As is always the case with ThinkPads, I can easily recommend the T480s for someone that wants a powerful and portable laptop. I'm just not sure of a use case where I wouldn't recommend a different ThinkPad first.
As is always the case with ThinkPads, I can easily recommend the T480s for someone that wants a powerful and portable laptop. I'm just not sure of a use case where I wouldn't recommend a different ThinkPad first.
This article is about one of the better ultraportable laptops available in stores in Mid 2018, the Lenovo ThinkPad T480s.
The T480s is a very balanced and high-quality business notebook. The dedicated Nvidia GeForce MX150 (regardless of being a Max-Q version) does make it more versatile, by making it suitable for casual gamers. Though the execution is not quite perfect.
high-quality chassis; excellent peripherals; long battery life; very good matte WQHD panel; combination of modern and established ports; WWAN ready; 3 years warranty; well performing hardware; lightning fast PCIe-SSD; many security features; MX150 suitable for casual gamers
i7 slower than i5 under continuous load; unrefined CPU performance management (fixed with BIOS 1.11; CPU throttling in battery mode; high surface temperatures; bad speakers; ThinkShutter camera cover only included with bad HD webcam
The laptop is sufficient for small business work. I have a lot of documents open at the same time and it performs well. The size is great. I don't care for the laptop keyboard layout as the Fn key is where the Ctrl key is on my keyboard.
Lenovo's ThinkPad T-series laptops are designed to deliver the performance and durability required by demanding business users. They are not the most portable devices in the ThinkPad lineup, but with 14-inch and 15-inch screens they offer plenty of screen space for working.
All-day battery life; Solid build; ThinkShutter for webcam security; LTE and touch-screen options
Moderate storage and screen resolution on entry-level models
The only feature-level drawback we can't quite forgive the ThinkPad T480s The somewhat dim FHD display in this test unit. A larger quibble has nothing to do with the system proper, but with Lenovo ' s pricing scheme.
Durable carbon-fiber chassis; Stellar keyboard; Quiet operation; Useful selection of ports, including Thunderbolt
Dim display; X1 Carbon is thinner, lighter, and only slightly pricier
If you really want a ThinkPad, skip the T480s and pick up the X1 Carbon instead.
Robust build quality; Decent battery life; Excellent connectivity; Good touchpad and keyboard
Subpar display; Thicker and heavier than alternatives; Expensive
The Lenovo ThinkPad T480s is a business laptop pitched to be "designed for mobile power" while being IT-friendly, secure and very lightweight (~2.9 lbs). This caught our attention, and we wanted to see how far we could push it, and if it would deliver.
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