 In the search for lighter and lighter materials for their laptops, Lenovo turned to carbon fiber, a material used and known for its toughness and light weight. After finding use in motorsports as well as aerospace and everything else that wants to be as light and as strong as possible. Today we have the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Carbon, a 13-inch device powered by the Alder Lake P series that weighs less than a kilogram. Yes, you heard us correctly. Stepping on the scale, we get a weight of 0.97 kilograms, while the thickness measures at 14.8 millimeters. Our model comes with a white finish, with rounded edges and corners. There is some branding with mainly a yoga and a Lenovo logo on the lid, which is entirely made from carbon fiber. The base, on the other hand, uses an aluminum magnesium alloy. All in all, the laptop is one of the toughest ones when considering its weight, as the lid uses a layering technique, stacking layers of carbon on top of one another. Opening it is also an incredibly elegant procedure, as the hinges are very smooth. We're also glad to see the thin bezels, which manage to house an FHD webcam, a Time of Flight sensor and an IR sensor for face recognition. The Time of Flight camera can be used for zero-touch login as well as autopause, as it can detect your presence and how close you're to the laptop. Moving on to some more boring parts, the keyboard has an obviously shorter key travel, but the feedback is clicky and very consistent. The touchpad is covered in glass while having a respectable size. On the sides, we don't see a lot of ports, with just a Thunderbolt 4 port on the left and one 10 gigabit USB Type-C port on the right. For the main attraction, we have a 13.3-inch QHD plus IPS panel, with a 90Hz refresh rate. It reaches 410 nits of brightness, while covering 96% of the sRGB color gamut and delivering excellent accuracy results with our design and gaming profile, which results in a delta E value of only 0.9. It doesn't use PWM at all, even at lower brightness, as can be the case with other displays. We'll leave links to our design and gaming profile in the description below. With a higher resolution display, often enough, you get slightly worse battery life. However, with the 50Wh battery pack and the Core i7-1260p, we still get around 9 hours and 22 minutes of web browsing, or 7 hours and 37 minutes of video playback. Only 2 per 100 people watching this video are subscribers. If you decide to just start following us, we'll be able to reinvest more in our laboratory, thus making even more helpful videos for you. Thank you, you're awesome. Speaking of the Core i7-1260p, it's the top CPU that's available with the Yoga Slim 7 Carbon. Stuck inside such a small package, it can still match bigger laptops in short loads like Photoshop, while still showing good performance in 3D rendering and other prolonged tasks. With the provided Iris Xe Graphics G7 IGPU, you can also tackle video editing as it comes with dedicated encoding support known as Quick Sync. Keeping the i7 cool and happy is a setup with one pipe and one fan. Still, we see respectable clock speeds and wattage of up to 2.69 GHz on the P-Cores and 2.22 GHz on the E-Cores, while the CPU runs at 46W in the first few seconds of the test, which is more than enough for most types of work. In terms of comfort, the laptop can get loud, as the fan ramps up to keep everything running well, while the base heats up to 45°C, which we're not that happy about. It shouldn't come as a surprise when we reveal that the Yoga Slim 7 Carbon has soldered LPDDR5 with up to 16 GB running at 4,800 MHz. You can access the storage through one M2 slot, which fits Gen4 SSDs. Our teardown video shows the inside of the laptop, as well as how to mount a new SSD for when you feel it's time for an upgrade. It's linked down below. While it seems like Lenovo drank a bit much from their own kool-aid implementing the P-Series CPUs, while the U-Series could have been perfectly fine, we're still satisfied with the Yoga Slim 7 Carbon. It looks amazing and feels great in the hand, while the display is gorgeous, making any type of content look incredible. The little to no I.O. does mean that you'll have to get used to dongles. The big win for us is the keyboard, which feels excellent to type on, despite the thin profile. Keep in mind that if you're okay with an extra 200 or 300 grams, there are other fantastic options on the market, like the 14-inch Swift 5 from Acer. If you need more convincing for purchasing the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Carbon, go over to our website, where we have a more detailed review paired with more tests and benchmarks.