Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Hands On with Lenovo’s Dual-Screen W700DS

Add as a preferred source on Google
Hands On with Lenovo
Image used with permission by copyright holder

There are big notebooks, and there are big notebooks. Of these categories, Lenovo’s W700DS most definitely falls into the latter, but the second screen and extreme feature load would seem to justify the weight – for those who really need it.

I had a chance to try the stately behemoth at Lenovo’s recent Digital Experience press event, and while it’s quite a monster, Lenovo has done a respectable job implementing the innovative new dual-screen design too.

Recommended Videos

For starters, every corner of the notebook touts Lenovo’s characteristically refined built quality. The slide-out screen, which you might expect to feel flimsy, was smooth and sturdy as well. Though it doesn’t pivot much to reach the user’s preferred angle, it doesn’t need to either. Lenovo also matched the dot-pitch of the slider to the dot-pitch of the main screen, so that windows spanned across both don’t awkwardly vary in size.

The secondary screen does lack the brightness of the main screen, though. It appeared quite dim under the conditions I tested it with.

While Lenovo’s estimated $3,663 starting price could be called high but reasonable, that’s only the tip of the iceberg in terms of both price and performance. The quad-core version of the machine, specced up with Nvidia graphics, maxed out RAM, and other features could run into the $7,000 to $8,000 range. That’s a lot of laptop. We’re not entirely surprised that Lenovo is pushing it for industries for oil exploration – if you shell out for one, you had better be prepared to strike oil to pay for it.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Topics
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 just became the Pixel desktop future I want Google to steal
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 became a tiny PC because Samsung already built the desktop mode Google keeps treating like a side quest.
Desktop mode within Android 16.

A broken Galaxy Fold 5 should be a sad little monument to modern gadget math. One busted outer display, one repair bill nobody wants to inspect too closely, and suddenly a powerful foldable starts heading toward a drawer. Instead, a Redditor turned one into a glowing acrylic DeX box with spare parts, fans, a USB hub, and the kind of LED lighting that makes every homebrew computer look mildly illegal.

https://www.reddit.com/r/SamsungDex/comments/1upica7/fold_5_dexbox/

Read more
You’ll finally be able to try OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna models this week
The GPT-5.6 family will become publicly available on July 9, ending the restricted preview that lasted nearly two weeks.
OpenAI Sol Terra Luna featured

OpenAI is ready to expand access to its latest GPT-5.6 model family. In a recent post on X, the company confirmed that GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna will become publicly available on Thursday, July 9. If you've been itching to try the new models since the limited preview began in late June, you won't have to wait much longer.

Why the rollout took longer than expected

Read more
A Windows 11 bug may be quietly eating hundreds of gigabytes of your storage
Windows 11’s storage-eating bug now has a fix from Microsoft
Windows 11 suffering from RAM crisis

If your Windows 11 PC suddenly looks low on storage, your downloads folder or game library may not be the problem. According to Windows Latest, a bug tied to a Windows system file can silently consume tens or even hundreds of gigabytes on the system drive.

The file in question is called CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal, and it sits inside Windows’ Capability Access Manager folder. Windows Latest says the issue may appear as unusually high “System files” usage in Windows 11’s storage breakdown, even though the Settings app does not clearly identify the exact file responsible. In some reported cases, users saw it grow to 200GB, and even more.

Read more