16, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: , | Comments: Off

Samsung may be a big TV manufacturer, but it doesn't do OLED TVs since 2015. The company bet on its QLED panels, which are far closer to LCD panels in terms of both cost and quality. The company is also rapidly developing its microLED tech, which is seen as superior to OLED in terms of image quality, but still prohibitively expensive and only available in the largest diagonals. It now seems Samsung is looking to buy more time for the microLED tech to mature and will look to cover the premium market with OLED TVs. And the company has turned to its South Korean neighbor to achieve...

Huawei, ZTE and BOE work on a flexible OLED with under-display selfie cam
10:00 pm | May 1, 2023

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According to a renowned tipster DIgital Chat Station, three Chinese tech giants, namely Huawei, ZTE and BOE, are teaming up to create the best foldable OLED screen with an under-display camera. The first phone to potentially benefit from the cutting-edge display tech is Huawei's future foldable Mate X4 smartphone. Sure, the Mate X4 won't be the first foldable smartphone with an under-screen selfie camera as Samsung's Galaxy Fold4 debuted with the said screen tech but it was far from ideal. The selfie camera is well-concealed, but it's severely lacking in the quality department. Well,...

Researchers create an OLED panel with inflatable keyboard
6:30 pm | April 29, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

Perhaps one of the things people miss the most in modern smartphones is the physical keyboard. That's why BlackBerry devices were so popular in the past - they offered an unrivaled typing experience. Well, researchers from Future Interfaces Group have been working on a solution for the past 15 years and they've made a significant breakthrough. The tech, called Flat Panel Haptics, provides tactile feedback on a flat surface using inflatable buttons. The FPH is 5 millimeters thick and incorporates an Embedded Electro-Osmotic Pump. Using an electrical current to activate the small pumps, the...

Apple to sign in Samsung and LG in move to swap OLED for microLED
2:31 pm | April 26, 2023

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Apple will start using microLED panels as early as 2024, reveals The Korea Herald. This is the third time we hear such a move is on the way from a third different outlet, suggesting the switch is innevitable. According to a report by the Institute for Information & Communications Technology Promotion (IITP), Apple is looking to eventually manufacture the panels itself, but it won't be ready to do so at the start of the transition. That's why it will keep sourcing panels from South Korea, with at least 60% of the orders going to Samsung Display and LG Display. The transition from...

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: an almost-flagship with smart compromises
7:00 am | April 23, 2023

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Motorola Edge 30 Fusion: Two-minute review

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion is the middle child in the Edge 30 family. It’s less expensive than the Motorola Edge 30 Ultra but a lot fancier than the Motorola Edge 30 Neo. 

Is this the perfect balance of quality and cost? It might well be. 

For around half the price of the Motorola Edge 30 Ultra you get a high-end metal and glass design, super-bright OLED screen, and a camera that, while not truly top-tier, can handle almost all kinds of scenes well enough. The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion even has a flagship chipset. It’s just the flagship of 2021, not 2022 – when the phone launched. 

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion is a phone that lets you feel you found a good deal, without needing to hunt down sales or discounts, earning a place on a rundown of the best Motorola phones.

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the back

(Image credit: TechRadar)

We don’t think it’s much of a style icon, even if its outer build is perhaps the number one reason to buy this particular model. And we’ve noticed a few camera issues that have come and gone with software updates released during the testing period. It also lacks any form of telephoto camera.

If the camera is your number one consideration, you need to check out the Google Pixel 7 as well. It has a better camera, and uses a newer chipset and tougher glass, but has a smaller screen with a 90Hz refresh rate instead of 144Hz. 

However, the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion is a well-rounded mid-range phone where most deficiencies are strategic, not screw-ups. We’ll cover what minor 'screw-ups' there are in this review.

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: price and availability

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the front

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • Launched in September 2022
  • Original price was around $700 / £499 / AU$900
  • Now costs around $500 / £400 / AU$785

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion was announced in September 2022 alongside the Edge 30 Ultra and Edge 30 Neo. It’s the middle one of this trio. 

