Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga 20FQ005TMS
Specifications

Price comparison
Average of 1 scores (from 3 reviews)
Reviews for the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga 20FQ005TMS
Source: Toptenreviews

The X1 Yoga belongs on anyone’s list for the latest and greatest. Sure, we’d have liked to see the inclusion of USB 3.1 or Thunderbolt 3, but the combination of the X1 Yoga’s OLED display and NVMe SSD (plus excellent keyboard, clickpad, and eraserhead) make this laptop one of the best. We can’t stress enough that you shouldn’t judge this machine by its photographs. You’re viewing them through an LCD screen–go out and see that screen yourself.
Single Review, online available, Very Long, Date: 12/14/2016
Source: PC Authority

Lenovo has produced some amazing devices in recent times, so it’s no surprise to see it waltz in and do what it does best: produce another brilliant business hybrid. It isn’t cheap – even in its most modest specification, the X1 Yoga is a cool $2,299 – but you most certainly get what you pay for. The screen is large enough to use all day without yearning for an external monitor; everything from the keyboard to the stylus is faultless; there’s a three-year on-site warranty; and the performance is strong enough to please all but the most demanding users.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/11/2016
Foreign Reviews
Source: M3 PC för alla

Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 08/31/2016
Rating: Total score: 80%
Comment
Intel HD Graphics 520: Integrated GPU (GT2) with 24 EUs found on some Skylake CPU models (15 W ULV series).
Modern games should be playable with these graphics cards at low settings and resolutions. Casual gamers may be happy with these cards.
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
Intel Core i7: The Intel Core i7 for laptops is based on the LG1156 Core i5/i7 CPU for desktops. The base clock speed of the CPUs is relatively low, but because of a huge Turbo mode, the cores can dynamically overclock to up to 3.2 GHz (920XM). Therefore, the CPU can be as fast as high clocked dual-core CPUs (using single threaded applications) but still offer the advantage of 4 cores. Because of the large TDP of 45 W / 55 W, the CPU is only intended for large laptops.
6600U: Skylake-based ULV dual-core processor for thin notebooks and ultrabooks. Offers an integrated HD Graphics 520 GPU and is manufactured in 14 nm.» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.