Looks like the deal is done now, but it seems PCMall/OnSale
still has these in stock! Did Lenovo make a LOT more of these than previously thought, or is it only a select few "chumps" buying them (that is to say, all the suckers in this thread, clamoring to buy last year's technology...LOL)?
Anyway, since there were a couple of questions asked about T60p earlier in the thread, I thought I'd give a report on my T60p after having it in my possession for almost two weeks now:
- ONSALE REBATE: I just got notice today that the USPS delivered my Certified mailing of my rebate coupon to OnSale, and that they signed and accepted it yesterday, so delivery has been confirmed as of July 31st. I'll let you know when the actual check arrives.
- KEYBOARD: My keyboard starting showing signs of becoming "shiny" within the first 24 hours.

Oh well, they all do that. (Anybody hear about or have any real experience with HP business-class laptops with the DuraKeys coating on the keyboard? Curious to know how well this helps/works: "HP DuraKeys - A clear coating applied over the notebook keyboard helps protect the finish and the printed characters on the keys." They claim that they keys are "50 times more resistant to visible wear than keyboards without it." Sounds like something Lenovo should look into imitating!) Still enjoying the touch of the T60 Alps...it feels vastly different than the T42 Alps that I had before, but it is a "good" different; it's definitely superior, but requires just a little more force to complete a keystroke (there is a lot more travel on the keys of this keyboard). Took about half a day to get used to it (made a few early stumbles touch-typing), and then I had no problems afterward. The feel and sound of it kind of remind me of some "retro" computer keyboards, like, ohh, it's been a while, but I want to say Commodore/Atari...that is, really deep travel (feels like a desktop keyboard), and really smooth action. Hard to describe.
- FAN/HEAT: The fan is definitely louder than my T42p, but it doesn't really bother me
THAT much. Some people don't like any fan noise. Well, I know it comes with the territory, and it doesn't sound like a jet engine or anything, so I'm not bothered by it. I think the main reason why it is "louder" is because it spins faster on average and is on more often than on the T42. But I would
also say that this laptop, believe it or not, runs
cooler than my T42 by far. So pick your poison, heat or noise.

(Or, I guess if the rumors are true, with the T61, you don't need to choose.)
- GRAPHICS: The graphics are definitely an upgrade over what I had in the T42p. I was able to load up a couple games that I have to play in 800x600 on the T42p/FireGL T2 for acceptable performance (Halo PC for one), and they ran beautifully on the T60p's native resolution of 1600x1200 (and looked beautiful at that res, too!). Haven't tried tweaking anything yet or play around with drivers too much (flirted with Omegas for about 30 minutes, but they messed up ATI Theater Mode more than the stock ones, and I can't have
that, so out they went).
- SCREEN: Of course, I love it. We've been over this before, so I won't belabor it, but UXGA + IPS == mmmm mmmm good! The IDTech screen is great, but I have no frame of reference other than my old T42p, which also had an IDTech (never seen a Hydis or LG FlexView panel). Still haven't gotten to see the friend with the 15" T60p SXGA+, so still don't know what panel he has and still haven't done a direct comparison, but I will get around to it soon, I hope.

