- Lenovo Thinkbook Veriflex is a concept laptop with a 14 -inch rotating screen
- It has a thin ultraportable design and offers a smartphone connection Smart Connect
- To whom he will appeal and how long the rotary hinge is, stay unknown for the moment
Lenovo confirmed that Thinkbook Veriflex, previously known as Pivo Code name, is real.
Presented for the first time at the end of August 2025 on X by Renown Serial Leaker Evan Blass, the laptop of the concept was officially revealed at IFA 2025 in Berlin and it is just as good as we expected.
The Verflex thinkbook has a 14 -inch screen that is independently running the cover. This mechanism allows the device to switch between horizontal and vertical orientations.
Ultra -portable
In vertical mode, Lenovo suggests that the commercial laptop could be useful to display and write code, read documents and long web pages, or run several windows side by side.
The device is thin at only 17.9 mm and weighs 1.39 kg, which makes one of the lightest laptops.
A vertical orientation is not new in the world of external monitors, but it is much less common in a laptop.
Lenovo sees it as a productivity amplifier for users who would benefit from a larger display.
The rotary hinge system is interesting, and although I can see how it would work, inevitable questions arise on its long -term sustainability.
Lenovo has also announced Smart Connect, a feature that connects a user’s smartphone to the Veriflex.
When the screen is in vertical orientation, the attached phone can share files or reflect its display directly on the laptop.
This suggests that the company considers the device as more than a simple curiosity, although the real public of such a design is a little less clear.
Conceptual laptops have a mixed history, with a lot of never marketing, although some, like the Thinkbook Rollable of Lenovo, end up doing it.
The VERTIFLEX is part of this unusual and untreated category, where it will certainly appeal to a close group of professionals, but the general buyers will find it difficult to grasp the goal, especially if they are delivered at a high price.
I certainly applaud the will of Lenovo to experiment, even if the practical advantages of the rotary screen of the Veriflex thinkbook remain open to the debate.