New X220 IPS, Part 2
Posted: Thu Sep 08, 2011 10:44 am
So I spent most of yesterday playing with my new X220 (obviously) and here are a few more observations, mostly in comparison to my last ThinkPads (T400 and X41) and to my current Macbook Air 11".
First, I just can't get over this screen. The X220i I first ordered wasn't bad, better than my old 2006 MacBook or my very old ThinkPad X32 and X21, but it was visibly dingy when used next to my MacBook Air or Macbook Pro. The IPS display on this X220 is truly gorgeous, better than any I've ever used. Its not the brightest, a distinction goes to my old 1999 Toshiba Portege 3490CT which had the backlight from hell, but viewing angles, color quality and contrast are better than my desktop LCDs wiht the singular exception of the 2011 iMac my secretary uses (also IPS), which is equal, not better. The Windows calibration tools don't go into as fine of an adjustment range and are harder to use than Apple's, but the end result is still a beautifully calibrated display that is visibly superior to either of my Apple laptops.
Ahhhh, the joys of a proper ThinkPad keyboard and TrackPoint. I actually like the chicklet keys on Apple's current machines, and have come very close to impulse buying an X1x0 a number of times at Office Depot thanks to its even better interpretatin of the chiclet board (with Trackpoint). Call me old-fashioned, but I'd forgotten how good a traditional ThinkPad keyboard feels, and while I am making more errors on this than on my Air, those errors are made at a higher typing speed. The TrackPoint, as always, is my favorite laptop pointing device. Mine is set to a very light touch, the way I've done since moving from cat tongue to rubber dome caps with my first T42p. The TrackPoint on the X220 is exactly what I expected it to be, no difference that I can tell even back to my old T20 (once fitted with rubber dome).
As many of the reviews correctly point out, the palmrest is really shalow on the X220. My much smaller MacBook Air's palmrest resembles a soccer field by comparison, but it is comfortable, wiht a gentle curve at the front that feels good to the touch. The touchpad, well, it sucks. Compared to other Windows laptops I've owned it is perhaps average, but Apple is just so vastly superior in its touchpad implementation that anything else is just annoying to use. Right now I turned the sensitivity down so I get few accidental inputs and use the touchpad for navigating in a browser, which I like better on a touchpad than with the TrackPoint. The click feature works fine, but the two finger scrolling is VEYR jerky, to the point of being unusable. I may try one of the 3rd party two-finger-scroll utilities, or more likely will keep the install pure and just use the TrackPoint. The touchpad may end up getting disabled in the driver, I'm still undecided.
Battery life is currently showing at 7 hours in the task bar, with the display at 6. I expected more out of the 9 cell, but this is a brand new system and I do have the fastest i5. I have also not yet fiddled with the battery stretch utility and have confgured regular power management not to turn off the display. I am sure that with some optimization I can hit 12 hours.
My original plan was to swap the 128 GB SSD out for a 320 GB HDD (should arrive today) and use a 40 GB Intel 310 mSATA (also should arrive today) as the boot drive. I still may do that, but I am VERY happy with the performance and the silence of the SSD and may set it up as a dual SSD system (mSATA for music and video, SSD to remain in stock configuration with OS and recovery. I'll try it both ways.
I will likely completely kill the swap file and see how it runs without one. With 8GB of RAM, I just can't imagine Windows needing any more than that. This should also help avoid constant writes to the SSD and make the drive last longer.
I bought this for military use and cannot use it at all for my primary business management software, which is Mac-only. Since I can use that software on my iPhone and iPad when I travel, I just might start using the X220 as my primary machine on the road. The Air is smaller and lighter and will remain my office machine and will continue to go with me to court every day, but for any travel out of town the battery life, keyboard and display of the X220 are extremely tempting.
Its nice to be back on a ThinkPad.
First, I just can't get over this screen. The X220i I first ordered wasn't bad, better than my old 2006 MacBook or my very old ThinkPad X32 and X21, but it was visibly dingy when used next to my MacBook Air or Macbook Pro. The IPS display on this X220 is truly gorgeous, better than any I've ever used. Its not the brightest, a distinction goes to my old 1999 Toshiba Portege 3490CT which had the backlight from hell, but viewing angles, color quality and contrast are better than my desktop LCDs wiht the singular exception of the 2011 iMac my secretary uses (also IPS), which is equal, not better. The Windows calibration tools don't go into as fine of an adjustment range and are harder to use than Apple's, but the end result is still a beautifully calibrated display that is visibly superior to either of my Apple laptops.
Ahhhh, the joys of a proper ThinkPad keyboard and TrackPoint. I actually like the chicklet keys on Apple's current machines, and have come very close to impulse buying an X1x0 a number of times at Office Depot thanks to its even better interpretatin of the chiclet board (with Trackpoint). Call me old-fashioned, but I'd forgotten how good a traditional ThinkPad keyboard feels, and while I am making more errors on this than on my Air, those errors are made at a higher typing speed. The TrackPoint, as always, is my favorite laptop pointing device. Mine is set to a very light touch, the way I've done since moving from cat tongue to rubber dome caps with my first T42p. The TrackPoint on the X220 is exactly what I expected it to be, no difference that I can tell even back to my old T20 (once fitted with rubber dome).
As many of the reviews correctly point out, the palmrest is really shalow on the X220. My much smaller MacBook Air's palmrest resembles a soccer field by comparison, but it is comfortable, wiht a gentle curve at the front that feels good to the touch. The touchpad, well, it sucks. Compared to other Windows laptops I've owned it is perhaps average, but Apple is just so vastly superior in its touchpad implementation that anything else is just annoying to use. Right now I turned the sensitivity down so I get few accidental inputs and use the touchpad for navigating in a browser, which I like better on a touchpad than with the TrackPoint. The click feature works fine, but the two finger scrolling is VEYR jerky, to the point of being unusable. I may try one of the 3rd party two-finger-scroll utilities, or more likely will keep the install pure and just use the TrackPoint. The touchpad may end up getting disabled in the driver, I'm still undecided.
Battery life is currently showing at 7 hours in the task bar, with the display at 6. I expected more out of the 9 cell, but this is a brand new system and I do have the fastest i5. I have also not yet fiddled with the battery stretch utility and have confgured regular power management not to turn off the display. I am sure that with some optimization I can hit 12 hours.
My original plan was to swap the 128 GB SSD out for a 320 GB HDD (should arrive today) and use a 40 GB Intel 310 mSATA (also should arrive today) as the boot drive. I still may do that, but I am VERY happy with the performance and the silence of the SSD and may set it up as a dual SSD system (mSATA for music and video, SSD to remain in stock configuration with OS and recovery. I'll try it both ways.
I will likely completely kill the swap file and see how it runs without one. With 8GB of RAM, I just can't imagine Windows needing any more than that. This should also help avoid constant writes to the SSD and make the drive last longer.
I bought this for military use and cannot use it at all for my primary business management software, which is Mac-only. Since I can use that software on my iPhone and iPad when I travel, I just might start using the X220 as my primary machine on the road. The Air is smaller and lighter and will remain my office machine and will continue to go with me to court every day, but for any travel out of town the battery life, keyboard and display of the X220 are extremely tempting.
Its nice to be back on a ThinkPad.