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We’ve aggressively integrated touch across our consumer PCs so that we have one of the largest portfolios of Windows 8 touch products available, said Peter Hortensius, senior vice president at Lenovo.At the top of the range are Lenovo’s IdeaPad U310 and U410 Ultrabooks, which add ten-finger multitouch support to previous versions. Both Ultrabooks offer tablet-like response times, with Lenovo promising wake-up times of less than one second.Lenovo has also introduced touch to its mainstream IdeaPad laptop range, with the IdeaPad Z400 and IdeaPad Z500 also boasting ten-finger support.Two all-in-one PCs now include touch as well. The IdeaCentre A730 will be available with a 27in 1,920 x 1,080 display with ten-point multitouch, while the more affordable 23in IdeaPad C540 comes with an optional touchscreen.

Lenovo’s final touchscreen offering is a new monitor, the ThinkVision LT1423p Mobile Monitor Touch. Again, this includes full ten-finger touch support.Its 13.3in display includes a 1,600 x 900 resolution and promises great viewing angles thanks to an AH-IPS panel protected by Gorilla Glass.The Ultrabooks and laptops will go on sale from March, while the IdeaCentre A730 becomes available in June. UK prices weren’t immediately available.Acer’s incoming CEO has admitted that the firm made a series of mistakes in recent years, pinning the blame for its sliding market share on pushing into Ultrabooks and touchscreens too early.Jason Chen, who was named CEO in December, held his first press conference today in Taiwan, saying the company’s biggest mistake had been investing too quickly in touch panels and Ultrabooks, and not realising the extent to which tablet computers like Apple’s iPad would disrupt the PC industry.We wanted to stimulate demand using new technology and we took the initiative more aggressively than anybody else, to the point where we got hurt, Chen said. Hopefully we won’t repeat the same mistake we made before.

We wanted to stimulate demand using new technology and we took the initiative more aggressively than anybody else, to the point where we got hurt However, investors looking for specifics as to the future of Acer came away disappointed, as the new CEO spent more time focusing on the company’s past mistakes than on where it’s headed.Chen told reporters that it was too early for the company to reveal its full strategy for recovery, but suggested cloud services would be a key aspect.We need to find how to add value to hardware with mail, photo, video and other things we haven’t even seen yet, he added. We’ll start from our competitive advantage and go from there.Chen is the latest appointee in a series of top-level shake-ups at the struggling firm. In 2011, Italian-born Gianfranco Lanci resigned as CEO, and in November then-CEO J.T. Wang also resigned, to be replaced by then-corporate president Jim Wong. Wong stepped down only weeks later.

According to data from research firm IDC, Acer saw a 21.4% fall in PC sales during the fourth quarter from a year earlier, by far the largest of all major vendors. At its peak in the third quarter of 2009, the company occupied a 13% share of the worldwide PC market.Chen has been tasked with guiding the company to integrate hardware, software and services and push deeper into the fast-growing tablet sector as PC sales stall.In tablets, the company has made some inroads, seeing its global market share increase to 2.5% in the third quarter of 2013 from less than 1% in the same quarter of 2012.

MSI’s bombastically titled GE70 2PE Apache Pro serves up serious gaming power in a hefty 17.3in chassis. With a quad-core Core i7 processor taking the reins alongside one of Nvidia’s latest GTX 800 Series GPUs and twin SSDs in RAID, the Apache Pro promises blindingly quick performance for £1,299 inc VAT. See also: The best laptops of 2014 It certainly looks like it means business. It’s a foreboding piece of kit, measuring almost 4cm thick and weighing a lumpen 3kg, and the chassis feels seriously tough. The metal wristrests give no flex during typing, and metal extends all around the keyboard, giving the laptop’s entire base a reassuring solidity. The lid is plastic, but combines rigidity and good looks with a luxurious, all-black, faux-brushed-metal finish.

One of the Apache Pro’s key assets is its Geforce GTX 860M dedicated graphics chip, which sits in the middle of Nvidia’s new 800 Series range, and boasts the new, power-efficient Maxwell microarchitecture. In contrast to the previous Kepler architecture, the Maxwell generation distributes its CUDA cores into several separate blocks, each of which can be dynamically toggled on and off to minimise power usage. As a result, Nvidia claim that the new Maxwell GPUs deliver twice the performance per watt of their Kepler predecessors.

