Kyle Wagner
At a glance, the 11-inch version looks almost identical to the 13-inch. They even feel roughly the same when you pick them up. It will have a Tegra 3 processor, which is the first time Windows RT will get a quad core processor. It's got a 1366x768 11.6-inch screen, claims up to 13 hours of battery life, and weighs 2.8 pounds. You can configure it up to 2GB of RAM and 64GB of storage.
There are a few drawbacks, though. The 11-inch's keyboard isn't up to Lenovo's usual awesome standards. It's a little too undersized, and not comfortable to type on. That's a shame, considering some of the other 11-inch ultrabooks out there with great keyboards, like Acer's new S7, or even the MacBook Air. That said, it's a Windows RT machine, so it's more fair to judge it against something like Dell's XPS 10, where it fares a bit better. It'll be out on October 26th, with the Windows 8 launch, for $800. [Lenovo]
Ref:gizmodo
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