This little family represents a half-generational update to the Motorola Edge 30 and Motorola Edge 30 Pro released much earlier in 2022. 

The Motorola 30 Fusion cost around $700 / £499 / AU$900 at launch, and since then prices have dropped. At the time of writing (in April 2023) we can see it for $500 / £400 / AU$785.

So it’s well below the price of top-of-the-line Android phones, but also too expensive to be considered a budget buy. However, as you’ll see in this review, the phone justifies this position well.

  • Value score: 4.5 / 5

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: specs

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: design

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the back

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • Gorilla Glass 5 front and back panels
  • Not too large, not too heavy
  • Expensive build, but not a particularly distinctive design

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's aim is to look and feel like a top-tier phone, while costing mid-tier money. This used to be a common goal among manufacturers. But these days? Not so much, as you can find plenty of reasonably expensive Androids with plastic rear panels.

There’s none of that nonsense here. The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a curved glass front panel, and a curved glass rear. Both of these sheets are Corning’s Gorilla Glass 5, a hardened glass that's a few generations behind the best, and the back has a smooth-looking matte finish that's totally immune to fingerprint marks. 

Unlike some of the few outlier phones that cost a little less but also use curved glass, like the Vivo V25 Pro, the sides that join the glass are aluminum – not plastic. This phone is no pretender. The build really is quite high-end.

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the side

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion’s sub-8mm thickness and 175g weight complete the picture. All the vital statistics match those of some phones twice the cost. This is also a moderately-sized handset, with width similar to an iPhone 14, not the much larger iPhone 14 Plus

Is it actually a good-looking phone? That’s up for debate, but it clearly does not have the character of a Pixel 7 or Samsung Galaxy S23 Plus.

There are some less visible areas where the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion is clearly mid-range. It has IP52 water resistance, which is actually worse than it may sound. The '5' refers to dust resistance, the '2' is the water part, and basically means it hopefully won’t die if it gets slightly rained on. You’d expect the same from phones with no water resistance rating at all.

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's bottom edge

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has no headphone jack, and lacks a microSD card slot. However, it will take two SIMs.

You get a stereo speaker array, and the two drivers – above the display and on the bottom of the phone – have a fairly evenly-matched tone. These speakers aren’t dramatically better than some of Moto’s significantly cheaper models, and at times we wished there were a little more volume on tap, a little more presence in the bass. However, they are solid.

We did initially have something more interesting to say about the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion. During the first week or so of testing, its haptic feedback was bizarre. It was so strong it felt as if the tappy motor was trying to break through the phone’s back. However, that seems to have been fixed in a software update. 

The phone also has a solid in-screen fingerprint sensor.

  • Design score: 4 / 5

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: display

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the front

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • Excellent outdoor visibility
  • 144Hz refresh rate, much like 120Hz in person
  • As usual, OLED offers good color and contrast

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a 6.55-inch P-OLED screen, a mid-size display with a flexible substrate that allows for those curves at the sides – the screen itself is curved, not just the glass.

Almost all aspects of the screen are solid, or better than that. Its maximum refresh rate is 144Hz, for example, not the more common 120Hz. The real-world difference? Basically nothing, but it provides the same smooth-scrolling effect as 120Hz when navigating Android. 

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion only offers two color modes, where other phones have three or more. These are Natural and Saturated. It’s a bit like a restaurant with adults’ and kids’ menus. Natural is clearly the way to go if you want more accurate color. But, hey, if you chicken dinos and fries, live your best life with Saturated. There’s also an easy-to-understand color temperature slider.

A close-up of a Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's screen

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Brightness is capped at around 487 nits indoors, but will reach all the way to 895 nits in super-bright spaces. Outdoors, basically. This is significantly brighter than the vast majority of sub-$600/£500 phones, even if they claim 1,300 nit peak brightness. Screen visibility in sunlight is very good. 

