USA TODAY US Edition

Smaller, thinner laptops often can pack a lot of power

- Mike Feibus Mike Feibus is president and principal analyst of FeibusTech. The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessaril­y reflect those of USA TODAY.

If you paid top dollar for a laptop, wouldn’t you expect it to be a great computer? Of course, you would.

That’s not been the case with premium-priced ultraporta­ble laptops. Yes, they were impressive­ly thin and light, so you could take them anywhere. But you had to be willing to compromise on pretty much everything else. Because while their svelte frames may have spared you from heavy lifting, they weren’t equipped to do much of it themselves.

Suddenly, things are different. For the first time, the thinnest laptops now pack a punch. These bantamweig­hts probably won’t break a sweat – even if you’re settling in for some serious number-crunching or video editing.

I’ve been evaluating three of these seemingly weightless wonders, all of which are just coming available: HP’s Elite Dragonfly G2, the ThinkPad X1 Nano from Lenovo and Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7+ for Business. All three business-class systems weigh just a couple of pounds and feature 13-inch displays, fast solid-state drives for storage, and the latest 11th-generation Tiger Lake Core processors from Intel.

The biggest eye-opener for me was not their size, but how well they performed.

To test the limits of the new ultraporta­bles, I took turns using each as my go-to workhorse PC. I swapped them in for my 18-month-old desktop powerhouse, which I rely on for heavier-duty tasks like video production. One at a time, I hooked them up to my ultra-widescreen display, keyboard, mouse, camera and microphone.

Visually, these petite PCs looked woefully undersized for the job, like a tiny tugboat paired with a massive

transconti­nental cargo freighter. But the mighty mites ably handled everything I asked them to do. I never once missed my desktop.

Credit Intel’s 11th-generation Core processors with much of the newfound capabiliti­es. The high-efficiency processors give PC makers many more controls to help dial in just the right amount of performanc­e to keep laptops humming, without burning extra power, generating more heat and forcing the system to throttle.

Each of these 11th-generation Corebased business-class ultraporta­bles offers something a little different from the others. The X1 Nano, for example, is the thinnest and lightest of them all, weighing in at just under 2 pounds. The Nano is also the first to offer Lenovo’s new Human Presence Detection, or HPD. It’s impressive­ly quick and accurate at recognizin­g me when I get close enough to automatica­lly unlock the laptop.

Like the original HP Dragonfly, the G2 has a 360-degree hinge along with Sure View, HP’s trademark integrated privacy filter. The filter is great for keeping prying eyes in coffee shops and on planes from seeing your work. And for

such a skinny little system, it has an impressive number of ports.

Both the Nano and G2 sport Intel’s Evo designatio­n. They also have Intel’s vPro security and manageabil­ity suite built-in, which gives your company’s IT more tools to protect your laptop while you work from home.

Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7+ weighs just 1.7 pounds without the optional magnetic keyboard attached, and closer to 2.5 pounds with the keyboard. The Pro 7+ is also the only one of the three systems without a built-in fan to promote cooling during power-hungry tasks – an impressive engineerin­g feat for a system this size. It’s also got a replaceabl­e solid-state drive.

As a group, these laptops are helping to usher in a new era of incredibly light, agile business-class ultraporta­bles with the muscle of larger laptops. So now they’re not only nice carry-anywhere systems. They’re also great PCs – even if you never leave the house.

 ?? PROVIDED BY MIKE FEIBUS ?? The thinnest laptops pack a punch that belies their weight.
PROVIDED BY MIKE FEIBUS The thinnest laptops pack a punch that belies their weight.

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