Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 3rd Jan 2008 23:05 UTC
Hardware, Embedded Systems Lenovo is undertaking an Olympic-size effort to establish itself as a consumer PC brand. The Chinese PC maker has found great success with the iconic ThinkPad brand of commercial laptops, a business it purchased from IBM. And now it's taking the world stage with a new line of consumer-focused notebooks called IdeaPad. There will also be a desktop line called IdeaCentre.
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Doc Pain
Member since:
2006-10-08

"I think they call that machine the "Thinkpad" ;D and it seems to work great with any Linux I've thrown at it and the FreeBSD that some regulars on other sites select Thinkpads for specifically."

Yes, I know, I know. :-) I've still got a very old Thinkpad (built by IBM) which I usually use to program Motorola mobile radios. Great technology, high quality. If I'm ever going to buy a new notebook (I usually get outdated or mininmal defective ones as presents and refurbish them so they are better than before), such a Thinkpad would surely be an option.

"I do hope they keep up the high standards though. IBM has always been known for good keyboards and the Think* machines as good business boxes."

That's correct, but as you see when you're looking at keyboards, no matter if they are in a notebook or to be placed on the table: The quality goes down and down, the devices are cheap, of course, but for typists they usually are a pain to use.

"non-Windows preinstalls would be nice too."

No installs at all would be an option, too, maybe it would make the product a bit cheaper without loosing hardware quality. And if the quality is good, you can install anything you like, be it Linux, BSD or even Solaris.

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