Just two parts don’t quite match up to the very best phone displays. At certain angles whites can take on a slightly blue cast, a common effect among OLEDs, and the 1080 x 2400 pixel resolution is the budget norm. Some very expensive phones have far more pixels but, interestingly enough, the step-up Edge 30 Ultra sticks with 1080 x 2400. 

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has as good a screen as you could ask for considering the cost, and we love that it uses Gorilla Glass rather than an unnamed kind of tempered glass.

  • Display score: 4.5 / 5

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: software and performance

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the front

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • Has a top-tier processor from 2021
  • Good gaming and general performance
  • Clean software with a few useful Moto extras

Low-key software is one of the long-standing reasons to pick a Motorola over one of its rivals. It’s often called 'vanilla', but it’s not really. It is just a low-key custom interface without too many try-hard attention grabbing bits.

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion’s appearance can be made much less ordinary with themes, which alter system fonts, icon shapes, and the color of UI blocks. Android 12 sits at the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion’s core, and these color accents are part of its style – we’re talking about the feature toggles you’ll see when you pull down the notifications menu. 

Our first impression of the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion’s software feel wasn’t actually that great, but largely because the experience was derailed by the bizarrely strong haptic feedback mentioned earlier in this review. A few updates later, the Fusion is exactly as you’d expect. It’s smooth, it’s inoffensive – although one software update did alter the system font without being prompted.

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion from the front

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 Plus chipset, and it’s the key to its 'cheaper flagship' status. This is a top-tier processor, but one released in mid-2021.  It is two generations behind the Edge 30 Ultra’s Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1, but as a once-flagship chipset it still holds up well.

In the hierarchy of current processors it sits above the Snapdragon 870, which is fab but not necessarily super-competitive in a phone of this price, and below the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, 8 Gen 1 Plus, and 8 Gen 2.

However, Androids with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 tend to suffer from thermal throttling more acutely than the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion, so while those phones have higher peak performance, it tends to settle down to a similar level after five minutes or so of gaming. So it's only the 8 Gen 1 Plus and 8 Gen 2 that offer major performance upgrades.

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion scores 3,247 points in Geekbench 5 (1,063 per core), where you can expect around 4,300 from the Motorola Edge 30 Ultra and its Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1. 3DMark’s more GPU-dependent Time Spy test results in a 5,849 score, where a Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 can score upwards of 10,000. 

This phone is a good performer, but the Motorola Edge 30 Ultra is way more powerful still. 

Does it actually matter? Maybe not in most situations. You can still play Fortnite in its 60fps mode with the graphics maxed out. It drops below 60fps in busy scenes, and when you turn around quickly, demanding lots of fresh assets to be loaded, but the latter happens regardless of your chipset.

The power you get for your money here is solid, and we’ve had no issues with overheating during testing.

It's also helped along by either 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage (in the UK and Australia), or 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage (in the US).

  • Software score: 4 / 5
  • Performance score: 4 / 5

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: cameras

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's cameras

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • Solid primary camera but no zoom
  • Good low-light performance
  • 4K and 8K video looks oversaturated

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has three rear cameras, and it’s quite an interesting array. You get a 50MP primary, a 13MP ultra-wide and a 2MP depth camera. 

Its depth camera is classic mid-range tertiary fluff, and is used for background blur portrait images, but the other two are fairly good. The 13MP ultra-wide is a cut above the 8MP cameras you often see in slightly cheaper mid-range Androids, bearing up to cropping and zooming a lot better. 

However, the ultra-wide does tend to produce images with a cooler, less inviting color temperature. And there’s a greater chance of blown-out areas, thanks to the sensor’s lower native dynamic range – this could have been avoided with more attention paid to the software HDR algorithm, but there you go. 

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion is largely a fun-to-use and versatile camera. Its HDR software is, for the most part, highly effective, and helps retain lots of cloud contours when you shoot right into a bright sky. 

