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meursault says...

Cool, no?


Magnesium frame looks different from the marketing brochures...

Filed under: Thinkpad

meursault says...


I bought a T400 thinking that I'd be able to live with 1280x800 resolution from a WXGA screen. I was a bit mistaken, so I decided to get an OEM WXGA+ 14.1 inch screen. Here's documentation of the process.

0. Unplug, remove battery, and ground yourself!

1. Remove screw covers. You'll find six of them on the front bezel. Two at the top and 4 at the bottom. Use an exacto-knife to take off the bottom ones (they turn out to be flat covers). The top two should be pretty easy to take out without damaging them.

2. Removing the front bezel. This is the first delicate part of the operation. Use your nails and work them between the front bezel and the rear bezel, in the seams. What you're trying to do is is unhook the claw captures near the seam. You'll hear a click when you've successfully undone one. Eventually you'll find a part that will come off. Use that as a starting point, and then continue to use your nails around the perimeter, separating the front bezel from the magnesium frame and the rear bezel. Take your time! The second challenge is the double sided tape Lenovo uses on the front bezel, if you're not careful you will crack it.

3. Remove the rear bezel. This is a lot simpler now that the front bezel is out. Like before, use your nails and work them between the rear bezel and the magnesium frame. Everything should pop right off.

4. Examine the LCD mounts. With the screen facing you, you'll notice two things. First, along the left edge you'll find an antenna (it's off color from the magnesium frame). The antenna prevents you from removing the screws on the mount. But that's fine! You can remove the whole left mount. Then look at the right edge...hm, looks like you can't just remove the mount. That's still okay too! Just remove the screws that slide into the LCD screen.

5. Okay, before you completely remove the LCD screen, you need to unlatch the light at the top of your screen. If you have a camera, I don't really know what to say, but it goes without saying that you'll need to remove that too. The light seems to be sitting in a little slot that you can gently pull out.


6. Now you can remove the LCD. Set it down on your keyboard. You'll need to remove the inverter cable and the main video cable. Remember the orientation of both!

7. Okay, well now just unscrew that left mount and put it on your new LCD. Plug everything back in and remount. I think from here on it's pretty straightforward. You system will automatically detect the new LCD panel and adjust accordingly. Make sure it all works before redoing the bezels as that's the most painful part.

This post was inspired by: http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?f=45&t=78857 and specifically

Filed under: Thinkpad

meursault says...

Specs:
Intel Core 2 Duo 2.8ghz, 6MB L2 Cache
4GB DDR3 RAM
160GB 7200 RPM HD
ATI Mobility 3470, 256mb
Vista 64, Business
Bluetooth
14 inch WXGA (1280x800)

Not too shabby if I do say so myself. I plan to do some light gaming and a lot of programming work on this computer, hence the upgraded CPU, memory, and discrete graphics. Total, just about $900 before tax.

Shipping

A lot of people in the forums seemed to have had problems with shipping from Lenovo. Understadably of course, as Lenovo ships its laptops straight from its factories in China. The build process seemed to take 3-4 days and it took another few days to clear customs. But since I'm on the West Coast, it was a quick sprint from L.A. to San Francisco.

Estimate Delivery: October 15, 2009
Actual Delivery: October 14, 2009

Not bad, no?

Out of the Box
In any case, it took awhile to get the laptop up to snuff. I'm coming from a Macbook Pro that I've been using for the last two years. It's a 4 year old model, but it was still pretty solid. Without a doubt OS X is a lot slicker and a lot more polished. Everything works out of the box without too much tweaking besides the usual bloatware.

Vista 64, however, took a little bit of time to go through the regular barrage of software and driver updates. I'd say it took about 2 or 3 restarts for everything to settle down.

Battery Tweaking
I also got the T400 with the extended 9 cell battery and the 3 cell ultra bay battery for an estimated 12+ hour battery life. I was so excited that day I stayed on the computer all day just to drain it. Check out this screen:

It's been about two weeks and the battery's still holding strong. Bother batteries come with a standard 1 year warranty, one which I plan to fully use/abuse.

On regular use I get about 9 or 10 hours on full charge. Not bad, it's good to finally be mobile. My Macbook used to get a good 40 minutes of battery life before pooping out.

Build Quality
Generally, I'm happy. But I do have some nitpicky issues.

Ask anyone who knows anything about laptops and they'll tell you that Apple has the best build quality. Regardless of operating system and other non issues, Macbook Pros just have the look and the feel down. It's great engineering really. Nothing is broken or doesn't fit. Everything works just as its supposed to, in harmony and perfection.

Judging from this Thinkpad, Lenovo has a long way to go before bringing the Thinkpad name back to its former glory. The T400 I has a LCD assembly that was slightly bowed. Bowed meaning that towards the middle the screen begins to arch ever so slightly. Ultimately destroying any clean lines that it might have had were the assembly properly fabricated. I suspect it to be more of an issue with the front and rear bezels as opposed to the magnesium frame everything's sitting on. It's still an annoyange though, and still a hit against Lenovo.

Typing on the Thinkpad, though, is a lot nicer than the Macbook. I'm not sure if it's the key spacing or the amount of effort to key in things, but the Thinkpad has it just right, making it a breeze to type long winded reviews.

