
X60 with X6 Ultrabase photos
X60 with X6 Ultrabase photos
I got the 1706-8DU unit yesterday. I guess some people might want to see what the X60 and the ultrabase look like. I uploaded the album and wrote some descriptions in Flickr. Hope it is useful.


Camera?
Very nice pics! Excellent depth of field.
What camera did you use?
Oh..great computer, too.
What camera did you use?
Oh..great computer, too.
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christopher_wolf
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Re: Camera?
"Taken with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT"wpwood3 wrote:What camera did you use?
Regards,
James
James at thinkpads dot com
5.5K+ posts and all I've got to show for it are some feathers.... AND a Bird wearing a Crown
5.5K+ posts and all I've got to show for it are some feathers.... AND a Bird wearing a Crown
Hello,
Nice pics, it's weird to see, this X60 ThinkPad® dont have inbuilt
56 kbps integrated modem. Mobility doesnt mean that they can remove
it. In some backward countries peoples still use dial up connections. I
know only CEO level peoples buy X series laptops but from the technical
side they can provide that thing also.
Regards,
Amey Abhyankar.
Nice pics, it's weird to see, this X60 ThinkPad® dont have inbuilt
56 kbps integrated modem. Mobility doesnt mean that they can remove
it. In some backward countries peoples still use dial up connections. I
know only CEO level peoples buy X series laptops but from the technical
side they can provide that thing also.
Regards,
Amey Abhyankar.
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christopher_wolf
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They provide plenty of help from the technical/IT side of things; I can't see where the exclusion or moving of the RJ-11 Jack to the Ultrabase would harm things any. Not unless you wanted mobility whilst moving about your machines and actually wanted to *dial back in*, which I can't see anybody doing any more.
IBM ThinkPad T43 Model 2668-72U 14.1" SXGA+ 1GB |IBM 701c
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
Well, I still do quite a bit of dial up when I travel around the world. I often cannot get (cheap) broadband/wireless in some locations but there's almost always a telephone line, so I use iPass and my employer's ISP details to get connected and pull down email.
I didn't realise the X60 didn't have a built-in modem.
I didn't realise the X60 didn't have a built-in modem.
X40 (2371-6EM) w/ 768 RAM
XPP SP2
DLINK DI-614+
XPP SP2
DLINK DI-614+
christopher_wolf wrote:They provide plenty of help from the technical/IT side of things; I can't see where the exclusion or moving of the RJ-11 Jack to the Ultrabase would harm things any. Not unless you wanted mobility whilst moving about your machines and actually wanted to *dial back in*, which I can't see anybody doing any more.
I was expecting this answer from one of admin's . Your right from your
point as your a residant of United States Of America. If you been to
Africa or to Asia before, you wont say that.
dial up coenctions. Broadband or wireless. Thats it ! Technology moving
very fast.
But still in many asian and in african countries users have no option but
dial up connection for communication. Just think, a photographer or some
executive goes to urban area of India, he cant find broadband or wireless
LAN to access through his X series ThinkPad®, and it doesnt mean that
India is poor country and nobody can afford, sure why not, we can buy
X series laptop. Not a big deal, but technicaly IBM® must provide RJ11
jack for integrated IBM modem. And secondly they dont provide touch
pad also which is strange. All other vendors provide finest touchpad for
tablet pc's .
Regards,
Amey Abhyankar.
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christopher_wolf
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Touchpad? The X Series never had a touchpad as far as I know; besides, it would only take up space for no good reason.
Point taken about the RJ11 connection; but it still isn't much of a big deal. When somebody travels, they are never guaranteed a solid connection anywhere unless they have specifically asked for it. I can give you some hotels in the US I have stayed at where you cannot connect to the internet via dialup or other means. This is why stuff like EVDO and WWAN are coming out, connect just as you would with a cell phone. If worst comes to worst, you can always use a bluetooth gateway to your cell phone and initiate a dial-up connection that way. Far more flexible than expecting RJ11 at any location you travel to (US or International); no big deal.
Point taken about the RJ11 connection; but it still isn't much of a big deal. When somebody travels, they are never guaranteed a solid connection anywhere unless they have specifically asked for it. I can give you some hotels in the US I have stayed at where you cannot connect to the internet via dialup or other means. This is why stuff like EVDO and WWAN are coming out, connect just as you would with a cell phone. If worst comes to worst, you can always use a bluetooth gateway to your cell phone and initiate a dial-up connection that way. Far more flexible than expecting RJ11 at any location you travel to (US or International); no big deal.
