gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

November 16, 2006

Hands-on with Lenovo’s X60 Tablet PC

Filed under: TabletPc, X60TabletPc, lenovo, tablet pc, x60, x60 tablet pc, x60t — Paul Miller @ 11:07 am

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We already showed you a review of the thing, but now we’ve got an X60t of our own, and we thought you’d give you our impressions, along with a nice bevy of pictures of this tablet in the flesh. As always, you can find the pics after the break, so lets get on with the impressions. Tablet PC Review was no liar when it complemented the build quality of the X60t: the unit is a rock. The keyboard feels wonderful, the hinge is solid and even the TrackPoint “nipple” (of which we’re not normally a fan) works great. The pen is solid, and when writing on the screen there’s just the right amount of friction to make pen-based input feel just right. Aside from an overly zealous complement of pre-loaded, taskbar-hogging software, our only real problem was with the battery life, but it was a big one: the stock 4-cell battery choked out at around 1.5 hours of use for us. Granted, the display was at max brightness (which is plenty bright), and WiFi and Bluetooth were on, but it was still rather disconcerting to be able to visibly watch the battery meter lose percentage points, and then have the thing conk out altogether at a supposed 8 percent of battery left. So, if you can spring for the 8-cell, or stand to live without wireless or a backlight, the X60 comes highly recommended as far as Tablet PCs go, but we do have that minor caveat. Keep reading for the pics.


Lenovo packed in a webcam, headset and dock. Wasn’t that nice of them?


Pretty dang small for a power brick.


The recessed ports are a nice touch.


The screen automagically reorients itself based on how you hold the tablet.


The latch works both ways.


Sure they’re dusty, but boy do they feel good.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 14, 2006

Lenovo launches X60 tablet PC

Filed under: lenovo, x60 — Ryan Block @ 12:14 am

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It’s got a 12.1-inch display with XGA touchscreen and/or digitizer options, as well as an SXGA+ digitizer-only version; it’s got 3G; it’s got 802.11n MIMO WiFi; it’s got a PC card and ExpressCard slot; it’s got a bunch of ports, Core Duo or Solo processor options, a 2.5-inch drive up to 120GB, in-bezel nav, fingerprint reader, mic, etc.; it’s Lenovo’s X60, reborn as a tablet convertible tablet. It weighs 3.77 pounds, is 1.1-1.3-inches thick, and could in theory last you up to 7.5 hours on a single extended battery. It starts at $1,800. Steel yourself, though, you’ve got video games to buy you and your family. Well, yourself, anyway.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

May 31, 2006

Lenovo’s compact V100 reviewed

Filed under: core duo, coreduo, expresscard, lenovo, m1210, review, thinkpad, v100, x60 — Paul Miller @ 4:57 pm

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Yeah, we’re officially removing any “ultracompact” or “ultraportable” marketing speak that might have slipped in to describe the V100 from Lenovo, but there’s plenty else to love about this slightly bulky compact notebook. First off, at 1.25-inches thick and weighing 4.4 pounds, the laptop is no X60 (which doesn’t contain the DVD burner of the V100), but it does look positively skinny beside Dell’s new M1210. The V100 features a nice glossy 12.1-inch WXGA screen, and a built-in 1.3 megapixel camera that captured his smarmy mug much better than those featured on the M1210 and MacBook. Lenovo also doesn’t seem to have as much trouble keeping the Core Duo cool as Apple is; the V100 ran plenty cool even though it doesn’t have the low-voltage version of the chip run by its X60 brother. The plastic case build is a bit drab and not near as sturdy as a ThinkPad, but it should hold up fine. However, the 3 to 4 hour battery life seems barely acceptable. There’s an ExpressCard 54 slot, so you might want to hold off until an EV-DO solution comes along. The integrated graphics really limit the gaming options, but the V100 really does provide a lot of functionality for the price, especially if you’re not up for lugging an external drive around and want some of that Core Duo power.

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