Skip navigation
7 of 12

Lenovo IdeaPad U1/LePad Hybrid

Lenovo, IBM's former laptop wild-child, has taken a radical approach to bringing the world a tablet PC (presumably worried that a skeptical public will still yearn for a more familiar user environment), and has brought us the IdeaPad UI/Le Pad Hybrid. Truly a jack of all trades, it packs twin OSes--the LePad tablet is a standalone Android 2.2 device (skinned with Lenovo's own LeOS system, and due to run Android 3.0 when it goes on sale in the U.S.) with a 1.3 GHz Snapdragon CPU, 10.1-inch capacitive multitouch screen and all the usual connection options.

When you plug it into the laptop-style keyboard base a magical transformation occurs, and the unit acts as the display for a 1.2 GHz Intel i5-powered traditional laptop running Windows 7. It's clever, will appeal to some--if only because the connected devices make for a dinky little laptop--but involves a lot of compromises, most notably on price.

LePad: Around $520, arriving first Quarter 2011. Full IdeaPad setup: Around $1,300.