Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Laptop Lenovo Y50

The first version of the model proposed a screen 1920 x 1080 pixel performance ordinary. Fortunately, Lenovo Y50 has remedied this by opting for the  Ultra HD screen. The only catch is that the NVIDIA 860M graphics chip is not capable of running most games at this level of definition. The oldest or most common games will work, but for the newest and greedy, we have to degrade the display settings. This Ultra HD version is physically identical to the original model.
The result is the same: this laptop does not include the typical aesthetic models for gamers, but it is also less fine and boilerplate that more conventional laptops. The angular design is made of black brushed metal with a hatch pattern, a dark red hue underscores the speakers, the subwoofer and USB jacks. But the most daring aesthetic touch keyboard which is also right at a red backlight. The visual effect is reinforced by the edges of the chicklet keyboard red translucent plastic that let the lighting.



The Y50 provides a connection just fine including an Ethernet jack. In our tests, it has lived up to any laptop PC with an Intel Core i7 processor. This is more than enough for everyday use. Lenovo Y50 machine proves very comfortable with image editing (Photoshop) or video editing in HD. Regarding the video game, the system shows its limits. Lenovo Y50 Ultra HD turned the BioShock Infinite 1080p game with the maximum level of detail to 49.7 frames / Sec and Metro: Last Light 18.6 frames / Sec. The standard Y50 performed the same tests with respectively 48.7 and 13.3 frames / Sec. So if you plan to run your games 1920 x 1080 with medium to high settings, you should be happy with the results. However, when pushing the definition Ultra HD, the BioShock test drops to 16.2 frames / Sec with maximum graphical detail and 28.1 frames / Sec when the minimum.

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