Perceived detail and sharpness are very good, and performance at night is strong too. The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a Night Vision low-light mode, but even if you forget to use it the phone can produce sharp and clean images in poor lighting. 

Night Vision attempts to improve dynamic range further, and tries harder to bring out more texture detail. However, it takes a little longer to capture an image and the images can look a little more synthetic, with more obvious 'outlining' of high contrast objects, which is a form of sharpening. Sometimes Night Vision looks like it’s showing off, and trading away from realism and classiness as a result. 

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has quality camera hardware, but the software – while solid – is not best-in-class. You can also see this when you zoom right into your pictures. Tight-knit natural textures like glass and leaves will often have a slightly fake-looking character, as if they’ve been drawn by an AI. Because, on one level, they kind of have been. This is particularly obvious in the more compromised ultra-wide camera.

Other problems we’ve had with the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion have come and gone with software updates, of which there were several during the review. At one point the camera had quite noticeable shutter lag. That seems to have largely been fixed. On one software build the Auto HDR would often fail to engage. 

Right now the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's camera experience is largely headache-free, but the HDR and exposure system does tend to let small objects that are not themselves all that bright become overexposed in certain scenes. This seems to happen quite a bit when sun shafts hit leaves or branches. 

All in, the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a highly capable camera that doesn’t quite get everything right 100% of the time, but can have a solid go at any lighting situation. And its hit rate is decent. 

Video is in more urgent need of attention but, again, the fundamentals here are good. You can shoot 8K video at 30fps, or 4K at 30fps or 60fps. These modes look sharp and clean when shooting in daylight.

However, both of these modes produce oversaturated video that looks unnatural in most scenes. Their detail level is great, but the image character often looks odd.

Drop down to 1080p, and color comes back down to earth. You can switch between 30fps and 60fps but, again, there’s a compromise. 1080p at 60fps looks a lot softer than 30fps, presumably because it misses out on a sharpening pass. Strange as it sounds, 1030p/30 is the least problematic mode.

But given you can adjust video color after shooting, the 4K modes should probably still be the default. Both (30/60fps) have stabilization, which our rather unsteady hands consider to be essential.

A close-up of a Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's screen

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion’s front camera uses the 32MP Samsung S5KGD2 sensor, as seen in phones like the Vivo X80 Pro and Samsung Galaxy A32s.

It’s a good selfie camera, able to render lots of fine detail in decent lighting while also juggling strongly backlit scenes. All those pixels are used for pixel binning in lower light, which helps the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion limit noise and hold onto a decent amount of detail in poor lighting. The front camera is able to record video at up to 4K resolution.

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera samples

Image 1 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Motorola doesn’t have the most naturalistic image processing, but this phone takes generally attractive images.

Image 2 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

A church shot using the 1x camera. No major issues here.

Image 3 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has no macro camera, but it does have a macro mode that uses the ultra-wide camera.

Image 4 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The Night Vision mode is powerful. Just look at how it brings out the cloud detail, which was nowhere near as visible to the naked eye as it is here.

Image 5 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Sometimes the Night Vision mode can seem a bit much, at which point you may want to drop down to Auto shooting.

Image 6 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Here’s the most common exposure issue we see in the Fusion, in small parts that are not actually that bright themselves, such as these reedy foreground branches.

Image 7 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Shot using the standard 1x camera.

Image 8 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Good low-light image quality shows the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a good primary camera sensor as well as capable software.

Image 9 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Another HDR fail – despite multiple attempts the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion wouldn’t compensate for the overexposed parts here, despite pulling off trickier stunts in other shots.  

Image 10 of 10

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion camera sample

(Image credit: TechRadar)

The 13MP ultra-wide can take less obviously compromised images than the 8MP cameras common among mid-range phones.

