And in our least -
demanding video test, Lenovo's 2 - in - 1 barely made it past eight hours, thoroughly trounced by the Yoga 920's nearly 14 hours, the Spectre x360 13's just over 14 hours, and the Surface Book 2 13's roughly 17 hours.
Not exact matches
The beauty of an subscription
video - on -
demand service is that we can continue to
test different types of content and because of the direct connection we have with our end user — it's a dialog that continues.
Providing a consistent interface and seamless integration of all the training assets (lessons,
videos, chat, workbooks,
tests, etc.) within a single easy - to - navigate platform is critical to avoid frustrating your on -
demand workers and client partners.
I recently
tested American Airlines Entertainment on
Demand in - flight streaming
video on AA flight 179 from New York's JFK airport to San Francisco (SFO).
It has the most powerful processor and dedicated graphics card of the laptops we
tested, which means that it's powerful enough to handle
demanding workloads, and it can render 4K
video faster than the competition.
In the more
demanding Peacekeeper
test, which mixes in
video, graphics processing, and more intensive computational activities to the typical web browsing load, the Spin 7 only managed four hours and 20 minutes before it shut down.
It lasted over 10 hours in our
video loop
test, and over five hours in our most
demanding battery run - down.
The same held true in our more
demanding real - world
test, using Handbrake to encode a 420 MB
video to H. 265 format.
In the more
demanding Handbrake
test, which encodes a 420 MB
video to H. 265 and stresses the CPU for a longer timeframe, the Spectre x360 13 took a competitive 723 seconds to complete the process.