IBM ThinkPad T43 Model 2668-72U 14.1" SXGA+ 1GB |IBM 701c
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
I'm glad these photos are useful.
sco1984, the X60 *comes* with an RJ11 jack. It is on the right side next to the power in jack. Click the photo below to see my note of the location in the picture.

I have used the X60 for a couple of days. It is really great. Very strongly built and incredibly light (I came from a T-series camp). My only design complaint with the X60 is one of the 4 rubber legs is at the battery. If you use the unit without a battery, it will not stand firmly.
I don't usually use the Windows key, but I will try to get used to it. It makes the ctrl+alt+del keypress harder. I can no longer use one finger to press both the ctrl and alt at the same time!
P.S. Thank you all for your compliments. I used the 50mm F1.8 lens with the Canon Digital Rebel XT.
sco1984, the X60 *comes* with an RJ11 jack. It is on the right side next to the power in jack. Click the photo below to see my note of the location in the picture.

I have used the X60 for a couple of days. It is really great. Very strongly built and incredibly light (I came from a T-series camp). My only design complaint with the X60 is one of the 4 rubber legs is at the battery. If you use the unit without a battery, it will not stand firmly.
I don't usually use the Windows key, but I will try to get used to it. It makes the ctrl+alt+del keypress harder. I can no longer use one finger to press both the ctrl and alt at the same time!
P.S. Thank you all for your compliments. I used the 50mm F1.8 lens with the Canon Digital Rebel XT.
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Rob Mayercik
- Junior Member

- Posts: 262
- Joined: Tue Sep 28, 2004 6:50 am
- Location: NJ, U.S.A.
Sorry, but that's bull. No way, no how is the entire US using a broadband connection to the Internet. Recheck your statistics.sco1984 wrote:In US now nobody runs dial up coenctions. Broadband or wireless. Thats it !
How do I know? I'm still using dialup, because the cheapest broadband connection I can currently get at home is over $40/month.
To the OP - nice pics. Sharp-looking unit.
T61p 8891-CTO
TP600 2645-45u (Upgraded to PII-400)
TP600 2645-45u (Upgraded to PII-400)
Very few people who use Thinkpads consider the lack of a touchpad in the X series machines to be a "drawback". The Trackpoint is capable of much finer control than the average touchpad and is the preferred device once you become familiar with it.sco1984 wrote:And secondly they dont provide touch pad also which is strange. All other vendors provide finest touchpad for tablet pc's .I found this 1st draw back in a ThinkPad®
It would be more fitting to decry the lack of a Trackpoint on those other tablets as the true drawback.
Regards,
James
James at thinkpads dot com
5.5K+ posts and all I've got to show for it are some feathers.... AND a Bird wearing a Crown
5.5K+ posts and all I've got to show for it are some feathers.... AND a Bird wearing a Crown
I personally don't use trackpad. My previous T41 has both the stick and the pad. I guess spent <1% of my time using it. So I'm perfectly happy with the X60. The single sign on from the fingerprint reader is really cool. No longer do I have to type the power on password, harddisk password, windows logon password.
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revolutionary_one
- Sophomore Member
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- Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 9:13 pm
- Location: Dallas, Texas
Can you post a how-to on how to set this up. I've been meaning to set this up with my MOTO ROKR (T-Mobile) and my Thinkpad t42 with a seperate bluetooth dongle. But i cant seem to find a decent guide.If worst comes to worst, you can always use a bluetooth gateway to your cell phone and initiate a dial-up connection that way. Far more flexible than expecting RJ11 at any location you travel to (US or International); no big deal.
I called T-MObile to find out whether it would cost me anything if i setup a bluetooth gateway, and they said as long as i used it to connect to a dialup ISP i'd be kosher.
I'd be more than happy to get a dialup ISP at super cheap to get this functionality.
T42 2378FVU -- PM 735 1.7Ghz, 768MB RAM, 40GB 5400rpm HDD, 14.1 SXGA+(1400x1050) TFT LCD, 64MB ATI Radeon 9600, 24x24x24x/8x CD-RW/DVD, Intel 802.11b/g, Modem(CDC), Gigabit Lan, 6 cell Li-Ion battery, WinXP Pro | UbuntuLinux (Dapper Drake)
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christopher_wolf
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I have Bluetooth built-in on my T43 and I have tried this, and other services, quite successfully on my RAZR. If you have the BT dongle, simply follow the instructions to set it up; make sure to install the software and drivers that came with it and *not* the Microsoft BT stack (the MS BT handler is barren and has no services available, tey have to be configured by the user through COM ports). After that, the software should have a nice little GUI where you can setup the dial-up gateway; as well as various other things. 
Have you tried doing that already?