  • Camera score: 4 / 5

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion review: battery

A Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's bottom edge

(Image credit: TechRadar)
  • 68W adapter charged phone in around 50 minutes
  • No wireless charging
  • Serviceable but unremarkable battery life

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a 4,400mAh battery that supports 68W fast charging, and comes with such an adapter in the box. 

It’s pretty nippy to charge, reaching 100% in 47 minutes even when starting from completely flat. This typically adds at least a couple of minutes to the process, as phones usually start off slow when in a 'dead' state. 

Motorola claims you can get a day’s worth of charge in 10 minutes, but this does not really pan out. It hits 45% in 20 minutes, and even that won’t get most folks through a day’s use.

The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion uses the USB-PD charging standard, and a USB-C-to-USB-C cable. There’s no support for wireless charging here.

Actual stamina is fine, but nothing more than that. It gets through a moderate-to-heavy day of use, but typically won’t have much juice left to see the phone comfortably through the night and into the second day.

4,400mAh is near to the lowest capacity Motorola could get away with in a phone of this power and size. But the Moto-favorite 5,000mAh capacity would probably have resulted in a thicker, and perhaps noticeably heavier phone. We love a long-lasting phone, but considering what Motorola aims for with the Fusion, it has probably made the best capacity-design compromise here.

  • Battery score: 3 / 5

Should you buy the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion?

Buy it if...

You like the idea of a curved glass phone
The Edge 30 Fusion has curved glass front and back panels, which makes it feel slimmer, more elegant and more expensive than most rivals. It’s the classic aim of high-end design at a lower price.

You want a lighter phone
At 178g according to our scales, 175g on Moto’s spec sheet, the Edge 30 Fusion is lighter than a lot of the competition by up to 20g. While you get used to a little extra weight, some will prefer not to have to go through that process.

You want a flagship-like experience for less money The Motorola Edge 30 Fusion has a lot of the same characteristics as top-tier Androids, but costs a lot less. Motorola likely saved a stack of money by using a previous-generation processor, and not using the most expensive version of Corning’s Gorilla Glass.

Don't buy it if...

You want a zoom camera
While the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion's camera is good, there’s no dedicated zoom, which is one of the key elements that separates this phone from a true high-end Android. The Edge 30 Ultra has one of those zooms, and you’ll find even better examples of the tech elsewhere. 

You want two-day battery life
We’d class the Fusion’s battery life as acceptable, but no more than that. It can last through a moderately taxing day, and we don’t think it’s short enough to be problematic for most folks. But you’d have to be a very light user to see two days of use between charges.

You want wireless charging
The Edge 30 Fusion looks like the kind of phone that might have wireless charging, but that’s all part of the "slick design for less" illusion. It only supports cable charging. You have to step up to the 30 Ultra to get wireless support. 

Motorola Edge 30 Fusion: Also consider

If you're not sold on the Motorola Edge 30 Fusion then consider these alternate options.

First reviewed: April 2023

Report: the Google Pixel Fold may have a more advanced OLED panel than the Galaxy Z Fold5
3:55 pm | April 10, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

Samsung Display introduced the M12 material set for OLED displays last year – it was used in the Galaxy Z Flip4 and Z Fold 4 phones first, later it was featured on the LTPO displays of the iPhone 14 Pro and 14 Pro Max. Korean publication The Elec now reports that the company is cooking up M13 and M14 material sets. M13 might be used in the mythical Google Pixel Fold – well, we say “mythical” jokingly, the phone has been delayed so many times it’s hard to believe it’s real anymore. But it has been spotted in the wild, it is very much real (and possibly coming in June). And it might have...

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 review: Lenovo is clearly no longer the underdog
12:00 pm | April 8, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Tags: , , | Comments: Off

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Two-minute review

If you were to tone down the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8’s charisma to an average 7, it would still be a pretty great laptop – compact, capable, and packed with mention-worthy features such as a great keyboard, an included stylus, and a rotating soundbar that blasts out decent audio. But as it is now, its appeal is simply off the charts, making it even more irresistible. In fact, it might have just sealed Lenovo’s status as the new IT brand for laptops.

