Lenovo tweaks ThinkPad line with slim T400s
The new Lenovo ThinkPad T400s
(Credit: Lenovo)(For more hands-on impressions, make sure to check out our review of the T400s.)
ThinkPad laptops from Lenovo (formerly made by IBM) are among the most ubiquitous PCs found in offices around the world. Of course, most of those systems are boxy 14- and 15-inch models, which aren't usually the sharpest-looking machines in the coffee shop.
To keep up with the increasingly design-conscious consumer, Lenovo is taking some cues from its own popular X300 laptop --a slim, upscale 13-inch--and incorporating them into the new ThinkPad T400s, a reasonably svelte 14-inch mainstream business laptop that's 0.83 inches thick and starts at less than 4 pounds.
Helping keep the size and weight down are an LED display, solid-state hard drive, and carbon-reinforced fiber frame. Making it a viable choice for a wide range of business environments are configuration options that seem more flexible than what we're used to seeing in ultraslim systems (which are often limited to low-voltage CPUs and no optical drives). According to Lenovo, the new T400s will offer:
- Choices of Intel 2.4GHz and 2.53GHz Core 2 Duo processors (standard voltage)
- Choices of solid-state drive storage up to 128GB, or 250GB hard drive storage
- 9.5mm slim DVD burner or Blu-ray player
- Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and optional WiMAX3, WWAN, Bluetooth and ultrawideband connectivity
- 34mm Express Card slot or 5-in-1 multimedia card reader
- Support for Lenovo's ConstantConnect and Protect technology that allows users to maximize integration of their BlackBerry smartphone and ThinkPad laptop
- Nearly six hours of battery life
- Supports up to two monitors via a display port and VGA connector
- Meets the Energy Star 5.0 criteria for energy efficiency
- Built-in USB/eSATA port
A few other promising-sounding tweaks went into the T400's design. Lenovo claims internal studies have shown that the Esc and Del keys are the most used, at 700 hits each per week, so the company simply made those keys a little larger. Spaces between keys were minimized to keep food and debris out, and the touchpad is now flush with the wrist rest, delineated by a textured surface. For Webcasting and VoIP use, the onboard speakers are louder than the previous (nonslim) T400, and there's a physical mute button above the keyboard that can mute just the built-in mic.
The Lenovo ThinkPad T400s is available now, starting at $1,599.
On Sale Now: $1,599.00
View the latest prices for Lenovo ThinkPad T400s
New York native Dan Ackerman, a former radio DJ turned journalist, has written about technology and music for publications including Spin, Blender, The Hollywood Reporter, and USA Today. He hosts the weekly Digital City podcast and the New York edition of Editors' Office Hours. Dan's new album, Tales Out of Night School, is available now. E-mail Dan. 
I mean I know that lenovo makes some capable machines that are durable and well constructed
but is it so hard to take some time designing the case as well !
Sure it looks good for a StinkPad. JUST REMEMBER Lenovo offers horrible service and support. They will have your notebook longer (in service) than you will.
Be patient. Just wait for the user reviews. Guaranteed they will all be bad.
The case is designed that way for a reason. If you want form over function head over to the Apple store. Lenovo doesn't cater to people who value pretty over durability and never has.
My unibody MacBook Pro will last far longer than your CHEAP ThinkPad - which will probably need to be sent in for service AGAIN in a week or so --
Powerbooks run perfectly to this day. They can even run Leopard. Try turning on a A20M or putting Vista on it! You cannot even load XP onto it! StinkPads SUCK!
Just read Lenovo Forums! People who buy Thinkpads have to send them in for service - almost on a monthly basis. A truck should run them over!
[CNET editor's note: Personal attack deleted.]
Oh Bob, Please check out this link and read it for yourself. http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-9938550-1.html There you will find a list from CONSUMER REPORTS that ranks the big laptop providers in terms of laptop repairs per 1000 units. You'll find Lenovo at the top and Apple at the bottom.
Oh how funny. Someone actually claiming that Apple Macbooks are more reliable than Thinkpads. What a laugher. [CNET editors' note: Personal attacks deleted.]
"Consumer Reports says a difference of less than three points is statistically "not meaningful."
So, there you have it--no major laptop brand is really much more likely to break down than any other."
Not to mention, there is probably an error rate of a few percent. However, you're going to bash Apple because of issues you had, fine go ahead. Then take your Lenovo. Don't sit here and spew facts that HARDLY prove your point. Ignorance is bliss.
Apple makes a quality laptop. As does Lenovo. That said, as I own both, I trust the Thinkpad to take a beating far more than the Mac.However my Mac's doing ok.
Overall I've found Thinkpad owners to be realistic about their latops while Mac owners not so much. It's a laptop. Not a slice of heaven on earth.
Lenovo support has been fine with me [maybe because I haven't called them yet]
my Thinkpads have worked perfectly fine after taking considerably damage from things like falling from desks, being stepped on, and most importantly, coffee, lots of coffee
Yes, having all TV/projectors have HDMI or DP would be dandy, but it is still a while off.
