http://www.lenovoblogs.com/designmatters/?p=172
But what happens to us all T6x/R6x/X6x/Z60 owners? Are we to be left behind?

It is very hard to predict anything but if they keep the keyboard layout, you would be able to replace the old keyboard.gator wrote:But what happens to us all T6x/R6x/X6x/Z60 owners? Are we to be left behind?
I need to buy it, don't I?ryengineer wrote: It is very hard to predict anything but if they keep the keyboard layout, you would be able to replace the old keyboard.

Sadly yes.gator wrote:I need to buy it, don't I?



http://stuff.silverorange.com/images/t2 ... yboard.jpgMagic Wonder425 wrote:What're these stripes, just designs?
Was it really something that "needed" to happen? I haven't used a single-latch screen, but a double latch makes perfect sense for me - grab it with two hands and then use these two hands to open the screen to avoid stresses from flexing the lid as you may have if you used one hand.gator wrote:there are aspects that needed to evolve (for ex. dual LCD latch --> single latch).

As I said before, the stripes are for aesthetic reasons only - and to associate the trackpoint buttons with the trackpoint. That is a very good reason to have them back, if not for visual appeal/maintaining the design legacy.bill bolton wrote:None of the multitude of mice I have used over the years has ever had colour stripes on the buttons, and personally I can't see any partical reason why a Thinkpad needs them.
It was something that was really needed IMHO. I have used an X31 (and still use an T23/600X with dual latches) and sometimes while opening/closing I'll open one of them fully, usually the right since I am right handled, and the other will open after a small lag. That will put more flex on the top cover than with a single hand use.qviri wrote: Was it really something that "needed" to happen? I haven't used a single-latch screen, but a double latch makes perfect sense for me - grab it with two hands and then use these two hands to open the screen to avoid stresses from flexing the lid as you may have if you used one hand.
Even after an year, I still need both hands to open my T60. The point of having a single latch IMHO was not to facilitate opening the thinkpad with a single hand, but to make sure that both latches open/close simulatanously, which was not the case before (see above paragraph).tomh009 wrote: ... and with the weight of the battery moved to the back on the X6 series, you still need two hands to open it up, even with the single latch.
First, I think you make too much of the "unwillingness to change". More than anything, it's good for a company to listen to its customers, whether those customers are asking for a change or for the continuation of a product feature.snife wrote:I've been vocal about changes i'd like to see, such as a UV Thinklight (since someone mentioned it) and the battery moved to the front like Dells, but i'm sure such changes will be unlikely to happen now.
Space should really be an issue (you just move everything back so nothing is using that area) and the extension for the 8 cell would be about an inch (as it is on the back, if it was made of the correct matieral then it would be comfortable as a palmrest extension, I think this will become more important once the X series moves to widescreen and the palmrest will likely be smaller. It has the added advantage that batteries these days do not product much heat so it would avoid the issues we have had with heat from components like HDD, Mini PCI Express etc being under the palmrest and would also allow many of the ports to move to the back of the system, where I think they should have remained, I cannot believe people prefer connections like VGA, power and ethernet on the sides.tomh009 wrote:As for the battery, there are pros and cons to a front battery. First and foremost on the negative side, though, there is a space constraint. On the X series, for example, the front of the system is very thin, making even the fitment of a four-cell battery a challenge, and an 8-cell would provide a massive extension to the front.

So ... did you ask Lenovo management contacts for a front battery location? What did they say to your suggestion?snife wrote:You may think i am making a lot of the unwillingness to change but I know Lenovo mangement and I know how they react to things.

That may be true of the current laptops that Apple produces, but Steve Jobs was Interim CEO when Apple produced the 'Pismo' PowerBook G3, arguably the best combination of durability and expandability that Apple has ever produced in a portable. I do wish that Apple would design from that perspective again, at least with one model line. Until that time, I'll use a ThinkPad (unless I luck out like Ray and get a free one!)lilserenity wrote: I'm no mean businesswoman, but the aesthetic (I don't see TPs as bland at all) of the ThinkPad really tunes me into thinking, this is a workhorse, a tool and not some ornament I'll polish, I'll use and use it and it'll see me through and they have. This compares with say the frottage one could say is sometimes indicative of oooh Apple perhaps

people don't. consumers do. apple started that hippy pattern and lenovo is just following their footsteps. you should feel lucky that you don't have all the ports on one side of the computerGomJabbar wrote: "I cannot believe people prefer connections like VGA, power and ethernet on the sides." These connections are best left on the back of the notebook.


Unfortunately not, my lines of communication in that respect are a one-way street, I only have contacts to get things fixed, not to get things changed.tomh009 wrote:So ... did you ask Lenovo management contacts for a front battery location? What did they say to your suggestion?snife wrote:You may think i am making a lot of the unwillingness to change but I know Lenovo mangement and I know how they react to things.
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