Don’t get me wrong; Lenovo’s portables have always been incredible in my opinion, and I’ve always been a fan. But they’ve also always sat in the shadows of Dell and HP, relatively unknown except to those who are in the know.

These days, however, I think most are willing to concede that they may be surpassing even the Dell XPS line in the best laptops realm – quite a feat considering that the line has held a lofty status for years and considering that Dell has recently given its XPS 13 2-in-1 model a not wholly welcome design overhaul (it’s now essentially a tablet with a detachable keyboard).

One of the best touchscreen laptops – and naturally, among the best 2-in-1 laptops – we’ve tested in 2023 (so far), the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 is an absolute stunner, with an Oatmeal, glossy-trimmed satin chassis that’s worthy of your adoration, a 360-degree rotating soundbar, a vibrant OLED display, and an elegantly minimalist look. It packs a punch as well, going toe-to-toe with the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360 in terms of performance. And, most importantly, it isn’t as pricey as the Dell XPS and HP Spectre x360 lines, which makes it a more prudent choice.

It isn’t perfect, but it’s pretty damn close, and if Dell and HP were wise, it might behoove them to start paying attention.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Price and availability

  • How much does it cost? $1,399.99 / £1,440
  • When is it available? Available now in the UK, available on April 10 in the US
  • Where can you get it? Available in the US and the UK

At the time of writing, the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 has yet to hit the shelves in the US, being slated for release on April 10. You can, however, already pre-order our review configuration at Best Buy for $1,399.99, which puts it in the same price as the similarly-specced Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360 and just a little more affordable than last year’s Dell XPS 13 2-in-1, which I am in the process of testing now. A higher-specced version will be made available, hopefully on the day of release.

In the UK, it’s a slightly different story, with both configurations available now at Lenovo UK, with the base model costing £1,440 and the higher model priced at £1,599. I’m still waiting on word as to when it’ll be available in Australia.

I wouldn’t call the Yoga 9i Gen 8 a budget or even affordable model. It definitely sits in the premium range, albeit perhaps on the lower end. However, for what you’re getting, it’s definitely reasonably priced and a great value proposition.

  • Price: 4 / 5

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Specs

 The Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 comes in two configurations, the base model and the higher-end model that has twice the storage capacity and a higher resolution display. 

Lenovo has been known to limit its available configurations to two or three per laptop model, and it’s no different here. At the time of writing, the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 is only available in two configurations. Both are powered by the same Intel Core i7-1360P chip and Intel Iris Xe integrated graphics, and they both have the same 16GB memory.

Where the higher-end model deviates is in the storage capacity and the display. It doubles the base model’s storage to 1TB and sees its 2.8K OLED display and raises it a 3840 x 2400 OLED panel.

It’s worth noting that while these configurations are confirmed in the US and the UK, we don’t have any information about pricing and availability in Australia. In addition, it’s entirely possible that Lenovo adds more during or after its official launch. Not to worry; we’ll update this review accordingly.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Design

  • Look and design that are impossible to resist
  • Great trackpad and keyboard with useful shortcuts
  • Stunner of an OLED display

I’ll tell you right now that you’ll have a hard time resisting this laptop as soon as you hold it in your hands. Though it largely preserves its predecessor’s design, the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 still feels like how the Dell XPS line felt when it was overhauled – a breath of fresh air. Its all-aluminum chassis has an elegant, minimalist look with just the words Lenovo and Yoga engraved on opposite sides of the top cover.

I quite like the Oatmeal colorway, as it works well with that modern minimalist look as well as the rounded corners and glossy edges, which by the way is rare on laptops, making this one even more distinctive. 

