Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Core i5-3337U 128GB 14in
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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Ultrabook Review
Ultrabooks continue to be the hot trend in the Windows notebook arena. With the recent introduction of Intel's new, low power 3rd generation Ivy Bridge Core series processors, designs are becoming thinner with every iteration, while paradoxically it seems, performance continues to scale higher. ...- Thin
- light
- strong and ThinkPad tough with Carbon Fiber shell
- Most stylish ThinkPad yet
- Favorite Ultrabook keyboard
- period and it's backlit
- Nimble in SSD
- High res display
- Large glass touchpad
- DDR3 1333MHz system memory versus 1600MHz on other machines
- Pricey
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Review: What The Future Of Laptops Should Be
The Lenovo X1 Carbon does the impossible. It makes a business laptop - a business anything - cool. Cool because it looks good, sure, but also because it works the way it's supposed to. And somehow, that's become one of the bigger compliments in tech.
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Ultrabook
With its consumer focused IdeaPad U310, Lenovo showed that it ‘got' the Ultrabook segment and impressed us with a solid, powerful and distinctive Ultrabook with great battery life and an even greater value at around $600.
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch review: one of our favorite Ultrabooks gets a touchscreen
The X1 Carbon Touch is among the best Windows 8 Ultrabooks around, with a comfortable keyboard, fast performance and a lightweight build. Still, it's pricey, even for a high-end ultraportable.- Solid build
- lightweight for a 14-inch machine
- Excellent keyboard and trackpad
- Fast performance
- Expensive
- Narrow viewing angles
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch review
Summary: The ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch is attractive and solidly built, with an excellent touchscreen and a great keyboard. However, we'd like to see more ports and a removable battery at the very least. As it stands, this ultrabook is too expensive for widespread deployment.- Attractive design
- Solid build quality
- Superb touchscreen
- Excellent keyboard
- Fast battery charging
- Mobile broadband with wireless hotspot support
- Only two USB ports
- Non-removable battery
- Proprietary power connector
- Expensive
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch Review
On the surface, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch is one of the best built and best performing laptops we've reviewed. The quality and design is stunning, and it's able to smoke even the toughest tasks with ease.- It may be plain black and probably won't win over Apple fanatics with its looks
- but the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch's alluring and premium build is one of its biggest plus points.
- The array of business features is worth a mention as a positive, but we can't help but feel Lenovo has forgotten the basics here
- As business users we missed Ethernet and a proper AV connector, and the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch isn't quite slim enough to make up for the times we left the...
CES: Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Carbon Touch
But despite being lightweight and ultra powerful, the first Thinkpad X1 Carbon's enterprise appeal was hampered by a few issues, primarily its lack of an Ethernet port and slightly poor non-removable battery.
Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch: A lightweight contender
The Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Carbon Touch is the rare notebook that does just about everything well, from performance and battery life to its touch abilities and superb display. Its $1,399 price tag is relatively high, but if you want the best, it is worth every penny.- Thin and light
- ultra high resolution display
- great performance
- folds flat on tabletop
- good battery life
- innovative "adaptive" keyboard
- Expensive
- touchpad overly sensitive
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Review
Lenovo has rolled out a variety of business-chic ThinkPad laptops over the past few months, as well as the wonderfully flexible Yoga 2 Pro . We've reviewed several of the company's devices in recent times, including the T440s , the X240 , and the ThinkPad Yoga.
Review Update Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Touch 20A7-002DGE Ultrabook
About 700 Euro (~$1000) separate the least and the most expensive version of the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon - a substantial amount of money, especially considering the high base price of 1300 Euro (~$1800).- light and sturdy chassis
- very quiet
- large ClickPad
- integrated UMTS modem
- backlit keyboard
- input devices offer great feedback
- good viewing angle stability (90°
- very good battery life
- spacious SSD with 512 GB capacity
- semi-matte touch display
- HDMI & Ethernet via dongle
- Gone are the clunky...
- very high price
- integrated touchpad mouse buttons
- webcam quality is marginal
- lacks true Fn-keys
- Innovation can also have its drawbacks: the redesigned touchpad without dedicated buttons and the rather unusual Fn function-row is going require a serious adjustment period for long-term ThinkPad...