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13 votes
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Refurbed Lenovo ThinkPads - whats the "current gen"?
I'm in the market to hurl at a wall upgrade our badly ageing general use family laptop (Lenovo V110). I've used ThinkPads in the past for work and due to their ubiquity there is a value to be had,...
I'm in the market to
hurl at a wallupgrade our badly ageing general use family laptop (Lenovo V110).I've used ThinkPads in the past for work and due to their ubiquity there is a value to be had, I believe, in corporate refurbs.
However, it's been a good few years since I used one - think it was a T440 - and am looking for some advice on what the most recently obsoleted gen is that I should be looking for, or where people have found a sweet spot on price/performance. Any pointers?
16 votes -
Installing a SATA SSD in a Lenovo x270 (shielding vs no shielding)
Hi all, Has been a while :) I'm having an issue with upgrading an SSD on a Lenovo x270 and thought I'd reach out for some advice. I'm installing a SATA SSD (Crucial BX500) but the original caddy...
Hi all,
Has been a while :)
I'm having an issue with upgrading an SSD on a Lenovo x270 and thought I'd reach out for some advice.
I'm installing a SATA SSD (Crucial BX500) but the original caddy in the laptop is for a NVME M.2 PCIe SSD. The only part I can use of the original caddy is the plastic shielding that can fit around the new drive.
The issue is, now I have no shielding. The new drive will fit in the 2.5 inch slot the old drive was in but it rests on top of only two small pieces of foam glued to the board. Do you think this is an issue? Should I shield it somehow? Perhaps EMI tape? If so, should I shield both the top and bottom of the drive? There's no caddy I can find for this use case in Europe.
Any help would be appreciated.
p.s I am following this article: https://techblog.paalijarvi.fi/2020/01/02/32gb-ram-for-thinkpad-x270-and-other-pimp-ups/
As you can see, in their case, some metal foil (an EMC cover?) came with the eBay cable they bought to support the SATA connection. I'm wondering if that's nesscary.
10 votes -
Lenovo’s new 27-inch, 4K monitor offers glasses-free 3D
13 votes -
Leaked images reveal Lenovo’s Steam Deck competitor with a hint of the Switch
39 votes -
US review of the Ideapad Duet 5i
4 votes -
Security expert defeats Lenovo laptop BIOS password with a screwdriver
13 votes -
Need a laptop for school, budget $2000, details inside
Hi everyone, I'm looking into getting a new laptop for university work. Thanks to a scholarship, I can get up to $2000 covered off a laptop purchase (and I'd be willing to pay a few hundred more...
Hi everyone, I'm looking into getting a new laptop for university work. Thanks to a scholarship, I can get up to $2000 covered off a laptop purchase (and I'd be willing to pay a few hundred more out-of-pocket too).
I plan on using this laptop primarily for basic web browsing, word processing, and Zoom calls. I may be playing some video games on it like Slay the Spire or Hollow Knight, but these aren't too demanding and most of my time will be spent working anyway. My use case shouldn't require a lot of processing power or a high-end dedicated GPU. After graduating, I'll have more consistent access to my desktop anyway, which already has a dedicated card for gaming and can easily be upgraded to suit my needs if I get into video editing or programming, which further reduces the need for a laptop that can do these things. In light of this, I'm looking primarily at a laptop that is lightweight, has a long battery life, good build quality, and a 14-inch screen, to upgrade from my current 13-inch. I haven't decided whether I'll be dual-booting Windows/Linux or running Linux only, but I do plan on running Linux so compatibility is important. Ports aren't a huge deal since there isn't much need for anything more than HDMI/USB on a college campus and I can get a docking station for post-graduation needs.
After lurking around on this forum and others, I've settled on a few potential options:
- Thinkpad X1 Carbon
- Thinkpad T14s
- System76 Lemur Pro
- MacBook M1 Air (added after suggestions, link to specs)
ThinkPads seem to offer the best build quality and potential to last years after purchase, so I'm leaning towards those, but System76 appears to have upgraded their build quality recently, and I just love their designs as well. Lenovo will be releasing the next-generation X1 Carbon soon, but it may be priced out of my range, and I'd like to purchase soon. Even the Carbon Gen 8 is above my price range, though as I understand it Lenovo usually offers discounts so I'm waiting for the sale on customizable builds (they already have discounts on pre-designed builds). I'm totally open to suggestions not on this list, and I've also read that purchasing refurbished ThinkPads can be the way to go, though I'd like to take full advantage of my budget if possible. If anyone has any experience with the above laptops, reason to recommend one over the other, or knows why I might want to wait on purchasing (e.g. for a release of next-gen hardware), please let me know!
basic hardware comparison
blank T14s X1 Carbon (Gen 8) Lemur Pro starting weight (lbs) 2.8 2.4 2.4 advertised battery life (hrs) 13.6 13.5 14 Linux compatibility compatible Fedora pre-installed Pop_OS! pre-installed edit: Table working now!
edit2: Thanks for all the suggestions and discussion everyone. I've yet to make a final decision but will update again later.
15 votes -
Lenovo goes all in with the Linux desktop with over two dozen Ubuntu Linux powered PCs and laptops
20 votes -
ThinkPad X1 Carbon with Fedora preloaded available for purchase
22 votes -
New ThinkPads with Ryzen 4000 announced
13 votes -
What I want to see from 2020 ThinkPads
18 votes -
Lenovo unveils preview of the world’s first foldable PC in ThinkPad X1 family
10 votes -
Motorola will sell its first foldable smartphone this summer
17 votes -
Lenovo to pay $7.3m for installing adware in 750,000 laptops
21 votes -
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme may be a premium 15.6 inch thin and light laptop
2 votes