Even with this being an IDTech, the screen is WAY superior in brightness and coloring than my T42's IDTech! So much brighter, and so much "white-r!" I will also soon have the opportunity to see either a new or recently refurb'd T42-era IDTech panel, which should tell me whether my T42's panel just has "aged" or if all T42-era IDTechs are like this. I will report back.
- CONSTRUCTION: The base is much more solid than my T42p. I do have a sliiiight creak on the lower right-side of the palmrest where it meets the base of the laptop, but it's not bad, and my 15" T42 had a similar creak. Lenovo engineers could probably afford to put a couple screws up at the very front of the laptop to secure the palmrest a little better, but no real biggie. It only creaks if I REALLY press on it/stress it purposefully, not during general use and shifting around of my palms during typing.
- NETWORKING: I have no use for the WWAN at this point. Intel gigabit ethernet chipsets are great; I especially love the auto-MDIX feature as it means I don't have to worry about carrying both a straight AND a crossover cable with me (T4x gigabit models had this feature, too). Oh, and not only can it interpret 802.1Q-tagged packets and generate tagged packets itself, but that functionality is even exposed by the Windows drivers; awesome.
I'd like to say a few brief words about the wireless, which I hope will help others who might find themselves in my predicament.
My T42p came with an Atheros ("IBM") card, while this unit came with an Intel 3945ABG. Please let me just pause for a second and say now that
I have no desire for this thread to go the way of the recent Atheros vs. Intel thread that was just closed by a mod, so please, let's try to keep this discussion civil.
I work for a local, regional WISP, and the general consensus among the engineering staff (and I think the tech support people's experience dealing with supporting them bears this out) is that Intel Centrino wireless cards have several problems with stability and compatibility. Heck, our AP vendor had to release a software update specifically to work around issues with Intel cards, which wouldn't even show our APs in a scan! (This despite the fact that every other wireless client we've ever thrown at them have worked fine, and a Kismet snoop showed our APs beaconing properly.) Centrino laptops are also constantly filling up our AP logs with "Connect/Disconnect" messages like, every two minutes. They are doing something strange and non-standard, and have given us a few headaches, especially as they become more and more common and we find ourselves supporting more and more people with Centrino laptops.
Naturally, I was not really looking forward to owning a laptop with an Intel card, given my experience with having to help support them on a commercial network. But I decided to give it a fair shake and only swap it out if it was necessary.
At home, I have an older Linksys wireless router (WRT54AG) that I loaded OpenWRT on, and am only using as an AP at the moment (all ethernet ports are flat-bridged to the wireless interface, not doing DHCP or NAT on it; there's a PC-based router sitting behind it). It contains a PRISM WorldRadio chipset (the A/B/G version of PRISM GT) which I am running in 11a mode. I had 0 troubles with the AP combined with my T42p's Atheros card, but 5 minutes out of the box, I was wrestling with my new Centrino laptop, trying to make the connection to my AP at least usable.
Performance was absolutely miserable. Transfers were not consistent and fluid, but felt rather stop-and-go (they would go slowly, then stall...there was extreme jitter/variable latency). And it also acted like it was disassociating and then re-connecting to the AP an awful lot (yellow bubble below the wireless icon in the system tray telling me I was connected was showing up every 5-15 minutes). But worst of all, after using the connection for, oh, I'd say 30 minutes on average, my AP would lock up and stop beaconing! All laptops connected to it at that time would drop off until I powercycled it.
At first, I thought this was only happening when I had both my T42p and T60p associated to the AP, but even when I had the T42 shut off, I discovered it would still do it. It does
not do it, though, when the T60's Intel card is switched off. So the Intel card is doing something to cause the AP to crash. Lovely.
It got so bad that at one point, I had the T60 connected to the T42 via ethernet and Internet Connection Sharing enabled on the T42 with the T42's wireless connecting to the AP, just so that I could download things reliably from the Internet. It was pathetic.
I dealt with this for a few days, then finally just threw up my hands in frustration, said "screw it" and ended up purchasing an Atheros a/b/g/n Mini-PCI-Express card just this afternoon.
However, this evening, I discovered that after turning off ALL power-saving options on the Intel card (card properties -> Configure -> Advanced -> Power Management -> set to Highest, then Power Management (tab) -> uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power"), it works way better. Speed is fine, transfers are consistent and stable, jitter is no longer an issue, latency to AP went down from 7ms at lowest to 1ms, received signal is actually showing stronger; I mean, it's like a whole new card.
I was also going to write in the above paragraph "and it stopped crashing my AP," but as I was typing this while listening to a live audio stream, it crashed
again. LOL. So it still isn't perfect, although even the AP lasts way longer between crashes now than it did before the change. (My current running theory, which is merely an educated guess at this point, is that one of the power saving techniques that Intel employs results in what looks like disconnects and reconnects from the AP's perspective [this would certainly explain what we've seen at work], and I'm thinking my AP doesn't handle several dis/reassociations within a short time period by the same host very gracefully.)
If any of you are experiencing problems with the wireless on your Centrino laptop, you too might just try changing your card's power management settings. Sure, this will probably nullify any power consumption advantage that the Intel card has over the Atheros, but what good is it if its unusable?
I'm happy to "convert" over to Atheros anyway, not just because I hope that my AP stops crashing (!), but also because the other strong advantage that Atheros has over Intel is much stronger Linux support, thanks to the bad-[censored] MADWiFi driver/software suite.
That's it for now. Has anybody else who purchased their laptop from OnSale/PCMall received it yet, and if so, what are your impressions? A build manifest with parts used would also serve as an interesting comparison (keyboard, HDD, drive, battery, etc.)
-- Nathan