However! My Thinkpad does appear to have some nagging issues with rigidity. I'm finding, especially as I type this, that the right side of the keyboard is super flexy. So much so that there's a slight echo whenever I hit any of the keys on the lefts side. I suspect that I might have gotten a defective keyboard, and I think Lenovo will replace it. It is, however, another annoyance.

Speaking of flexy, the ultrabay area and the express card slots both appear to exhibit a good deal of flex. Not terribly much, but still a noticeable amount.

Final say

It's a great machine, plenty powerful. I think the only thing I can think of is to replace the keyboard and to replace the LCD screen.

         
Click here to download:
Thinkpad_T400_Unboxing_-_thoug.zip (2212 KB)

Filed under: Thinkpad

Zain says...

I've been awol from my blog. My personal laptop, a Thinkpad T42 died a
couple of days ago. It was a sad and eventful death (and probably
painful too). It was more than four years old, which is almost like
40 in human years (or 70 dog years or infinite turtle years). To make
things worse, it was actually the first laptop that I bought with my
own money.

 The first time it died back in May turned out to be a false alarm
since the display GPU had de-soldered itself. After spending $45 on a
2 hour repair job, it continued running like a champ for a couple of
months. Unfortunately though, this had to come sooner or later. I was
kinda hoping that she would hold out until Christmas to earn a formal
retirement and formally induct it's younger brother, the upcoming
T410.

 Where do we go from here? As of now, I have a Samsung NC10 SE as my
travel book, a blazingly quick T400 as my new primary notebook and a
T60 corporate book that's slower than my old Athlon XP desktop test
bed. Come Christmas, the Sammy and T400 shall be put on the fleabay
market to raise cash for a T410 (Arrandale! mmmm) and another
Sammy/Asus/Lenovo/MSI Pinetrail-based netbook.

 In other things, we've been working behind the scenes on this
uber-cool idea for Twitter. It's scheduled to go live sometime during
the fall and I'm pretty excited about it.

 R.I.P. dear T42, you've been an amazing companion over the past 4 years.

 Alright, back to work!

Filed under: thinkpad

dm says...

坐在寝室里,突然很想找人玩游戏。现在游戏做的一个比一个占地方,一个比一个吃硬件。单纯玩游戏,家用机是不二解决的方案。至于PC,它不应是你的玩具。

“咱寝室合伙弄台Xbox 306吧?”没头没尾就这么一短信发给室友。彼此交换了下意见,基本算是同意,等人都来了再细说吧。

Xbox 360去联系一台二手的,显示输出方面,恰好我自己打算入手一台19或22寸的液晶显示器放在寝室来extend自己的Thinkpad——最近中multiple-monitors的毒太深——这样要娱乐的时候就拿来接Xbox 360提供输出。至于音频输出方面,用耳机凑合着行了。

----

喜欢用这些躁动的想法来点缀有时平淡的生活。

Filed under: Thinkpad

dm says...

单肩包,Thinkpad,手抄本,马克笔,星冰乐.

近几天头回出远门,拿着Mockup去本部和理论组沟通,明确需求.

----

附闲来无事自己Mockup的校内iPhone版.通用版功能实在太弱了...

   

Filed under: Thinkpad

ssk says...

ThinkPad T43 在庫数(2009/06/16 ) →
ThinkPad T43
15型FlexViewDisplay
商品番号 UN8BJ-XPG002
機械番号 2668-8BJ
CPU / メモリ Pentium M 750(1.86GHz) / 1GB(512M+512M)PC2-4200
HDD/FDD/CD-ROM 60GB/ -/ CD-RW&DVDコンボ(2層非対応)
ディスプレイ 15.0V型TFT FlexView Display / SXGA+
その他 FaxModem, 1000Base-T/100Base-TX/10Base-T, 内蔵ワイヤレスLAN(b/g), USB2.0(x2),指紋認証センサー
ソフト WinXP Pro
付属品 ACアダプター、バッテリー
商品仕様 極楽中古品 保証3ヶ月
ご提供価格 39,900円
(本体価格 38,000円)

安いと欲しくなるなぁ。T42 のバッテリがへたれているのでリプレイス用。
デスクトップ機の隣でサブマシンとして稼動させてメールチェック用というのが現在の T42 の使用用途。
ゲームやりながら攻略サイト開くのにちょうどよいです。これくらいのスペックは。解像度高いし。

Filed under: thinkpad

ssk says...

: 2

あれ、T400s ってバッテリ内臓?
(記事はちゃんと読んでない)

Filed under: thinkpad

Robert says...

Um das Scrollen per TrackPoint auch unter Ubuntu 9.04 zu ermöglichen muss folgendes getan werden:

Terminal öffen

sudo gedit /etc/hal/fdi/policy/mouse-wheel.fdi

Folgenden Inhalt in der Datei speichern:

Datei mouse-wheel.fdi speichern gedit schließen

sudo reboot

DONE! Dies funktioniert unter Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope und auch unter Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex wunderbar mit meinem ThinkPad T41 2373-SA1.

Filed under: ThinkPad

Robert says...

Um den Treiber zu erhalten muss lediglich folgendes Paket installiert werden:

sudo apt-get install linux-backports-modules-intrepid-generic

Der Treiber kann anschließend im restricted-manager (Jockey) aktiviert werden. Der propietäre Treiber ath_pci/ath_hal muss deaktiviert werden. Dies half mir auf meinem IBM ThinkPad T41.

Filed under: ThinkPad