Lenovo had a large area reserved where they could display all of their new and upcoming hardware along with some of their recently released products. While there were various ThinkCentre offerings on display, the majority of the space was occupied by a plethora of laptops, tablets, and smartphones. We didn’t spend time with every product on offer, but there were a few interesting items worth pointing out. We’ll focus on their laptop offerings from the ThinkPad and IdeaPad lines for this post.

We’ve often complained about the dearth of quality displays in laptops—and it’s particularly irksome considering how many tablets are now sporting higher quality displays. Well, I finally got a chance to put my mitts on the ThinkPad X220, and it’s everything you’d expect from a high quality IPS panel. Contrast ratios look very good, with bright whites and dark blacks, but more importantly you get excellent viewing angles. I generally like the look of ThinkPad laptops, and the build quality of the T- and W-series is excellent. The X220 is probably one of the most compelling laptops you can find at under 13.3” right now, and while you’ll pay more for the privilege it’s money well spent. There are aspects of ThinkPad that I don’t like much—the touchpad on the X220 in particular is small and not particularly comfortable for me to use—but given the choice between an excellent touchpad with a crappy display and a mediocre touchpad with an excellent display, I’ll definitely take the latter. None of the other displays could match the quality of the X220, sadly, though the W520 is at least close.

Other ThinkPad offerings run the usual gamut of T-series, W-series, and ThinkPad Edge to name a few. Lenovo has also decided to move away from the s-suffix (e.g. T420s) and created a new S-series line. The ThinkPad Edge S430 is interesting in that it’s one of the few laptops we’ve seen so far at CES with a Thunderbolt port. Another cool ThinkPad is the X1 Hybrid, which is the same as the X1 but with a mini-PCIe card that contains an SoC capable of running a Linux-style. If you need more battery life and don’t need the performance of a full Core i5/i7 processor you can switch to the SoC. At that point, the Windows environment goes into sleep mode and you switch to a Linux-based (Android-based) environment. There’s shared flash memory storage that can be accessed by both the Windows and Linux platforms, but the Linux OS can only read from the flash memory. The battery life benefit is claimed as being up to 2X when in SoC mode, though others have reported even lengthier runtimes.

Overall, the ThinkPad line continues to deliver as a well-built business laptop series. Not all ThinkPads are created equal of course—I’m partial to the T-, W-, and X-series—but the hinges are all solid and for the increased price you get a laptop that should last a good five years. I'm also (apparently like many of you) more than a bit concerned with the move away from the classic ThinkPad keyboard to a new chiclet-style design; all of the new ThinkPads are sporting chiclet keyboards, and while they're not bad I definitely prefer the current "classic" keyboards. Finally, while there weren’t any Ivy Bridge models on display yet, those are obviously coming and we’ll keep an eye out for the spring refresh.

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  • Darknite39 - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Honestly, the only thing I'm excited about at CES is the new tablet screen rez. 1920 x 1200? WHEN can I get one of these in a Thinkpad? I almost don't care about the associated cost.
  • zillac - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    wait, why are you using the touchpad on at Thinkpad? Touchpoints are so great I can barely live without one (on a laptop that is). I really wish every laptop will have one of theses so I can have more selections...

    Now, what Thinkpads now need is higher resolution screens. The display on x220,while gorgeous, has too little pixels.
  • chrnochime - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Go read forum discussions wrt the IPS screen in the X220. People there sure aren't giving unreserved recommendation to the screen...
  • hglazm - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    All that discussion and no mention that the old thinkpad keyboard style is being replaced by the ones used on the E series?
    Really?
    One of the defining features of a thinkpad has gone and you don't mention that?
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Oh, yes -- forgot about that one. I brought it up and all the Lenovo guy could say was, "Yeah, we've heard that from a lot of people." I'm left sitting there waiting for the "...and..." that never comes.
  • Visual - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    And now, how about some actual specs? Does any of these at least use Ivy Bridge?
    I'm waiting on an Ivy Bridge refresh of something like ep121/samsung slate pretty desperately here, or a convertible like the x220 tablet version but with a dedicated GPU and/or a Brazos tablet with Wacom.
  • jayton4 - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Who cares about specs? It is all about style, design, and comfort for these PCs. Of course they will have all the big numbers and specs when they are released, all brands will.
  • jayton4 - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    So, the only slim models are now part of the edge series? No more slim T-series models? Those are two very different animals. There is no way the T420s is being replaced by an Edge.
  • MrCromulent - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Have you read the article? Hint: Ctrl-F for S430.
  • MrCromulent - Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - link

    Whoops, sorry, nevermind. Need to get more coffee.

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