Lenovo's ThinkVision M14, Best Portable Monitor, Drops to $193

ThinkVision M14 Monitor
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

When you're at your desk, you get the benefit of two or more monitors, but when you hit the road with your laptop, chances are that you're stuck with just one screen. A portable, USB-powered monitor is the best solution to this problem, and Lenovo's ThinkVision M14 is the best of these we've seen.

When we wrote our Lenovo ThinkVision M14 review, we praised the 14-inch, 1080p display for its sharp, colorful images and sleek design. However, the real star of the show is a built-in kickstand, which keeps it steady on  your desk and allows you to position it at a wide variety of angles or even in portrait mode. Leading competitors like the Asus ZenScreen MB16AC don't have kickstands, instead forcing you to prop them up with flimsy, annoying origami-style cases that take up a ton of desk space and flop over easily.

Normally, the Lenovo ThinkVision M14 costs well over $200, but as part of the holiday tech deals season, right now Lenovo has it on sale for $193 if you use coupon code THINK10. That's the lowest price we've seen.

Lenovo ThinkVision M14: was $249, now $193 @Lenovo

Lenovo ThinkVision M14: <a href="https://lenovo.7eer.net/c/221109/218864/3808?subId1=hawk-custom-tracking&sharedId=hawk&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.lenovo.com%2Fus%2Fen%2FthinkvisionM14" data-link-merchant="lenovo.com"">was $249, now $193 @Lenovo
This 14-inch  monitor weighs just 1.3 pounds and features an awesome kickstand. It gets both its power and display signal over USB-C (uses Type-C's alt mode). Use code THINK10 at checkout.

The ThinkVision M14 connects to your computer via a single USB Type-C connection, which carries both the power it needs to run and the video signal. It requires you to have a Type-C port that outputs video over USB-C's alternative mode.

In our tests, the M14 was capable of reproducing 98 percent of the sRGB gamut, about 30 percent more than Asus's ZenScreen MB16AC. Lenovo's monitor hit a solid, for a USB screen, 244-nit maximum brightness. Overall, this screen provides the best image quality and, just as important, build quality we've seen from a portable monitor.

Avram Piltch
Avram Piltch is Tom's Hardware's editor-in-chief. When he's not playing with the latest gadgets at work or putting on VR helmets at trade shows, you'll find him rooting his phone, taking apart his PC or coding plugins. With his technical knowledge and passion for testing, Avram developed many real-world benchmarks, including our laptop battery test.