Thanks for your comment. Just 1 problem "Thinkpads are for business" - NO - Thinkpads used to be for business - Thinkpads are to unreliable for businesses. That is why they are being dumped in record numbers.
No need to believe me. forum.lenovo.com has all the proof you need. Cheers!
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-9938550-1.html
There are very reasons VGA is standard on this notebook. Go over to Best Buy, check out the televisions, projectors, and monitors, and count how many have VGA, count how many have HDMI, and count how many have displayport. 100% of them will have VGA, maybe 75% will have HDMI, and about 15% will have displayport. I know Steve Jobs has you convinced that you are getting a bargain by paying for a machine that can interface with about 15 monitors, total, but Lenovo doesn't think you are all that interested in spending $30 for a display adapter or hooking up an adapter at all. [CNET editors' note: Personal attacks deleted.]
These are business laptops, focused on business use. They can not act like Apple, their userbase will not allow.
and even if a large company can buy new monitors/projectors, it takes years to migrate
VGA can only push VGA
DVI can push both
not to mention mini displayport or HDMI...
I was just looking at a thinkpad the other day and found the design and materials very lovely.
Also, if you look at the specs this is a very good machine for the money; a lot of flexibility.
Go to any companies support site forums, you will find every kind of issue since they are serving to people WITH PROBLEMS!
Because Dell sucks. My Dell broke 3 times while under warranty. We are still arguing over the 4th time. My Dells a brick. My older Thinkpads keep on trucking. I'd buy Thinkpad again. Not Dell.
http://www.engadget.com/2009/06/18/lenovo-t400s-run-over-by-truck-left-out-in-tornado-in-new-spate/
it's carved from a single block of aluminium , so it's in no way as bad as Dells and Hps
The HP Elitebooks business notebooks are very well constructed. They even meet military standards (MIL-STD-810), something Apple or Lenovo don't have. And only one model from Dell meet this standard.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIL-STD-810
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP_EliteBook
The notebook DID NOT survive being run over. So, why is that good?
Any computer would have the same changes. PLUS - They should have taken the hard drive out on the spot. No.. they shoot the truck in the dark, wait a day, take a ****, then go into a lab and swap out a magically saved drive - my ass! It was all a set up!
You would have to be a ***** idiot to buy that crap. Oh wait, 98% of Thinkpad buyers are IT - that explains it - High school dropouts that drain the life out of corporations only to be replaced and outsourced!
I guess you must not have watched the entire video. The only thing that didn't survive was the screen and the point of the video was to show that despite a 26,000 vehicle running over it the data was still intact and could be booted up and used in another machine. Try that with just about any other laptop and I dare anyone to make a similar video with their unibody Macbook. Talk about a pancake.
The only people that would buy a thinkpad are IT professionals and then you say something even more dumb that IT professionals are high school dropouts? Wow oh wow. Funny when I studied computer engineering at the University of Texas about 25% of the students had a thinkpad. Those idiots. Valuing durability and safety of their files? Idiots. [CNET editors' note: Personal attack deleted.]
http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/24/74521/
http://gizmodo.com/5159091/lenovo-thinkpads-officially-semi+rugged-certified-to-withstand-ass+beatings-mr-freeze
And as for all the comments on the looks, why would you want a laptop that looks like everyone else's? Unless you're close enough to see the logo, you can't tell a Dell, from an HP, from a Toshiba. You can spot a Thinkpad from 100 yards...kinda like with a BMW or Mercedes.
http://lenovoblogs.com/designmatters/?p=544
Who buys Volvos?
Oh right, the cheap (people) that cannot afford Mercedes or BMWs!
You people keep forgetting. It does not matter how STRONG a StinkPad has been built - Lenovo makes cheap electronics - You will have to send it in for service every other month!
Read Lenovo Forums if you doubt me!
[CNET editor's note: Offensive comment deleted.]
You are right HP Elitebooks are exceptional machines too. I intend on buying one soon to compliment my Macs.
I bet the Elitebook screen would have survived being run over.
Thanks for the links
You don't need a truck to run over a lenovo laptop for it to be a piece of $#!+.
I studied Electrical Engineering at Yale. I was almost unable to present my senior research because my less-than-one-year-old T-42 began to crash. But what was I expecting? It was already on it's 3rd hard drive (refurbished, thanks IBM support) and 2nd motherboard (refurbished, thanks IBM support). This was 4 years ago. My computer looked pretty much just like the one this article is about. When I bought it 5 years ago.
I would, however. like to shout out my man Fernando who worked for IBM support at the time, for coming to my house/school/job and replacing my hard drive 5 times in total, and my motherboard twice.
Thank you engadget for showing us the best use of lenovo laptops, being run over by trucks.