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

The Yoga 9i Gen 8 is more than adequately travel-friendly, being compact, fairly lightweight, military-grade solid, and svelte, which makes it sufficiently easy to handle in tablet and tent modes. I’m not quite sold on laptops that turn into tablets yet, but what I can say is that I’ve used this one in both modes, and the experience was comfortable. I especially like being able to watch Narcos in bed without having to put on my glasses. In addition, a stylus comes packaged so you can interface more with that touchscreen without spending extra money.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

Its 360-degree-rotating soundbar moonlights as the hinge, and it’s a pretty ingenious element. Whatever mode you’re on, those speakers are never facing directly away from you, which means you're getting good audio every time. But more on that later.

The keyboard, backlit and spacious, spanning the length of the laptop, will never make you feel cramped, especially since the keys are stubby – short yet thick – and there’s enough space between them. And, the whole thing’s comfortable and satisfying to type on, just the ticket for hammering out those work documents or, in my case, reviews and features. I also appreciate that Lenovo took great pains adding shortcuts here: performance modes, webcam background blur, light and dark modes toggle, airplane mode, audio profile, and more within easy reach thanks to these shortcut keys.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

This keyboard is so great, in fact, that it makes the trackpad look insipid and boring, which is saying something since the trackpad — big, responsive, accurate, and nice to the touch — is pretty great in its own right.

For quick sign-ins, you’ve got a fingerprint scanner and facial recognition here, and they’re both not only fast and responsive but not at all a pain to use. My biggest gripe with fingerprint scanners is that they’re usually finicky little things – your fingers have to be dry and clean and whatever else for them to do accurate readings. That’s never been an issue with this one. Speaking of cameras, professionals and casual users alike will appreciate that 1080p webcam, which we are starting to see in a number of higher-end laptops these days.

And for the finale, there’s the OLED multi-touch glossy display which gives you a 2880 x 1880 resolution, a 90Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision support, and 14 inches of pure unadulterated OLED viewing. It gave me about 200% sRGB and 142% DCI-P3 coverage during testing, and a yummy average color accuracy of 0.39 (standard is Delta-E<2). And, honestly, my Netflix experience has been elevated.

  • Design: 4.5 / 5

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Performance

  • Great performance for productivity and every day workloads
  • Decent but not the snappiest with creative workloads
  • Display could be brighter, audio is decent
Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Benchmarks

Here's how the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

3DMark: Night Raid: 17,852; Fire Strike: 4,927; Time Spy: 1,916
GeekBench 6: 2,464 (single-core); 10,828 (multi-core)
25GB File Copy:
1,669 Mbps
Handbrake 1.6: 9m 45s
CrossMark: Overall: 1,789 Productivity: 1,714 Creativity: 1,977 Responsiveness: 1,506
Sid Meier's Civilization VI: Gathering Storm (1080p): 25fps
Web Surfing (Battery Informant): 10 hours and 10 minutes

I wish I could compare this laptop to another new anticipated release this year with very similar specs, but seeing as that’s currently under wraps at this time, let’s settle with the ones that are already out. 

TechRadar’s own benchmark results show that the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 surpasses the likes of a similarly-specced and similarly-priced Samsung Galaxy Book3 Pro 360 in most of them except in the Fire Strike extreme stress test. Same with an Intel Core i7-1360P, Iris Xe- powered LG Gram Style with double the RAM. 

In fact, it crushed the competition in CPU performance, especially multi-core ones, and our real-world application benchmark, scoring 10,828 in the Geekbench 6 multi-core test and 1,789 in Crossmark. As is the norm with integrated graphics, the graphical performance isn’t anything to write home about, scoring an average of 25fps with Sid Meier's Civilization VI at the native 1800p resolution although it did perform better than the two aforementioned rivals in Night Raid.

In practice, it’s also not too bad. I used it to edit and export 50 high-res 7952 x 4472 images from RAW to JPEG in Lightroom, and it took about two to three minutes to do so. That’s obviously not instantaneous, but it’s faster than my own M1-powered iMac 24-inch – though, to be fair, this review unit does have double the memory. It did get a little warm and pretty loud when exporting those images, however.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 on a coffee table

(Image credit: Future / Michelle Rae Uy)

As I mentioned before, the display is yummy to stream on. The only drawback here is that it averaged about 350 nits of brightness during testing, and with many displays offering more than 400 nits these days, some might find it a little dark for their taste. 

