Lenovo Thinkpad X1: The Best Thin 13.3-inch Laptop With Good Performance

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 is a laptop for business professionals who want the best in performance, mobility and entertainment. Lenovo X1, will replace the ThinkPad X301, the ThinkPad laptop that thin, with a thickness of less than 17 mm and weighing approximately 1.67 kg.

Beneath the slim and slender body, it has the second generation Intel Core i3 or i5 or i7 processor which is typically offered in a notebook 14-inch 15-inch and larger, while the memory supports up to 8GB of RAM
and 160GB hard drive SSD. ThinkPad X1 also meets the standards with a roll cage MILSPEC survival rate of carbon fiber and magnesium casing.
This laptop has passed the eight military test specifications so that mobile professionals can work with this laptop anywhere with confidence.

13.3-inch LCD screen Lenovo X1 using Corning Gorilla Glass for extra durability and scratch resistance, also features a new battery with Rapid Charge technology can deduct up to 80 percent in just 30 minutes. Other features include HDMI 1.4a video output, HD built-in webcam, touchpad and Trackpoint, Spill Resistant keyboard backlight with Noise surepress on keystroke technology to muffle the sound typing on the keyboard, stereo speakers with Dolby Home Theater v4 USB 3.0 ports, and a fingerprint reader.
You’ll also find WiFi, Bluetooth 3.0 and optional WWAN connectivity Gobi 3000. Price for Lenovo ThinkPad X1 ranging from USD 1.399.

Design
The Lenovo ThinkPad X1′s chassis is an evolution, not a reinvention, of the classic ThinkPad design. The all-black chassis is made entirely from soft-touch, rubberized material that’s as durable as it is pleasant to touch. Lenovo has taken great care to give the ThinkPad X1 a clean look, going so far as to seal in the battery, minimize the number of holes in the bottom, and hide its left- and right-side ports under rubber panels. The ThinkPad X1 opens to reveal an equally elegant interior with a deep palm rest, a backlit island-style keyboard, and a bright screen that’s covered end to end in scratch-resistant Corning Gorilla Glass.
At 13.3 x 9.1 x 0.8 inches and 3.8 pounds, the ThinkPad X1 is extremely thin and light compared to most notebooks, but it’s heftier than the 2.9-pound 0.68-inch-thick 13-inch MacBook Air or the 2.9 pound, 0.64-inch-thick Samsung Series 9. However, the Thinkpad X1′s somewhat bulkier frame allows for a magnesium alloy top and bottom and an internal roll cage that adds superior durability. The notebook was
designed to pass eight different mil-spec tests, including those for sand exposure, vibration, mechanical shock, and extreme temperatures.
Better still, Lenovo claims that the X1 can survive drops of up to 1.6 meters (5.2 feet), though it may suffer some damage from such a fall.

Keyboard
On the surface, the island-style, spill-resistant keyboard may look nearly identical to those on the company’s ThinkPad Edge series, but Lenovo specially designed the X1 keyboard for even greater typing comfort and accuracy. From the curved “smile-shaped” keys that make it easy to avoid hitting adjacent keys by mistake to the adjustable backlight (a ThinkPad first) to the gentle slope of the deck, the X1 gets everything about the typing experience right. Perhaps the best feature of the X1 keyboard is the strong force feedback it provides; it reminded us of the highly tactile IBM model M keyboards of the 1980s. The keys made a subtle, pleasant clicking noise as typed.

Pointing Stick and Touchpad
Like other ThinkPads, the X1 features both a TrackPoint pointing stick and a touchpad. Prefer to use the TrackPoint, because it provides the most accurate navigation possible on any notebook. If you’re not a
trackpoint fan, you’ll appreciate the 2.9 x 2.3-inch textured touchpad on the X1, which provides accurate navigation, too. The touchpad’s left and right buttons are built-in so as to provide extra surface area. Though we prefer discrete buttons, they offered decent tactile feedback without making the pointer jump as we activated them. The pad also supports multitouch gestures such as pinch-to-zoom and three-finger flicks. However, these gestures weren’t always smooth, and we sometimes had to repeat a pinch in order for it to register.