You're right regarding Lenovo and the military specs. Here you have more info. from the Lenovo website,
http://www.lenovo.com/news/us/en/2009/02/rugged_computing.html
The sleek-ification on the T400s is nice, but from another design perspective it might be nice to either go with red or blue for their signature key accents instead of both. It adds a strange colour dischord to the visual package that bothers me in a weird, hard-to-pin-down way.
I love tech that works for sure but aesthetics it's a crucial component, in my opinion.
Don;t like the fact that its very hard to get updates. Their site always seems slow.
Definitely sturdy notebooks but that's about it.
But really, think about it. "Dollar ends up in American hand"... who do you think makes all the components? One way or another, your money is headed that direction. Sorry to burst your bubble.
Apple is sitting on how much cash right now - $25 billion? Fine, they buy parts from the commies. The dollar ultimately ends up with Apple, an American company. Same goes for HP and Dell, minus the significant surplus of course... But really, think about it.
BTW why would you send your hard earned money to a "potential enemy"???
gggg ssssss is 110% right!
[CNET editor's note: Personal attack deleted.]
Not really. Apple ergonomics suck. HP does good design but the quality is lacking. I may havet to check out an elite book though. Dell's best machines copied ThinkPads but the quality is lacking.
In bang for the durable buck and useful ergonomics I've not seen anything that can touch a thinkpad. I've owned everthing on your list.
the profit stays with Apple, but thats much less than half of the computer cost
the rest goes to other countries that aren't as greedy as we are [China, Taiwan, ...]
Also, are you a complete moron or just make comments that sound like they come from a moron. If you ever took a research course in your life you would know that only those who complain tend to write in forums or seek out means to vent their anger. People who are pleased tend to keep to themselves. That is why it is so hard to find a balance opinion about something. And since when did venting in a forum count as validation that something doesn't work?
Maybe you should get off your ass and take a walk outside and talk to, I don't know actual people. I am sure my IT friend who drives a porsche and swears by Thinkpads would be more than happy to talk to you. Oh wait I forgot you wouldn't want to be see by somebody who drives a porsche (correction two porsches) and not a Merceds or BMW. Anyway, while you are outside maybe you should also take your time educating yourself besides believing everything you read behind a computer screen.
I have owned a Thinkpad T60p for 2 years now, and I have had ZERO problems. Some of the keys have become shiny, but that is it. My parents have owned a few Thinkpads and they have never had problems. My Dad's company has tried using all sorts of computers and they have decided that Thinkpads are the best (their opinion).
Also, I love how Thinkpads look. Call me crazy, but I think they are the best looking computers out there.
If you ever wonder why Apple, shipping a UNIX 03 certified operating system (very same as AIX) is still a joke in enterprise scene, read your own comments again.
Stop making us ashamed for using Apple computers and software.
Go to Lenovo's Forums and tell me Thinkpads are reliable!
They are not.
Sure, support forums are inherently negative - BUT Lenovo's have THOUSANDS OF HORROR STORIES!
"IBM/ Lenovo" is NOT EVEN CLOSE TO BE ANY RELATIONS BETWEEN THE TWO COMPANIES! IS JUST " Lenovo " ONLY! Atleast get facts right
tcr07
You don't need a truck to run over a lenovo laptop for it to be a piece of $#!+.
I studied Electrical Engineering at Yale. I was almost unable to present my senior research because my less-than-one-year-old T-42 began to crash. But what was I expecting? It was already on it's 3rd hard drive (refurbished, thanks IBM support) and 2nd motherboard (refurbished, thanks IBM support). This was 4 years ago. My computer looked pretty much just like the one this article is about. When I bought it 5 years ago.
I would, however. like to shout out my man Fernando who worked for IBM support at the time, for coming to my house/school/job and replacing my hard drive 5 times in total, and my motherboard twice.
Thank you engadget for showing us the best use of lenovo laptops, being run over by trucks."
This is right right.................please disregard anything this person says. "IF" its a IBM era Lap top then I say its true. But if its a Chinese " Lenovo " made product?then your sadlly and totally a lier !!!!!!!!!!! Yale AHAHAH don`t make use laugh
"IBM/ Lenovo" being the makers of the THINK PAD! IS FAR FROM THE TRUTH!
- by geed4rugged July 1, 2009 5:44 PM PDT
- Recently, I?ve seen a lot of talk about products being MIL-STD-810F compliant. What concerns me about this is most people don?t understand what it means to be MIL-STD-810F compliant. A product can claim to be MIL-STD-810F compliant, which might lead people to believe it can be dropped from 3+ feet or used in the rain, but it may just mean it can be used at high altitudes. There are many MIL-STD-810F tests and you can pass one and make the MIL-STD claim. You can also modify (make it easier) the test to pass it as well. Most important, these test are self regulated - no third party verification is required. There is a great post on the Toughbook blog about understanding MIL-STD-810F. I suggest you check it out:
- Like this Reply to this comment
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Showing 1 of 2 pages (72 Comments)http://toughbloggers.com/2009/06/30/pulling-back-mil-spec-curtain/