The GeForce GTX 860M finds itself in good company. Working alongside is a quad-core Core i7-4700HQ CPU supported by 16GB of DDR3 RAM, a pair of 128GB SSDs in a RAID0 array and a 1TB HDD. As you’d rightfully expect, it’s a combination capable of blisteringly quick benchmark scores across the board. The pair of SSDs ensures lightning-quick boot-up and application-load times, and recorded sequential read and write speeds of 836MB/sec and 505MB/sec in the AS SSD benchmark. And it came as no surprise to see the Apache Pro breeze through our suite of Real World Benchmarks with an Overall score of 0.97.

Gaming performance is equally impressive. The GeForce GTX 860M cruised through our Crysis benchmark – run at 1,920 x 1,080 resolution and High detail settings – with a silky-smooth average frame rate of 65fps. Even with Crysis cranked to its maximum Very High detail settings, the Apache Pro eased to a playable average of 42fps.Such powerful hardware takes its toll elsewhere, however, and the MSI’s battery life was mediocre. In our light-use battery test, with the screen set to 75cd/m² it managed to survive for only 4hrs 21mins, and pushing the CPU flat out saw the GE70 2PE shut down after only 46mins.The Yoga 2’s similarity to the 11S is no bad thing. We’re sad that it isn’t available in the distinctive orange hue of its predecessor – only in a more sedate silver and black finish – but it’s just as stylish and daintily proportioned. The subtle curves of the body are pleasingly understated and, at 1.3kg, it’s the perfect size and weight for slinging in a bag and carrying around every day. It’s fairly slim, too: the chassis measures 18mm at its thickest point, including the rubber feet on its underside.

Some compromises have been made to keep costs down, the foremost being a switch from the metal construction of the Yoga 11S to an all-plastic chassis. Thankfully, this hasn’t dramatically impacted the overall build quality. There’s a little flex in the keyboard section if you twist it viciously from side to side, but – crucially, given the Yoga 2’s portable aspirations – both the slender lid and the double-jointed hinges still feel reassuringly tough and resilient. The overall package feels solidly put together, especially for a £500 hybrid.The Yoga design is impressively versatile. In laptop mode, the Yoga 2 does a superb impression of a high-quality 11.6in Ultrabook. The Scrabble-tile keys could do with a little more travel, and as a result aren’t quite as tactile and responsive as the best we’ve used, but we found them easy to get used to. While the keys are a little less than full-size, Lenovo hasn’t resorted to needlessly shrunken keys or awkward key placements. The buttonless touchpad doesn’t throw up any issues either, and everything from two-fingered gestures to edge swipes works reliably.

The double-jointed hinge means that the Yoga 2 can also shapeshift into a variety of other formats. Flip the lid back on itself and the keyboard section becomes an adjustable stand, allowing the display to be angled to your liking. Turn the Yoga 2 upside down and “tent mode” makes it usable even in the most cramped of spaces. Fold the display all the way round and the Yoga 2 becomes a tablet. It’s a great piece of design. As ever, the keyboard and touchpad are automatically disabled as soon as the screen is tilted past 180 degrees, so you won’t be typing or clicking by accident in tablet mode. The power, volume and automatic-screen-rotation toggle buttons are all positioned along the Yoga 2’s edges so they’re always readily to hand, and there’s a physical Windows key embedded in the touchscreen’s lower bezel.Putting together a budget laptop is a tricky balancing act at the best of times, and the Asus VivoBook X200CA is one of the company’s most ambitious attempts yet. Following in the footsteps of the excellent VivoBook S200E, the VivoBook X200CA slashes the price to a miniscule £290 by making some small yet noticeable compromises. See also: what’s the best laptop you can buy in 2014?http://www.dearbattery.co.uk

The VivoBook X200CA’s build is one area where Asus has made some savings. The chiselled metal chassis of its predecessor has been replaced with a textured, white plastic finish top and bottom. However, for a budget laptop the X200CA certainly doesn’t disgrace itself. The all-white finish looks rather dashing by budget standards, and the rounded edges and smooth curves add a little more style than you’d expect from a sub-£300 laptop. Crucially, build quality is impressive as well, and there’s very little flex or give anywhere in the laptop’s base and lid.Look past the redesigned exterior, and in many ways the VivoBook X200CA build is a dead ringer for the VivoBook S200. Its chassis is exactly the same size, measuring 303 x 200 x 21mm (WDH), and it has retained a well-spaced and responsive Scrabble-tile keyboard and a good-sized touchpad beneath. It also has an identical array of ports; along the left there’s a single USB 3 port and full-sized HDMI and D-SUB outputs, and along the right there are a further two USB 2 ports, a 10/100 Ethernet socket, SD card reader, Kensington lock slot and a 3.5mm headset jack. Wireless connectivity is trimmed down to the bare essentials, and Asus has included single-band 802.11abgn Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.

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