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Lenovo IdeaPad Y480

 & Eric Grevstad Contributing Editor

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 - Lenovo IdeaPad Y480
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 combines quad-core "Ivy Bridge" adrenaline with speedy Nvidia graphics to stir up the 14-inch mainstream laptop segment.

Pros & Cons

    • Fast performance.
    • Exemplary screen and keyboard.
    • WiDi.
    • Slightly overweight.
    • Battery life merely so-so.

Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 Specs

2nd Graphics Card: Intel HD Graphics 4000
3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - 1,024 x 768 - Default: 11571
3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - Native – 0X/4X: 8414
Battery Type: 48 Whr (Watt hours)
CineBench 11.5 Multimedia Tests: 6.26
Crysis - Medium quality - 1,024 x 768 - AA/AF=Off/Off: 68.4
Graphics Card: Nvidia GeForce GT 640M LE
Handbrake Multimedia Tests: 1:17 min:sec
Lost Planet 2 (DX9) - High quality - Native - AA/AF= 0X/4X: 24.1
Lost Planet 2 (DX9) - Middle quality - 1,024 x 768- AA/AF=Off/Off: 49.9
MobileMark 2007 – Standard Battery Productivity Load (hrs:min): 4:48
MobileMark 2007- Performance score: 378
MULTIMEDIA TESTS - PhotoShop CS5: 3:20 min:sec
Native Resolution: 1366 x 768
Networking Options: 802.11n
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium
PCMark7: 2610
Primary Optical Drive: Dual-Layer DVD+/-RW
Processor Name: Intel Core i7-3610QM
Processor Speed: 2.3 GHz
RAM: 8 GB
Rotation Speed: 5400 rpm
Screen Size: 14 inches
Screen Type: Widescreen
Storage Capacity (as Tested): 750 GB
Tech Support: 1 year.
Type: General Purpose
Weight: 5.1 lb
Wireless Display Capability (WiDi): Yes
WWAN (Mobile Broadband): None
At first glance, the Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 didn't strike us as a contender for Editors' Choice. At 5.1 pounds, it's a little heavier than we like a 14-inch mainstream laptop to be. With a street price of $1,000 for our review unit, it's a chunk of change more than our Editors' Choice Dell Inspiron 14z (Core i5)  (4 stars), too. But the Y480 had one important feature that seduced us quickly: horsepower. It flaunts one of Intel's new third-generation "Ivy Bridge" quad-core processors—the 2.3GHz Core i7-3610QM. Instead of integrated graphics, its Nvidia GeForce GT 640M LE discrete graphics give it the power to play demanding games, at least at medium resolution and detail settings, at speeds within shouting distance of the Alienware M14x R3  (3.5 stars) at comparable settings. Add an exemplary screen and keyboard and a full set of ports plus WiDi, and you've got a winning laptop for both work and play. And if you're concerned about its weight and price, just think of it as an alternative to a 15.6-inch system.

Design
The 1.3 by 13.6 by 9.4-inch (HWD) Y480 combines a silver-gray brushed aluminum lid and keyboard deck/palm rest with black plastic sides and bottom. The slightly scalloped keys have a firm but precise feel, with just the right amount of give for comfortable typing. The keyboard is brightly backlit (toggled by the Fn key and space bar), and the layout includes dedicated Home, End, PgUp, and PgDn keys as well as Ctrl and Delete in their proper lower left and top right corners, respectively.

A button next to the power button launches Lenovo's emergency antivirus and system recovery functions when the computer won't boot Windows, which is handy. The good-sized touchpad below the space bar (no ThinkPad-style pointing stick here) has slightly stiff, clickable lower corners instead of dedicated mouse buttons, but scrolling and gestures—including four-finger flicks left and right to open a pair of Lenovo pop-up apps, a wallpaper picker and a sticky-note scratch pad—work smoothly.

The glossy 14-inch display offers the usual 1,366 by 768 resolution that's marginal for would-be image editors but fine for watching 720p videos or multitasking with a couple of overlapping application windows. It's bright and colorful, with sharp contrast and decent viewing angles. Two speakers above the keyboard ("JBL Brand Speaker," boasts a sticker on the palm rest) put out above-average audio, without tons of bass but with more than enough volume to fill a room.

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Features
An SD/MMC card slot decorates the Y480's front edge, while microphone and headphone jacks and two USB 2.0 ports join the DVD±RW burner on its right side. Two USB 3.0 ports, VGA, HDMI, and Ethernet are on the left. Wireless connectivity includes 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Intel Wireless Display (WiDi) for beaming a video, DVD, or presentation to a big-screen TV outfitted with a third-party WiDi adapter.

