Tech Advisor

Lenovo ThinkPad L390 Yoga

Price: £999 from fave.co/2IrcUF8

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Lenovo’s ThinkPad L390 Yoga is in many ways the quintessen­tial work laptop. It’s chunkier than many other thin-and-light laptops in its price range, but it also packs a lot of enterprise-friendly features, such as temperatur­e and shock resistance, and a variety of connection ports. At the same time, the L390 Yoga has some nice touches to help it stand out from the enterprise pack, most notably a keyboard

that feels great to type on and one of the best clicking mechanisms you’ll find on any trackpad today. If you’re not planning to do much work outside – and can therefore tolerate the L390 Yoga’s limited screen brightness – this might be your next workhorse.

Design

The ThinkPad L390 Yoga isn’t exactly thin and light. Weighing in at 1.46kg and measuring 18.8mm thick, it feels more like a modernizat­ion of yesteryear’s hefty ThinkPads than a peer to svelte laptops such as Dell’s XPS 13 and Lenovo’s own IdeaPad 730S.

That feeling is reinforced by the ThinkPad’s display bezels, which measure 0.6 inches along the sides, with a 0.7in upper bezel and a 1.5in ‘chin’ under the screen. Thick borders like those are common

among convertibl­e laptops, but we have seen some exceptions, such as HP’s Spectre x360 13. Then again, those slicker laptops haven’t been subjected to the various shock, vibration, dust, and extreme temperatur­e tests that the L390 Yoga has gone through.

The display itself is an IPS panel with great viewing angles, but it’s also one of the dimmest screens you’ll find on a laptop in this price range, maxing out at 258 nits’ brightness. By comparison, the aforementi­oned HP Spectre x360 13 reaches 350 nits, Microsoft’s Surface Pro 6 reaches 378 nits, and Lenovo’s IdeaPad 730S hits 317 nits. In practical terms, the L390 Yoga requires almost full brightness to use comfortabl­y in well-lit rooms, and outdoor computing sessions can be frustratin­g.

Touchpad and keyboard

While the display is a letdown, Lenovo does put the ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s bulk to good use, with a keyboard that affords plenty of travel and feels snappy instead of mushy. You can type for hours on the ThinkPad’s shield-shaped keys without discomfort. In a typing test, I average 102 words per minute on the ThinkPad L390 Yoga, versus 105 words per minute on my usual mechanical keyboard, and I never felt uncomforta­ble going through the barrage of tests.

Lenovo also manages to pack in more keys than usual for a laptop of this size, including an extra-wide Escape key and dedicated keys for Home/End/Insert/ Delete. The arrow keys are all roughly the same size, with Page Up/Down keys placed comfortabl­y above the left and right arrows. There’s even a bit of spacing

between each cluster of four Function keys. The only nitpick is Lenovo’s continued insistence on putting the function key on the bottom-left corner of its ThinkPads, where most Windows laptops put a Control key instead. Flipping the Fn and Ctrl keys around requires a trip to BIOS settings, and leaves you with mislabelle­d keys.

The ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s luxurious feeling extends to the touchpad. With most laptops, I prefer tapping, because the clicking mechanism is too loud and rigid. Clicking the L390’s trackpad almost feels like pressing a key on the keyboard, and I found myself using tapto-click less often as a result. While the touchpad could be larger, it uses a Mylar coating that’s easy to glide around on.

Of course, the Yoga L390 also retains the ThinkPad line’s iconic TrackPoint nub at the centre of the

keyboard, along with dedicated left- and right-click buttons above the touchpad. I’ll never get used to the former, which now feels more like an aesthetic flourish than a useful input mechanism, but keeping one hand on the touchpad while using the other hand for button clicks can be efficient when you’re not typing.

Ports and stylus

Beyond the keyboard and trackpad, the ThinkPad L390 Yoga justifies its hefty design by including plenty of ports.

This is the first time Lenovo has abandoned its proprietar­y ThinkPad charger, instead opting for three USB-C ports (two on the left side, one on the right). All three are USB 3.1 Gen 1 ports, meaning they support transfer speeds up to 5Gb/s. I was thankful for the change, especially after a recent trip in which I used a single charger for the laptop, an Android phone, and a Nintendo Switch. Lenovo also boasts of ‘anti-fry’ protection on its USB-C ports, which can guard against damage by poorly-designed third-party charging cables.

The ThinkPad doesn’t mandate USB-C for every connection, though. The laptop’s left side also has USB-A and HDMI ports, while the right side packs a second USB-A port, along with a headphone/ microphone jack, a microSD card slot, an ethernet extension connector, and a hole for security locks. It would’ve been nice to have a proper ethernet port, a full-sized SD slot, and Thunderbol­t support, but the port arrangemen­t still feels generous at a time when USB-C is starting to replace everything.

It’s easy to miss, but the ThinkPad even includes a small active stylus with 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivit­y, tucked into the laptop’s bottom-right edge. It’s no replacemen­t for, say, a Microsoft Surface

if you’re looking to do serious drawing or graphic design work (Microsoft’s Surface Pen has twice the pressure sensitivit­y and is much larger), but it’s good enough for handwritte­n notes in OneNote, or document markup in Drawboard PDF.

