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Showing posts with label Thinkpad X1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thinkpad X1. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Longer Laptop Battery Life with Thinkpad X1

Longer Laptop Battery Life with Thinkpad X1

Article by Tom Henry

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You've got the thinnest ThinkPad ever from Lenovo laptops -- the do-almost-anything wonder machine that looks as good as it performs. You've got MIL-SPEC ruggedness with a carbon fiber roll cage, Corning® Gorilla® Glass and a spill-resistant keyboard. You can charge your battery to 80% in a quick 30 minutes with innovative RapidCharge technology and you're ready to go again.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 laptop sounds like it was designed for the ultimate spy, not to mention people who are constantly on the go and demand performance. Oh, and who look great while doing it. Shaken, not stirred, please.

I'm a huge fan of RapidCharge. It is a key reason I'd choose to carry an X1, and is the kind of technology that comes from listening hard to our customers and delivering innovation that makes a difference. But I know the people who are going to carry an X1; if one thing is true of them, it is that they are always on the go.

"Performance" and "Thinness" aren't words that usually work together. Five hours of battery life is an incredible achievement in the no-compromises design of the X1, but let's think about the people who are going to be carrying these things: They are out there, moving, doing, making things happen. Thirty minutes is hustling from one terminal to the other. It's getting from the train to the next appointment. It's time spent tucked away in a crowded coffee shop with no available power outlets, getting the reports done before the deadine.

So how do we make the ultimate Lenovo ThinkPad even better? Simple: make it run longer. Enter the ThinkPad Battery 39+. It doubles the battery life of the X1, meaning 10 hours now stand between you and the need to plug in. Since it it comes from the same engineers that brought you the X1, all that additional productivity is in a package deserving of the X1 - thin and very light. And when you're using our Ultraslim AC/DC adapter or the standard 90W adapter, Lenovo laptops' RapidCharge will have you at 80% in the same 30 minutes for each battery. Now you've got a full day on the go, and it won't take long to get ready to do it all over again.

Well that about wraps up this review on Lenovo's new ThinkPad X1 and how it's battery longevity (in comparison to it's size) is quite incredible.



Tom enjoys writing laptop reviews, tech highlights and general recommendations about personal tech items like Lenovo laptops.













We are proud and pleased to unbox the thinnest ThinkPad ever, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 laptop.
Video Rating: 4 / 5


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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Preview

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Preview, Slimmer and Thinner With New Battery Charge fast, last three times as long

Article by batteryfast.co.uk
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To compete against the likes of the MacBook Air and the Samsung Series 9 laptops, Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 forthcoming ultraportable needs to do something a little different. According to a leaked PDF, that difference appears to be a new battery tech called RapidCharge.Compared to previous ThinkPad batteries, Lenovo claims that the X1’s RapidCharge version will last three times as long. In addition, the battery will charge to 80 percent capacity in a mere 30 minutes (working out to charging 2.5 times as quickly as older ThinkPad batteries). The bad news is that the X1’s battery will be sealed, meaning you won’t be able to replace the battery yourself.In terms of specs, the 0.84-inch-thick notebook will come with an Intel Core i5-2520M processor, 8GB of RAM, 160GB SSD, and a 13.3-inch display made of Gorilla Glass and with a 1,366×768 resolution. The only price and release date info thus far is courtesy of a Swiss retailer, and it looks like the X1 will cost the equivalent of a whopping ,900 when it drops on May 20.Lenovo’s new ThinkPad X1 weights 1.36 – 1.72 kg and is designed with ultra-thin products; 21.5mm thick, the thinnest ThinkPad ever built, running Intel Core i5 built in 32nm technology, 2.5GHz Core i5-2520M CPU, 13.3-inch Gorilla Glass screen, 160 GB – SSD, 8 GB of RAM.Equipped with 13.3 inch LED-backlight display with 1366 x 768 resolution, 4-in-1 reader (SD, SDHC, SDXC, MMC), superior Multimedia capabilities, with Bluetooth 3.0, USB 3.0, eSata, Digital Display Port, LED backlight illuminated Keyboard, Waterproof, TrackPoint, UltraNav (Touch Pad), Fingerprint Reader, HD Camera with Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Edition OS.Finally, Lenovo’s new ThinkPad X1 is price tagged at 2,585 CHF (,920) with an expected delivery date of May 20th according to the sources.