Display
The 13.3-inch, 1366 x 768 glossy display on the ThinkPad X1 provided incredibly bright images, thanks to its 350 nits of brightness. However, even though images were razor-sharp, colors were not particularly deep, and the highly reflective screen produced narrow viewing angles. That said, as long as you don’t use the ThinkPad X1 to show a movie to three people at once, you’ll appreciate its brightness and love its scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass cover.
Fans of the old ThinkPad X300/X301 may be disappointed that the ThinkPad X1 has a lower resolution screen than its 2008 predecessor, sporting only 1366 x 768 pixels of desktop real estate, as opposed to 1440 x 900. That’s 15 percent less vertical real estate for viewing web pages, Word documents, and anything that requires scrolling. It’s also 5 percent less horizontal space for placing windows next to each other. Apple includes a 1440 x 900 display on its 13-inch MacBook Air.

Audio
Thanks to its Dolby Home Theater v4 technology, the ThinkPad X1 offers strong audio that was loud enough to fill our whole apartment and rich enough to substitute for a low-end stereo. The speakers produced rich,
accurate sound with a good separation between instruments. By using the bundled Dolby software, you could able to optimize for bright, rich, or warm audio, while selecting between movie, music, or gaming audio profiles.

Ports
The ThinkPad X1 has more than its fair share of modern ports, but it skimps a little on legacy support. On the right side is an SD card reader, an amenity the X300/X301 lacked. On the back, you’ll find an Ethernet port, a USB 3.0 port, an eSATA/USB port, and both HDMI and mini Display port outs. Under a rubber panel on the left side are an audio in/out jack and one more USB port, for a total of three USB connections. The USB 3.0 port and combination of modern display options are critical additions, but businesses with old projectors or
monitors in their offices will need a mini Display port to VGA adapter, because the X1 lacks a dedicated port.

Heat
The ThinkPad X1 stayed nice and cool throughout our testing, which is critical for a device that’s made to live on your lap. After 15 minutes of playing full-screen video, we measured the touchpad at a chilly 79 degrees, the keyboard at a cool 87 degrees, and the bottom at a barely perceptible 92 degrees Fahrenheit.

Specifications:
Second generation of Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 CPU options (2.1 GHz i3-2310M, 2.5 GHz Core i5-2520M, 2.7 GHz Core i7-2620) HDMI 1.4a and a Mini DisplayPort Gigabit Ethernet, WiFi 802.11n (various Intel Centrino options will be available)
Optional Bluetooth 3.0
Low light web cam with dual array mic
Stereo speakers (loud!) with Dolby Home Theater v4
SD/MMC card slot
1 USB 3.0 port
1 eSata/USB 2.0 powered combo port
No internal optical drive
250 and 320 gig 7200RPM drive options, or 128 gig SSD or 160 gig Intel SSD
Gobi WWAN and Ericsson WWAN options for 3G, WiMAX option
Fingerprint reader is standard

Pros:
• Sturdy construction.
• Gorilla glass is scratch-proof.
• Backlit keyboard.
• Great typing experience.
• HDMI and DisplayPort.
• Fast 2.5-inch HDD.
• Standard Voltage processors only.
• An excellent mix of wireless technologies.
• Dolby sound is worthy of entertainment laptop.

Cons:
• No Anti-glare screen available.
• Standard battery alone doesn’t crank out enough battery life.
• Hefty for an ultraportable without an optical drive.

Bottom Line:
The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 has a backlit keyboard, edge-to-edge gorilla glass screen, the infamous click touchpad, and high-fidelity Dolby sound, and it has some serious processing chops. Its standard battery,
however, is unimpressive.

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