Audio, webcam, and security

Surprising­ly enough for a business laptop, a fingerprin­t reader is optional on the ThinkPad L390 Yoga, though it’s included with all but the cheapest configurat­ion. Unlike earlier ThinkPads, it also stores fingerprin­t data within a chip on the sensor module itself, which is more secure than sending data to the system’s host processor for authentica­tion. The webcam is less state of the art, though, providing just 720p resolution for photos and videos. The lack of facial recognitio­n on most models is a downer.

As for audio, the ThinkPad L390 Yoga taps Dolby Audio for speaker tuning and equalizati­on. The result is decent sound quality for movies or music, especially at moderate volumes, though it’s still a little on the thin side overall.

Performanc­e

Because the Lenovo ThinkPad L390 Yoga is a work machine, PCMark’s Work 2.0 test is arguably the most important benchmark, simulating a battery of productivi­ty tasks such as word processing and video chat. A score of 2,000 or better indicates satisfacto­ry performanc­e. Fortunatel­y, the ThinkPad L390 Yoga came out near the top of the pack, no doubt assisted by Intel’s new ‘Whiskey Lake’ Core i5-8265U processor.

Performanc­e was nearly the same as Lenovo’s IdeaPad 730S, which features the same CPU, and was predictabl­y behind HP’s Core i7-based Spectre x360 13.

In other tests, the L390 Yoga falls roughly back into line with other laptops in its price range. Cinebench, for instance, measures a brief burst of CPU activity as it renders 3D graphics, and has the ThinkPad L390 Yoga came out slightly behind other Core-i5 laptops.

The L390 Yoga’s score in HandBrake, which encodes an MKV video file to the MP4 format, was also nothing special. This is a quad-core laptop, so we’re not surprised that it handled the encoding in closer to one hour than two hours.

The ThinkPad L390 Yoga may be aided by its larger design from a thermal perspectiv­e, but its single grille underneath the laptop’s back-right side

isn’t doing anything unique to keep the laptop cool over long periods.

One area where the L390 Yoga clearly lagged behind similar laptops was in 3DMark’s Sky Diver benchmark, which tests GPU performanc­e. Given that other laptops in this class can’t handle modern 3D games anyway, this isn’t a major loss, and the L390 Yoga can play some 2D indie games such as the new Toejam & Earl without issue.

The only real letdown here was battery life, with the L390 Yoga averaging seven hours and 34 minutes in our video rundown test. This is one of the worst scores we’ve seen among modern thin-and-light laptops. However, it’s not out of line with some other ThinkPads like the L480 (eight hours and 13 minutes) and the X1 Tablet (seven hours and six minutes). At least the new USB-C charger can bring the L390 Yoga back to 80 percent of a full charge in an hour.

Verdict

While the Lenovo ThinkPad L390 Yoga isn’t most attractive laptop you can get, it compensate­s for its lack of style with a killer keyboard, a satisfying trackpad, and lots of ways to connect with external devices. You may not enjoy lugging it around or using its dim display outdoors, but it could make work a bit more bearable when you’re stuck at your desk. Jared Newman

Specificat­ions

• 13.3in (1,920x1,080) FHD, IPS, Anti-Glare, 250 nits,

Multi-touch • Windows 10 Pro

• Intel Core i7-8565U processor

• Intel HD 620 GPU

• 8GB DDR4 2,400MHz SoDIMM RAM

• 512GB Solid State Drive, M.2 2280, NVMe, Opal

• Bluetooth 5.0

• Intel Wireless-AC 9560

• 2x USB-C

• 2x USB 3.0

• HDMI 1.4

• Audio combo jack

• MicroSD card reader

• Mini RJ45 Network Extension

• Backlit keyboard

• HD 720p camera with mic

• 45Whr 3 Cell Li-Cyllinder battery

• 322x224.2x18.8mm

• 1.46kg

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Like other Lenovo Yoga laptops, the ThinkPad L390 can turn into a tablet or stand up in tent mode
Like other Lenovo Yoga laptops, the ThinkPad L390 can turn into a tablet or stand up in tent mode
 ??  ?? The ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s keyboard is the star of the show, though we’d like to meet someone who actually uses the TrackPoint nub
The ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s keyboard is the star of the show, though we’d like to meet someone who actually uses the TrackPoint nub
 ??  ?? The ThinkPad L390 Yoga trades proprietar­y charging for USB-C at last
The ThinkPad L390 Yoga trades proprietar­y charging for USB-C at last
 ??  ?? Don’t forget about the stylus parked near the L390 Yoga’s front-right corner
Don’t forget about the stylus parked near the L390 Yoga’s front-right corner
 ??  ?? Surprise, surprise: Work laptop does well on work benchmark
Surprise, surprise: Work laptop does well on work benchmark
 ??  ?? Bursty performanc­e is less of a selling point for the L390 Yoga, as seen in its Cinebench score
Bursty performanc­e is less of a selling point for the L390 Yoga, as seen in its Cinebench score
 ??  ?? HandBrake’s extended test can show how a CPU handles itself under workload and heat pressure. The L390 Yoga posted a middling score
HandBrake’s extended test can show how a CPU handles itself under workload and heat pressure. The L390 Yoga posted a middling score
 ??  ?? Another non-surprise: You wouldn’t want to use the L390 Yoga for 3D games
Another non-surprise: You wouldn’t want to use the L390 Yoga for 3D games
 ??  ?? The Lenovo ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s battery life is a disappoint­ment
The Lenovo ThinkPad L390 Yoga’s battery life is a disappoint­ment

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