Is the Yoga Slim 7x (Gen 11)'s 2.8K OLED display worth the upgrade?
The Yoga Slim 7x has a few different OLED touch displays with either a 1920x1200 (FHD+) or a 2880x1800 (2.8K) resolution. Aside from pixel count, the biggest differences involve brightness and refresh rate. The FHD+ model I have in the review unit tops out at 400 nits (SDR) or 600 nits (HDR); what's advertised is accurate based on my testing with a colorimeter. Unfortunately, the FHD+ version is capped at a 60Hz refresh rate, and there's a fair amount of glare if you're working in a bright space. The 2.8K display hits 120Hz, making it much easier on the eyes, and it also gets significantly bri
Why buy the Dell 32 Plus 4K QD-OLED Monitor (S3225QC)?
So what makes this monitor special? Let's start with its display, which is a QD-OLED panel capable of displaying images, videos, and games in 4K resolution and 120Hz refresh rates. These two elements combined will ensure that whatever media you run on it will be displayed with immaculate detail and maintain a smooth, consistent framerate with little to no stuttering or lag. Secondly, it's incredibly easy to set up for non-PC-build enthusiasts, to the point where you won't even need any tools. Lastly, the Dell 32 Plus 4K QD-OLED Monitor (S3225QC) is equipped with a built-in 5-speaker soundbar,
The Yoga Slim 7x (Gen 11) makes its debut at $1,099.99 at Lenovo's website. In this model, you get a Snapdragon X2 Plus (X2P-42) chip, 16GB of LPDDR5x RAM, 512GB M.2 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, and a 14-inch OLED touch display with FHD+ resolution. Lenovo also offers a Snapdragon X2 Elite (X2E-80) config with 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD, and a non-touch FHD+ touch display for $1,699.99. For $1,899.99, you can max everything out with the X2 Elite (X2E-88) chip, 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD, and 2.8K OLED touchscreen. As usual at Lenovo, you can configure your own model with a mix of hardware as required. Here's a look at th