Lenovo has never shied away from experimenting with laptop design. From rollable OLEDs to foldable displays, the company often treats major tech shows as a playground for bold concepts.
At IFA 2025, Lenovo has revealed something more understated but arguably more practical: the ThinkBook VertiFlex Concept.
At first glance, the VertiFlex looks like a standard 14-inch productivity notebook. The difference lies in its screen mechanism. Instead of folding or rolling, the display can rotate 90 degrees within its frame to switch into portrait orientation.
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Based on Lenovo’s press materials, this isn’t powered by motors or flexible screens but a simple pivot system hidden in the chassis. The result is a cleaner, more approachable concept compared to some of Lenovo’s past prototypes.
Portrait mode isn’t new in computing, but it’s uncommon in laptops. The idea is that users who spend long hours reading documents, writing code, or scrolling social feeds might appreciate a taller, vertical canvas without needing an external monitor. While it may not generate the same “wow factor” as a rollable display, the VertiFlex feels like a concept with a clear everyday use case.
Lenovo hasn’t shared technical details beyond basic connectivity. The prototype images show two Thunderbolt ports, a USB-A port, HDMI, and a headphone jack. At 17.9mm thick and weighing around 1.39kg, it looks to be in line with mid-range productivity laptops rather than ultra-light designs.
Whether this design makes it to production remains to be seen. Still, it’s refreshing to see a concept rooted in practicality rather than spectacle.
The Lenovo VertiFlex may not redefine laptops, but it poses an interesting question: in a market obsessed with bigger screens and bolder tricks, could a modest rotating display be the idea that quietly sticks?