Posts Tagged ‘Lenovo’
Lenovo IdeaPad S10-3t 0651
With a sleek, slim design and curved lines at the edges, there’s a lot to like about the build of the S10-3t. No protruding battery bulge in the back, clean edges, and the total size is slightly larger than the average soft-cover book make the IdeaPad S10-3t easy to pick up and carry around.
Glossy, highly shiny black plastic around the top inside and outside of all the IdeaPad; keyboard area in the lower half of bright white, with a subtle embossed pattern of white squares on the other wrist. The surface of the keyboard mat, black and white contrast between the upper and lower halves of the very attractive.
The multi-touch display on the S10-3t is capacitive, meaning the screen isn’t pressure-based. With smooth lines and large stereo speakers, S10-3T seems destined for consumers in the media as netbooks regular users of this hybrid. S10-3T capacitive multi-touch screen is a great idea, the pressure on the touch screen always feel uncomfortable fit for the finger gesture.
The 10.1-inch glossy LED-backlit display of the IdeaPad S10-3T has a resolution of 1024 pixels standard X600, which is standard for most netbook screens and video, and text looked sharp on the screen. Stereo speakers on the screen, although the sound level is louder than the speakers on most netbooks and is ideal for watching movies in tablet mode.
Lenovo IdeaPad S10-3T provides a new upper class of the N470 as an option in its ultimate goal of the configuration files. N470 reference time was slightly faster on a task, but not enough to justify any amount of money invested in the upgrade, any Atom processor is much slower than almost any other notebook CPU on the market.
Lenovo ThinkPad X201 Tablet
Lenovo still not giving up on those who still need an old-fashioned, completely Powered Tablet PC. Strictly speaking, it is powerful, as it is, we describe the new x201 Tablet with its new low voltage Intel Core i7 processors and 4 GB of RAM. However, during one of the more than 12 inches are laptops, capacitive touch screen now allow a touch fortunate among us in turn to take notes with your Wacom pen and put two fingers up or down to scroll.
While the ThinkPad Edge was a major design departure for Lenovo, the X201T doesn’t stray from the traditional ThinkPad roots. While you can pick up the inch thin, three pound X201s sans a convertible touchscreen, the four pound X201T feels heavier than it should, especially when resting on an arm in tablet mode. At least the extra space on the sides to accommodate a long list of ports, including making a trio of USB 2.0, Ethernet, VGA, ExpressCard/34 slot and headphone / microphone input.
The 12.1-inch, 1280 x 800-pixel resolution screen is quite bright and lacks the greyness that’s sometimes symptom of the added touch layer. Speaking at the launch of the screen around – BI group directions 360 degrees hinge feels solid and the latch keeps it locked in place when placed in the top of the keyboard. And if you look at the first photo of this review is to inform you that the screen becomes rather leaked to fingerprints.
The 2.13GHz Core i7 640LM CPU and 4GB of RAM make the Lenovo X201T one of the fastest ultraportable laptops we’ve ever used. Though the lower voltage i7 processor isn’t as speedy as the faster clocked Core i5 Sony VAIO Z Series, the X201T’s benchmark scores are still quite high, and everyday performance was incredibly snappy. Running multiple programs – iTunes, Microsoft Word, GIMP, Firefox, Skype and others – not to diminish in the least. Your hard disk of 320 GB 5400 is not as fast Z-wheel drive, but not surprised by the program to run.