The IdeaPad's 750GB hard drive has ample space for programs and files (622GB available out of the box), though its 5,400-rpm speed is a step behind the 7,200 rpm of the drive in the Lenovo IdeaPad U400 ($899.99 direct, 4 stars). There's a fair amount of preinstalled software, but most of it is bloatware-free (although the 30-day trial of McAfee Internet Security is woefully short); titles range from Microsoft Office Starter 2010 to CyberLink Power2Go, Google Chrome, and ooVoo video chat. An Enhanced Experience Boot Optimizer utility cycled through several reboots to whittle startup time from 60 to 48 seconds. Lenovo provides a one-year parts and labor warranty for the Y480.

Performance
Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 The IdeaPad Y480's  quad-core, eight-thread processor and 8GB of DDR3 memory powered it to a Cinebench score that swept us off our feet—6.26, versus 4.78 for the Alienware M14x R3 and 3.16 for the Dell XPS 14z ($1,299 direct, 4 stars). Its Handbrake video encoding time of 1 minute 17 seconds and Photoshop CS5 image editing time of 3:20 easily outstripped the Alienware gaming laptop (1:30 and 3:39, respectively) and left the Dell Inspiron 14z (Core i5)  in the dust, though the M14x eked out a win in the PCMark 7 benchmark (2,749 to 2,610).

Lenovo IdeaPad Y480

The sticker on the palm rest proclaims, "Professional Gaming Graphics." In truth, the Y480 may not win many LAN parties against $3,000 gaming rigs, but its GeForce GT 640M LE graphics adapter powered the Lenovo to impressive results at medium (1,024 by 768) resolution and quality settings: 49.9 frames per second in DirectX 9 Lost Planet 2 and 68.4 fps in DirectX 10 Crysis, each result fewer than 10 fps behind the Alienware M14x R3.

The Y480 also broke the 30 fps barrier (34.2 fps) in Unigine's challenging DirectX 11 benchmark, Heaven 3.0, at 1,024 by 768 with no antialiasing. At its native 1,366 by 768 resolution with 4X antialiasing, however, it slipped to 24.1 fps in Lost Planet 2 and 21.3 fps in Heaven.

Having a battery that's removable or swappable for a spare, rather than sealed into the case, is a plus. The 48Wh battery's size, however, is nothing to write home about, and its endurance proved acceptable but not exceptional—the one test where the new Lenovo failed to topple the Dell 14z, at 4 hours 48 minutes versus 8:38.

Nevertheless, we're moving into the "Ivy Bridge" era and naming the IdeaPad Y480 our new mainstream Editors' Choice. When you consider its quad-core power, performance that'll save you measurable time every day, sunny screen, and comfortable backlit keyboard, it's a new benchmark for what $1,000 will buy.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:
Check out the test scores for the Lenovo IdeaPadY480

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 with several other laptops side by side.

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Final Thoughts

Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 - Lenovo IdeaPad Y480

Lenovo IdeaPad Y480

4.0 Excellent

The Lenovo IdeaPad Y480 combines quad-core "Ivy Bridge" adrenaline with speedy Nvidia graphics to stir up the 14-inch mainstream laptop segment.

About Our Expert

Eric Grevstad

Eric Grevstad

Contributing Editor

My Experience

I was picked to write PCMag's 40th Anniversary "Most Influential PCs" feature because I'm the geezer who remembers them all—I worked on TRS-80 and Apple II monthlies starting in 1982 and served as editor of Computer Shopper when it was a 700-page monthly rivaled only by Brides as America's fattest magazine. I was later the editor in chief of Home Office Computing, a magazine about using tech to work from home two decades before a pandemic made it standard practice. Even in semi-retirement, I can't stop playing with toys and telling people what gear to buy.

The Technology I Use

I wish I still had my TRS-80 Model 4P, Laser 128 (educational toymaker VTech's Apple IIc clone), Psion Series 5, and ThinkPad 701C with the fold-out "butterfly" keyboard.

My main machine is a Lenovo Yoga 9i all-in-one desktop with a 13th Gen Core i9 and 32-inch 4K display running Windows 11 Home, Microsoft 365 Family, and Norton 360 with LifeLock. My wife and I get 400Mbps Spectrum internet as part of our homeowners' association fee, but I pay a fortune for streaming services.

I also have a Google Pixel 7 Android phone and pay Mint Mobile $15 a month. We share a Volvo XC60 Recharge plug-in hybrid; I'd have a car of my own, but it seems wasteful to buy a Corvette E-Ray to drive 10 miles a week.

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