HTH
Have you tried doing that already?
HTH
IBM ThinkPad T43 Model 2668-72U 14.1" SXGA+ 1GB |IBM 701c
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
-
revolutionary_one
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 217
- Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 9:13 pm
- Location: Dallas, Texas
So you just pay for the dialup ISP and not per minute(data not voice) or per KB/MB with your cellular provider?
What cellular wireless provider do you have? I'll try to get my E398 working when I have a little time over the weekend. I honestly havent even touched the disc that came along with my E398.
Now only to find a dial-up isp for Free or maybe less than 5 bucks a month. This looks promising.
What cellular wireless provider do you have? I'll try to get my E398 working when I have a little time over the weekend. I honestly havent even touched the disc that came along with my E398.
Now only to find a dial-up isp for Free or maybe less than 5 bucks a month. This looks promising.
T42 2378FVU -- PM 735 1.7Ghz, 768MB RAM, 40GB 5400rpm HDD, 14.1 SXGA+(1400x1050) TFT LCD, 64MB ATI Radeon 9600, 24x24x24x/8x CD-RW/DVD, Intel 802.11b/g, Modem(CDC), Gigabit Lan, 6 cell Li-Ion battery, WinXP Pro | UbuntuLinux (Dapper Drake)
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christopher_wolf
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- Joined: Sat Oct 08, 2005 1:24 pm
- Location: UC Berkeley, California
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If you can find a cheap ISP, you can just dial-up using your minutes onto the net; the dial-up gateway through Bluetooth uses FTP anyway, so there won't be much of any impact when going through it to, say, download a file or just browse the net.
I don't know about the pay specifics, but I am pretty sure it is not treated like connecting to the Net via their own systems and the phone browser; that would be bizzare. All that is coming over is what would usually come over a phone line should you choose to dial-up through an RJ11. Essentially, are you are doing is "extending" your line, through their connections, and dial into your ISP...After that, it should be via minutes or non-peak time rates. At least that is my understanding from when I tried it last.
I tried it out and I get a suprisingly crisp connection, especially for dial-up. Also, if you have modern Bluetooth and drivers on both the phone and the Thinkpad, you will notice no bottlenecking of the connection either since it usually goes through the phone much faster than it can come through from the ISP.
I have Cingular as a wireless provider for my RAZR; although, if you have a Motorola, you shouldn't need to use the CD that came with it. That contains stuff and utilities for talking back and forth with the phone; which you can already do if you set up the bluetooth dongle and related drivers/software.
HTH
I don't know about the pay specifics, but I am pretty sure it is not treated like connecting to the Net via their own systems and the phone browser; that would be bizzare. All that is coming over is what would usually come over a phone line should you choose to dial-up through an RJ11. Essentially, are you are doing is "extending" your line, through their connections, and dial into your ISP...After that, it should be via minutes or non-peak time rates. At least that is my understanding from when I tried it last.
I tried it out and I get a suprisingly crisp connection, especially for dial-up. Also, if you have modern Bluetooth and drivers on both the phone and the Thinkpad, you will notice no bottlenecking of the connection either since it usually goes through the phone much faster than it can come through from the ISP.
I have Cingular as a wireless provider for my RAZR; although, if you have a Motorola, you shouldn't need to use the CD that came with it. That contains stuff and utilities for talking back and forth with the phone; which you can already do if you set up the bluetooth dongle and related drivers/software.
HTH
IBM ThinkPad T43 Model 2668-72U 14.1" SXGA+ 1GB |IBM 701c
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
-
revolutionary_one
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 217
- Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 9:13 pm
- Location: Dallas, Texas
awesome.
Now i just have to find a el-cheapo dialup isp that doesnt require a yearly contract.
My cousin has the Nokia 9300i with T-Mobile and pays them 5 dollars a month for unlimited internet access. Although, seeing as though you can extrapolate that his father paid for the phone and subsequently the GSM/GPRS internet access plan I doubt whether he actually knows the terms of the contract.
So anyone have an recommendations on a SUPER cheap dialup ISP that doesnt require yearly contracts and is based out of the southwest so connection number are faster?
Now i just have to find a el-cheapo dialup isp that doesnt require a yearly contract.
My cousin has the Nokia 9300i with T-Mobile and pays them 5 dollars a month for unlimited internet access. Although, seeing as though you can extrapolate that his father paid for the phone and subsequently the GSM/GPRS internet access plan I doubt whether he actually knows the terms of the contract.
So anyone have an recommendations on a SUPER cheap dialup ISP that doesnt require yearly contracts and is based out of the southwest so connection number are faster?
