Lenovo Education Store
Lenovo Pro Business Store
CALL OUR SALES EXPERTS ON
Mon-Thu 8:15 - 17:00 GMT
Fri 8:30 - 16:00 GMT
BUSINESS ORDER HELP
Lenovo Pro Business Store
Lenovo Education Store
Sign in
View your account and check order status
My Account
Checkout faster, save items and more!
Sign out
Sign in
View your account and check order status
My Account
Checkout faster, save items and more!
Sign out
Sign in
View your account and check order status
My Account
Checkout faster, save items and more!
Sign out
Sale
Laptops
Desktops
Workstations
Tablets
Accessories & Software
Monitors
Solutions
Servers
Storage
SDI
Software
Warranty Lookup
PC Services
Data Center Services
Asset Recovery
Solutions
Support
First there was the laptop, the first truly portable PC. Then came smaller, lighter tablets and netbooks, which were similar to laptops but achieved their tiny size by sacrificing internal storage, battery life, processor speed, and so on. Finally came the Ultrabook -- as small as many netbooks or tablets but with internal components and computing abilities more like those of a full-fledged laptop.
At least, that was the expectation. Yes, very thin and very powerful laptops have become a huge part of the home and business PC market. But while the concept is alive and thriving, the term Ultrabook -- conceived and trademarked by Intel Corp. -- has not taken off as a broadly recognized product category of its own.
The term Ultrabook was coined (and trademarked) in 2011 by Intel Corp. With slate-style tablet PCs and low-powered netbooks becoming popular, the company saw a growing consumer appetite for laptops that would be nearly as thin as tablets but offer faster processors and other features found in higher-end systems.
In particular, Intel saw a market for its new generation of low-energy, low-heat processors, which it designed to operate within the tight confines of a small laptop frame while still running at up to 2.0 GHz cycle times or more. The company worked with multiple PC manufacturers to combine its new chips with advances in storage and battery technology, and the first highly portable -- and highly powerful -- Ultrabook-labeled systems hit stores in late 2011.
In the years since they were first introduced, use of the term Ultrabook by PC marketers has declined considerably. Some analysts have attributed this to consumer confusion about where the new label fit in the hierarchy beside the existing netbooks and Chromebooks, tablets, 2-in-1s and regular laptops.
Still, PC makers regularly unveil new systems that meet or exceed the tough specifications Intel defined for Ultrabooks (see below). But most manufacturers have opted to sell these models under their own xxxxBook or Ultraxxxx trade names, or to add Ultrabook-like systems to their existing top-line brands, promoting them as high-powered laptops that are also "ultra light" or "extremely thin and light."
Intel's Ultrabook standards have not been updated publicly for several years. But they still exist. So officially, a laptop qualifies as an "Ultrabook" if it meets the following physical specifications (there are additional technical specifications for processor type, etc., that we cover briefly below):
The Ultrabook specifications (last updated in 2013) also include requirements for particular low-voltage Intel processors and certain kinds of Intel-branded system management software. The specs even require that the display be a touch screen (reportedly based on Intel's belief at the time (thanks to user studies) that users would increasingly choose touch commands over keyboard ones).
Note that the standards do not establish a maximum display size for an Ultrabook. So, an Ultrabook can actually be quite large -- one could have, say, a 15" display as long as it also meets the requirements for thinness, processor type, and so on. Of course, practically speaking, the height standards for Ultrabooks will always limit their potential maximum display size (at least until advancing technology makes even bigger and thinner displays possible).