I don’t mind it, however, especially since it offers a dynamic range wide enough that visuals do not lose a lot of detail in darker scenes or clips. I also tested this out in a bright, outdoor cafe on a warm and sunny day, and I could see what’s on my screen just fine, despite some glare. And, the whole panel looks to be fairly uniform in brightness in all quadrants, according to the colorimeter readings.

Everybody is praising the sound quality here, but I find it no match for the MacBook Pros. The mid-range is full, and it sounds good for streaming. But there’s really very minimal low end here, the mids are a little compressed, and the high end is boosted so it can sound a little harsh depending on the audio. Also, listening to music is not as pleasant as streaming shows and movies. Don’t get me wrong; it’s good audio, just not amazing as other reviewers make it sound like.

  • Performance: 4.5 / 5

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Battery life

  • A little over 10 hours at full charge
  • Rapid charging on hand

There’s not a lot of higher-powered Windows-powered laptops out there than can surpass the MacBook Pro in battery life. And sadly, the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 is in the same boat, not even coming close to the Apple Macbook Pro 14 with M2 Pro’s 14 hours and 23 minutes battery test results. 

The upside is that the Yoga 9i Gen 8’s battery life really isn’t that bad. It’s good actually, delivering a little over 10 hours of juice during our proprietary Web Surfing battery test and beating out the Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360’s just under eight hours result and 2022’s Dell XPS 13 2-in-1, which just made it over that eight-hour mark.

Listen, 10 hours will get you a full day’s work and then some, so while it probably isn’t going to outlast your energy levels, it’ll ensure that you’re commuting light since you can leave the charger at home. Plus, if it’s one of those days when you need to put in more than 10 hours, you can count on its rapid charging as well.

  • Battery life: 4.5 / 5

Should you buy the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8?

Buy it if...

You need a laptop for productivity and the occasional photo editing
This is an incredibly capable laptop that handles productivity and every day tasks like a pro and holds its own with creative workloads.

You're looking for a great-featured laptop
There's a lot of great features here, including a rotating soundbar, an OLED display, a fingerprint reader, many keyboard shortcuts, and a 1080p webcam, making it futureproof.

You're tired of the homogenous look on devices
The Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 veers off the beaten path with its minimalist, elegant look you'd be hard-pressed to find elsewhere.

Don't buy it if...

Money is tight
I think that this laptop is reasonably-priced for its performance and features, but it's not exactly a budget option. Look elsewhere if you need something under $1,000/£1,000.

You want a brighter display
That OLED display is fantastic, but it averages at about 350 nits in brightness, which in today's standards is just average.

You do more creative workloads
It held its own with photo editing high-res images, but it got pretty loud and warm, and it also wasn't the fastest. If you do more photo and video editing than productivity tasks, you should get something with more graphical prowess.

Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8: Also consider

If our Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 review has you considering other options, here are two more laptops to consider...  

How I tested the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8

  • Used it as my work and streaming laptop for a week
  • Tested it with the apps I used for work, including Adobe Lightroom
  • Ran a standard suite of benchmark tests

Using the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8 for work and media consumption for about two weeks allowed me to really see what it's made of. I used it indoors and outdoors for productivity work, editing high-resolution images, and streaming Netflix.

Of course, we also ran in through our suite of benchmark test as well, putting its CPU, GPU, and display through its paces, and compared those results to those of similar laptops.

I have been testing laptops, Chromebooks, and PCs for a few years now, first as a freelance journalist for many of the top tech publications and now as one of the Computing editors for TechRadar. That makes me more than qualified to test laptops such as the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 8.

Read more about how we test

First reviewed April 2023

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Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

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