T42 2378FVU -- PM 735 1.7Ghz, 768MB RAM, 40GB 5400rpm HDD, 14.1 SXGA+(1400x1050) TFT LCD, 64MB ATI Radeon 9600, 24x24x24x/8x CD-RW/DVD, Intel 802.11b/g, Modem(CDC), Gigabit Lan, 6 cell Li-Ion battery, WinXP Pro | UbuntuLinux (Dapper Drake)
My X31 has 2 of its 4 rubbers on the battery... image the horror I go by every daymcgyver wrote:I'm glad these photos are useful.
sco1984, the X60 *comes* with an RJ11 jack. It is on the right side next to the power in jack. Click the photo below to see my note of the location in the picture.
img]http://static.flickr.com/55/120479114_b062b428d5.jpg[/img]
I have used the X60 for a couple of days. It is really great. Very strongly built and incredibly light (I came from a T-series camp). My only design complaint with the X60 is one of the 4 rubber legs is at the battery. If you use the unit without a battery, it will not stand firmly.
.
(But still I take it out because I don NOT want to spoil the battery)
Own:
X61t
Owned:
X41, X31, T41, T42, X40, X61s
Yes... I love the X-series.
X61t
Owned:
X41, X31, T41, T42, X40, X61s
Yes... I love the X-series.
Many people would be or already are adopting broadband even at those prices. (myself included).Rob Mayercik wrote: I'm still using dialup, because the cheapest broadband connection I can currently get at home is over $40/month.
IBM X220 | T61p | R61e | T43 | Black Macbook | i5 Hackintosh | i7 iMac 27 | Dell 3007WFP-HC WQXGA
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naro
- Sophomore Member
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- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 5:23 pm
- Location: London (Study) Singapore (Home)
i 2nd this.... trackpoint is much better than touchpad... the lack of touchpad is better cos it frees up space for a bigger keyboard...JHEM wrote: Very few people who use Thinkpads consider the lack of a touchpad in the X series machines to be a "drawback". The Trackpoint is capable of much finer control than the average touchpad and is the preferred device once you become familiar with it.
It would be more fitting to decry the lack of a Trackpoint on those other tablets as the true drawback.
Regards,
James
IBM T42 (2373-MA5)
Pentium M 755. i855PM, ATI Radeon 7500 32mb, 14.1" XGA, Combo, Kingston DDR333 2gb, Samsung HM120JC 120gb
Pentium M 755. i855PM, ATI Radeon 7500 32mb, 14.1" XGA, Combo, Kingston DDR333 2gb, Samsung HM120JC 120gb
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AlphaKilo470
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I don't prefer a TrackPoint so much for the more wristpad space as I do for the fact that I don't have to move my hands to switch between using the mouse and keyboard. I find this to make my computing much more efficient.
ThinkPad T60: 2GHZ CD T2500, 3gb RAM, 14.1" XGA, 60gb 7k100, Win 7 Ult
Latitude E7250: i5 5300U 2.3ghz, 12gb RAM, 12" 1080p touch, 256gb SSD, Win 10
Latitude E7250: i5 5300U 2.3ghz, 12gb RAM, 12" 1080p touch, 256gb SSD, Win 10
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sparta.rising
- Senior Member

- Posts: 886
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- Location: Boston, MA
mcgyver - Go Illini. Your Flickr photos sure make Urbana look like its not in the middle of corn fields.
I work for Atlas and we get most of the professors T42's. One went around us and bought a Z60m (with titanium cover) the other day. It was decent, but I prefer my T42. I would like to play with an X series. But know what's ridiculous? A prof in the Sociology department wants to buy a $3000 Dell laptop.
I work for Atlas and we get most of the professors T42's. One went around us and bought a Z60m (with titanium cover) the other day. It was decent, but I prefer my T42. I would like to play with an X series. But know what's ridiculous? A prof in the Sociology department wants to buy a $3000 Dell laptop.
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Unil_Lausanne
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:01 am
- Location: Switzerland
Hello, your pictures are very nice! By the way, I'd like to ask you if this accessory: ThinkPad Second Serial-ATA Hard Disk Drive Adapter(40Y8725) can be fixed in X6 Ultrabase? And is the DVD driver removable? Thanks a lot. 
T60 2007-63G(2G,1024MB,100G)
X60 1706-WAW(1.83G,1024MB,80G)
Fujitsu P7010(1.2G,1024MB,80G)
VAIO FS215E(1.5G,512MB,60G)
X60 1706-WAW(1.83G,1024MB,80G)
Fujitsu P7010(1.2G,1024MB,80G)
VAIO FS215E(1.5G,512MB,60G)
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