10 January 2012 16:03 GMT / By Dan Sung
The Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga is a well put together piece of kit and definitely the strangest Ultrabook to arrive on the scene so far.
It's a 13.3-inch multi-mode laptop which introduces an interesting design idea supposed to optimise the user experience across four different usage modes - notebook, tablet, stand and tent - yes, a tent. That's the official line, anyway. To you and us, it's a laptop-come-tablet with a crazy 360 hinge that allows the screen to be bent right back on itself until both outer surfaces are touching one another.

The Yoga measures in at 16.9mm thick and weighs 1.47kg, but it feels a lot chunkier than the stats suggest. In fact, it doesn't really present much like an Ultrabook at all. Much of that comes down to the fact that, at 13.3 inches, it comes off like quite an unwieldy size for a tablet and not the kind of thing you'd feel comfy with holding in one hand.
All the same, it works very nicely. The 1600 x 900px display is bright, a little too glossy, highly responsive to the touch and it handles that future-look, Metro-style end of Windows 8 with great aplomb. It's a delight to flick through and the little Windows home key at the base of the screen is well positioned for both tablet and laptop uses.

The big question for us though, is whether anyone actually needs something like this? The answer is probably yes, but it's not going to be hugely mass market. As pretty and well built as it is, a separate laptop/tablet solution might be more convenient for those planning to make their work/play ratio the more fun side of 70/30.
The IdeaPad Yoga multimode notebook will be available in the UK in the second half of 2012 with an estimated starting retail price of £1,199.
Get all the coverage from the world's largest tech show: CES 2012 
Laptops, Ultrabooks, Lenovo, Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga, CES2012














Dell XPS 15z A real power-house
Asus UX31 Ultrabook pictures and hands-on UK first with new thin laptop
Hottest gadgets at CES 2012 CES 2012: Pocket-lint's pick of the show
Apple MacBook Air 11-inch (2011) The straw that breaks the Windows fan's back?
Dell XPS 14z pictures and hands-on Soon to be hitting Europe
First Look: Olympus OM-D E-M5 Full of features, full of promise
Pokemon Yellow on iPhone is massive scam... how did it get Apple approval? Unofficial and broken
Panasonic Eluga pictures and hands-on Waterproof goodness
Sky Go Android app now available for selected phones UPDATED: Other handsets and ICS on the way
BlackBerry PlayBook 2.0 update landing 21 February claims leaked document Email and Android apps inbound
Jaguar XKR-S convertible A super-cat
Canon PowerShot G1 X DSLR-beating compact?
Dyson DC38 Multi Floor You'll clean up
GREE teams up with Gameloft and Ubisoft for European social gaming assault Assassin's Creed 3 tie-in announced
Windows 8 logo: It’s a window… not a flag New brand for a new OS
Apple: Nearly 25 billion apps downloaded $10,000 prize up for grabs
Panasonic Eluga Android smartphone: First details Coming in spring
Sony's new TVs put design and picture quality first... pictures and hands-on 3D and Smart too, but not essential
Sky Go for Android video, pictures and hands-on Live streaming
Is this Sony's first Windows Phone 7 handset? UPDATE: It seems not
Sony PlayStation Vita review
Curriculum Vita
Nokia Lumia 710 review
WP7 on a budget
HTC Explorer review
A phone for people who make calls
First Look: Olympus OM-D E-M5 review
Full of features, full of promise
BlackBerry Torch 9810 review
Middle of the road
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 review
For the fast lane
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
To boldly go where we've already been before
Sony Alpha A65 review
Affordable SLT. But is it a DSLR-beater?
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Two-cylinder beast
Motorola MotoACTV review
Just add exercise
Motorola Xoom 2 Media Edition review
Mini Xoom
Fujifilm X-S1 review
The shining star of the superzoom world?
Sony Ericsson Xperia Active review
Can take abuse
Sennheiser IE80 review
Tune that bass
Kingston Wi-Drive review
Expand your storage