sanjuro wrote:Thinkpads were one of the last to make the transition from 4:3 to 16:10. Likewise I expect the Thinkpads will be one of the last to go from 16:10 to 16:9, though the transition has already started in the L and 15" T series.
Since Lenovo has been a follower in the LCD transitions, it remains to be seen how wide spread the adoption of 16:9 screens will be in the small-footprint Thinkpads.
Apple, which was among the first to adopt wide screen format in notebooks, has elected to keep their macbooks at 16:10 even in their 15 and 17 inchers while adopting 16:9 for imacs with larger displays. They also elected to use 4:3 in their iPad. So this means that Apple has not seen the merit of 16:9 format in the portable computing (discounting iPad and iPhones).
Since Lenovo has been a follower in the LCD format war, it is not clear when Thinkpads will go 16:9 in 12", 13", and 14" formats. If they follow the rest of PC industry, next major redesigns will feature 16:9 LCDs in sizes smaller than 14". If they follow Apple, 16:10 may stay a while longer and there is a chance that even 4:3 format will make a return. It may well all depend on how fast LCD suppliers stop manufacturing 16:10's and whether new 16:9 notebooks like Thinkpad Edge are big sellers.
Apple, like any good
ENTERTAINMENT company has an exceptional marketing team. They are very capable of listening to the great whining on the internet for a 4:3 IPS screen and see that these people frankly don't give a
(Word for: Excrement) about a quality product. Combined with their great capability to basically beat their suppliers as if they owed them lunch money, they will capitalize on people who really want a 4:3 IPS screen in anything.
However this doesn't mean you'll be getting a good product. Afterall, they are ENTERTAINMENT centric and not really a "hardware" company. Afterall, anyone can mill solid aluminum blocks, crank the reality distortion field and claim something like an ordinary iPhone screen has higher resolution than the human eye can perceive* (Realistically, for you photographer types, the human eye has in excess of a few hundred megapixels and incredibly high sensitivity with a fairly good SNR ratio too.) and market the product at their sheeple by shoving it down their throats.
Like any cutthroat ENTERTAINMENT company, they will use their marketing department to employ el-neato phrases like "We used electron microscopes to stare at the thumbscoop until it was perfect" while blatantly lying. This is however, a SUPERIOR method than lets say, actually putting work into your product in terms of convincing the unenlightened masses. Last time I checked, the unenlightened masses fell for 16:9 the moment their "slightly tech savvy but more like marketing targeted fool" and Apple rode that hard...
*
http://www.clarkvision.com/imagedetail/ ... ution.html Please compare and contrast this to what Steveo has to shove down people's throats.
Remember, you could be using state of the art Roentgen LCDs miniaturized into 14.1" in 4:3 but LCD manufacturers frankly didn't agree with IBM, they did however, ride that little wave of shoving 16:9 down your throat and Apple joined in there because it is easier to market products than to improve them.
... Afterall, who cares about having a laptop design that has excellent thermal properties?