If that price holds in the U.S., the X1 will be more than twice as expensive as the base 13.3-inch MacBook Air and more than 1.5x the cost of a 13.3-inch Series 9 model. That’s a pretty premium for a new battery tech and some extra RAM. Would it be worth it to you? Let us know in the Comments section.Lenovo the Chinese Multinational computer technology corporation that develops, manufactures and markets desktops notebook, personal computers, and related services has now strike with its ThinkPad laptop; named as ThinkPad X1 equipped with RapidCharge technology.A leaked reseller document reveals that the X1 notebooks are slimmer and thinner than any other ThinkPad Series Laptop and the X1 is armed with new battery technology, which won’t be user-replaceable. But it will deliver a longer battery life up to 3 times longer than the previous ThinkPad cells, it will also recharge 2.5 times faster than the earlier Lenovo notebook batteries.New Lenovo RapidCharge technology will recharge the ThinkPad X1 to 80 percent within at timeframe of 30 minutes. The new X1 is expected to hit the Australian Market very soon.Stay tuned to know more updates on Lenovo ThinkPad X1!

Source: http://www.batteryfast.co.uk/battery-technology/lenovo-thinkpad-x1-preview-slimmer-and-thinner-with-new-battery-technology-and-charge-fast-last-three-times-as-long/

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Laptop

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Laptop

Article by Robert Blume
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Ergonomics & Build

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 business ultraportable has a lacklustre greyish black color all over, which makes them a regular sight around boardrooms and conference tables. The ThinkPad X1's screen lid has a smooth but tough rubber coating. Prop the slim laptop open to reveal a fine finish on the X1's palmrest, keyboard and the area surrounding it.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is 0.65-inches thin and weighs 1.72-kg -- considering its 13-inch form factor, it's an ultraportable laptop to rival the likes of the 13-inch Apple MacBook Air and the recently reviewed Sony VAIO S.

This laptop is built like a tank, make no mistakes. We dropped it thrice from heights ranging from 3 feet to 4 feet, with lid closed, and it would resume its session instantaneously within seconds after picking up -- no scratches on screen, no loose hinges. Just goes to prove the toughness of the ThinkPad X1 ultraportable. The ultraportable's keyboard is spill-resistant and we dropped about 30 to 40 ml water across the keyboard and watched the water drain out along the side. The system didnt shut down and we found no internal electronics were harmed which was pretty amazing.

Features

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is arrayed with the latest generation hardware features. It comes with Sandy Bridge Intel Core i5, i7 processors -- our review sample came with an Intel Core i5-2520M 2.5-GHz processor with a Turbo Boost speed of 2.93-GHz and it also had vPro support for advanced IT management. There's also 4GB of DDR3 RAM, 320GB hard drive and Intel HD 3000 graphics to complete its core hardware components -- quite good for an ultraportable business notebook. Needless to say, the ThinkPad X1 packs a lot more firepower than its predecessors and can match the performance of most current-gen 14 or 15-inch mainstream laptops.

In terms of connectivity ports, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 covers all the bases. It comes with a USB port and audio jack under a rubber flap on its left edge, an SD card reader on its right, and Gigabit Ethernet, 3G SIM Card slot, USB 3.0, HDMI, mini Display Port, and a hybrid eSATA + powered USB port on its spine. There is no DVD slot -- as it's an ultraportable laptop -- or a VGA port, you'll need a mini Display Port to VGA cable to use any old office projectors with the X1. Wireless connectivity is looked after Wi-Fi 802.11n, 3G, and Bluetooth.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 comes with a fingerprint sensor for logging into the system without a password and biometric protection. Next to the keyboard is a blue button which launches Lenovo ThinkVantage software, one of the best proprietary suites we've seen on a commercial laptop -- it's a one-stop destination for monitoring your ThinkPad's healthy, download updates, plug security holes and more. The X1 also comes with a very good power management tool built into ThinkVantage -- more on that later.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 comes with a 64-bit Windows 7 Professional operating system and a one year warranty. It's definitely better equipped than the Sony VAIO S or the Apple MacBook Air, in terms of its hardware and features offering.

Performance

The X1 supports a Gorilla Glass Display screen and comes with a scratch resistant surface. We found it really was impervious to scratches, we even tried with keys and coins but din't find any marks. But it is glossy, the ThinkPad X1's 13.3-inch LED backlit LCD display, which may not go too well with ThinkPad loyalists -- past ThinkPads almost always had a non-glossy display screen. We're also miffed by the fact that the X1 comes with only 1366x768 resolution screen compared to the X300/X301's 1440x900 pixel screen.

