
PCs are boring. There, I said it. But this all-in-one PC from Lenovo is anything but. Why? Because the Yoga AIO 7 has a screen that you can completely rotate from vertical to horizontal in one swift motion – and I8217;m mesmerised by it.
Now you might be sat there thinking, 8220;why would I want a PC with a screen that spins around?8221;. But there8217;s actually a really good argument for one: I8217;ve watched family members working from home where spreadsheets and documents are king and, in such moments, a portrait orientation screen is perfect to fit more into eyeshot. Want to watch a video after? Spin that screen around into landscape orientation. Perfecto!
Lenovo Yoga AIO 7: How does the screen work?
The Yoga AIO 7 features a 27-inch 4K display, so it8217;s a decent desktop size, which is attached to a rigid stand that hides all the ports and whatnot at the back – and I think it looks really smart. There are dual front-facing 5W speakers, too, to give a chunky soundscape.
But how does the screen rotate? When Lenovo demoed the Yoga AIO 7 to me via videolink, the company revealed a little lock-switch beneath the panel: press that and it8217;s then possible to manually spin the screen through 90-degrees into its next lock position. So whether you need vertical or horizontal, it8217;s quick and easy (and not mechanised) to sort.
I was wondering how that would mess with video calls, though, as typically products have a fixed camera position. Lenovo has worked around this by including a clip-on 5-megapixel camera, so you can always set things up as you please. Better still, for privacy and security concerns, you can just hide that camera away entirely when it8217;s not in use. Clever.
Lenovo Yoga AIO 7: What about the spec?
Having a 27-inch 4K display sure is nice to work on, but powering that needs ample internals. There8217;s no lacking from this Lenovo, though, thanks to the latest AMD Ryzen 7 6800H processor, up to 32GB RAM, and up to AMD Radeon RX6600M graphics (with 8GB RAM dedicated).
There are plenty of ports in the stand too: one USB-C (3.2 Gen 2) and one USB-A (3.2 Gen 2) to the side, another Type-C on the top, plus four more (three Type-A, one Type-C) on the rear. Separate power, LAN and DisplayPort also feature, so you won8217;t be short of slots to plug in peripherals.
But, really, it8217;s that rotating screen that8217;ll grab your attention most of all. If I had the Yoga AIO 7 I8217;m pretty sure I8217;d spend far too much time showing off its special rotating screen feature (even if, most of that time, it8217;d just be to myself). How much you8217;ll have to pay for that exciting privilege, however, Lenovo is yet to reveal8230;