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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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ThinkPad X32 By Stephanie Bruzzese, ZDNet US June 07, 2005 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/hardware/laptops/soa/ThinkPad-X32/0,2000065761,139195594,00.htm
Frequent business fliers who burn the midnight oil would do well to consider the ThinkPad X32. This ultraportable offers enough keyboard and screen space, battery life and connectivity to get some serious work done on the road. Yet despite all of these perks, it still comes in at less than 1.8 kg. The only mobile employees who might not embrace the ThinkPad X32 are those who require an integrated optical drive. The ThinkPad X32 is slightly bulkier than its sibling, the ThinkPad X41; according to Lenovo, the larger form factor allows for higher performance, while the smaller model offers better battery life. Nevertheless, the ThinkPad X32's dimensions are on a par with those of the typical ultraportable notebook. It weighs a very manageable 1.68 kg and measures 27 cm wide by 22.35 cm deep; it's 2.5 cm thick at the front and 3 cm at the rear. The system's .27 kg AC adapter is also of average size for an ultraportable, bringing the total travel weight to a wieldy 1.95 kg. The ThinkPad X32 has one of the nicest ultraportable case designs we've come across. Thanks to the full size of nearly all of the keys, we were able to touch-type comfortably for extended periods. One of our favourite laptop pointing devices -- the ThinkPad's signature red-rubber pointing stick, with a broad, texturised top -- sits in the middle of the keyboard. Two roomy mouse buttons are centered below the spacebar, with a handy scroll button between the two. The four buttons above the keyboard control the volume and link to a preloaded help utility. The 12.1-inch display, featuring a standard 1,024x768 native resolution, is big by ultraportable standards; many systems in this class include 10.4-inch or smaller screens. A built-in light above the screen shines down like a spotlight on the keyboard, helping to illuminate the board when the captain dims the lights. Lastly, the ThinkPad line's strong metal hinges connect the laptop's lid and bottom.
For an ultraportable, the ThinkPad X32 is chock-full of ports, jacks and slots. It offers the parallel port and the three audio jacks (headphone, microphone and line-in) usually reserved for bigger laptops, along with FireWire, VGA, 56Kbps modem, Gigabit Ethernet, infrared and two USB 2.0 ports. The laptop also includes one Type II PC Card slot and one dedicated slot for CompactFlash cards. Companies interested in deploying a fleet of ThinkPads will appreciate the ThinkPad X32's compatibility with R-series and T-series docking stations, as well as its identical drive size, which lets you swap drives among models. Our test unit came preloaded with the Windows XP Professional operating system. Like other business laptops, the ThinkPad X32's software bundle does not include a productivity suite, though the system did ship with one user license for Lotus SmartSuite Millennium Edition. The system also includes the convenient Access Connections Wi-Fi utility, which lets you create and save different connectivity profiles for your various stomping grounds. InterVideo WinDVD player rounded out the bundle, with Sonic RecordNow and Sonic DLA to assist with disc burning. The laptop's Embedded Security System functions like a Trusted Platform Module, offering a hardware-based data lockdown. And the laptop's Active Protection System detects when the laptop is dropped or bumped, at which point the program stops the hard drive from spinning, preventing possible damage to the drive. But the system lacks the fingerprint reader that we've seen on other ThinkPads, including the ThinkPad X41 and the ThinkPad T43. Our ThinkPad X32 test unit earned midrange results in CNET Labs' mobile benchmarks. Though it lagged 9 percent behind the Dell Latitude D410, it came out 9 percent ahead of the HP Compaq Business Notebook nc4010, which included a slower, 1.7GHz Pentium M processor and 266MHz of RAM. The ThinkPad X32 triumphed over the Latitude D410 in our battery-drain trials, lasting a very respectable 4 hours, 23 minutes to the D410's 3 hours, 41 minutes. The HP nc4010's smaller battery trailed far behind both the ThinkPad and Dell cells, lasting a short 2 hours, 48 minutes. All three battery scores trailed the top-notch, 6-hour, 19-minute time earned by the Sony VAIO T250/L, which included a smaller (read: less power-hungry) 10.4-inch screen, an ultra-low-voltage Pentium M processor, and a slightly larger battery. NOTE: Products in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.
Mobile application performance
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Dell Latitude D410
229
ThinkPad X32
209
HP Compaq nc4010
190
Battery life
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
ThinkPad X32
263
Dell Latitude D410
221
HP Compaq nc4010
168
System configurations: ThinkPad X32
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