The glossy screen of the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is very bright -- 350 nits -- brighter than the Sony VAIO S -- and displays both text and video pretty well, sharp and crisp. The display screen is average and the colours aren't very deep. The screen's top bezel supports an integrated 2MP webcam ideal for video-conferencing and has HD 720p video output. The webcam worked well with Skype and we liked its Web Conferencing control panel which lets you exert fine control over the mic and camera.

Quite simply, without much exaggeration, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 has one of the best keyboards we've seen on a laptop -- ever. The island-styled, isolated keys sported by the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 have a slight dip or "scooped" scalloped design -- it helps your fingers nestle on top of the keys perfectly while typing on them. Overall, a top-notch keyboard which can resist up to 60ml of spillage -- courtesy a channel along the keyboard's edge with two see-through vents for water to go out -- and comes with two levels of backlighting for typing in the dark. The backlit keyboard also means no Lenovo ThinkLight at the top of the screen.

The X1 supoports the Lenovo TrackPoint system. It supports a red rubber button right in the center of the keyboard. The TrackPoint navigation, once you get used to it, is a great way to navigate the mouse on screen, reducing a lot of back and forth time between typing on the keyboard and reaching for the touchpad. The normal touchpad on the ThinkPad X1 is a square box of finely textured pattern -- there are no separate mouse buttons, they are designated at the bottom of the one-piece touchpad. The touchpad works well and has a similar concept like the MacBook Air's trackpad -- to provide one large clickable area.

Despite aimed primarily as a premium business ultraportable laptop, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is quite the performance machine. In our synthetic benchmarks -- PC Mark Vantage -- the X1 scored pretty high, better than average in fact. Its high-speed turbo boost enabled processor and 4GB of fast-paced RAM paid rich dividends, letting us multitask with a multitude of apps simultaneously without feeling any pinch in performance bottlenecks. The laptop handled tasks like video encoding, file transfer, etc., without a hitch as well. With the Lenovo ThinkPad X1, you can be sure that you can do a lot more than just working with spreadsheets and presentation slideshows.

In terms of entertainment, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 comes with Dolby Home Theater v4 technology for better-than-average sound quality. The laptops speakers are hidden below the keyboard but still offer loud enough audio levels. The sound does crack at 90% volume but the overall experience is pretty good for an ultraportable laptop, with good bass levels. Watching movies and HD videos is handled well by the glossy Gorilla Glass display of the X1 and apart from the ordinary viewing angles and reflected objects, the experience is quite good for a laptop.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 falls short in one department -- battery life. It's a disappointment, the battery lasted just over an hour in our synthetic test done at maximum performance preset, full volume and 100% screen brightness -- which is way below the average, definitely less compared to the MacBook Air and Sony VAIO S. On a conservative power plan, you can barely reach 3 hours. With Lenovo Power Manager's battery stretch feature turned on, we managed to cross the 3 hour mark but with a severely compromised user experience. The fact remains that the Lenovo X1's standard battery isn't one for the long haul -- although it will last you longer over the years with its claimed 1000 recharge cycles. But if you're thinking of using the X1 on the go, combining work and pleasure (movies, music, etc.), anything over a couple of hours is a bonus -- unless you opt for an extra battery pack.

Although the battery may not be long lasting, 40% of the battery was recharged within the first 15 minutes of plugging it into the adapter and 99% in 1 hour 4 minutes -- which is quite fast for a laptop. The ThinkPad X1 heated up a bit during our benchmarking, especially when under close to maximum stress, particularly around its left edge which has the heat exhaust vents. As long as you keep the left edge off your lap, you won't feel a thing -- but yeah, the ThinkPad X1 did heat up.

Value:

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is targeted towards the business executive. It is priced at Rs. 85,000 -- SKUs with Core i7, SSD built-in will obviously cost more. The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is one of the best business ultraportables, with features like vPro, fingerprint sensor, and decent HD video conferencing. The scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass display comes with great connectivity features you'd expect -- including a 3G SIM card slot. You'd be hard pressed to find all of these features on a business laptop from Dell or HP.

Bottomline:

If you can overlook the 13-inch ThinkPad X1's underwhelming battery performance, it's exactly the kind of business ultraportable for frequent flying executives -- slim, sturdy and easy to tuck away. It looks decent, feels good, is built like a tank, and has one of the best keyboards you'll ever find on a laptop.

Robert Blume is a well known author and has written articles on Lenovo ThinkPad X1, Dell Laptops, Sony Ericsson Mobile, Apple Laptops and many other subjects.







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