Lenovo’s conceit for the Yoga Book 9i laptop—ditch the keyboard and replace it with a second touchscreen—has been done before, but never very well. Arguably the best example to date anywhere along these lines has been the HP Omen X 2S, which featured a miniature display mounted above a physical keyboard, but it was a decidedly niche idea designed for gaming and priced at nearly $3,000 at launch. It never gained much traction. Now it’s Lenovo’s turn to take a trip down this road, and it may be the most ambitious, and successful variation to date.
With the Yoga Book 9i, “second screen” means a full screen. There’s no keyboard here at all; the lower half of the laptop is a touchscreen identical to the upper half. Take two 13.3-inch OLED displays and sandwich them together with a hinge in between and you’ve got the idea.
Lenovo has done a hefty amount of engineering to make this work, and while there are a few rough edges, for the most part, it’s a success. Naturally, you’re free to use the laptop as if it were two Windows tablets or one giant one, putting different apps on either screen of the device and holding the whole thing like it’s one of Moses’ enormous stone tablets. Want to get creative? You can even set it on a table in an inverted V formation and let two kids watch different videos on either side (though you can only play one audio track).
All of this may sound fanciful or even frivolous, but the Yoga Book 9i is surprisingly well positioned for getting real work done—and potentially succeeds on that front better than a standard laptop. Open the device up in standard laptop mode and use eight fingers to swipe upward on the lower touchscreen to have the virtual keyboard and trackpad area appear. Want to forgo the trackpad and move the keyboard closer to your body? Just drag it down and the keyboard moves toward you, leaving room for various configurable widgets in the few inches of open space that have been freed up.

