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Lenovo ThinkPad X300

Manufacturer: Lenovo   Part number: X300_DVDRW
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CNET Editors' rating: 8.5 out of 10
Average user rating: 7.3 out of 10

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CNET Editors' review - Lenovo ThinkPad X300 Editors' choice
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Excellent

8.5

out of 10
CNET Editor's rating: 8.5 out of 10
Reviewed by Michelle Thatcher
Review date: 02/22/08
Release date: 02/26/08

The good: Extremely thin and light; sleekest ThinkPad yet; built-in DVD burner, plus WWAN, GPS, and wireless USB.

The bad: Solid-state drive comes at a high premium; touch pad's location makes it easy to accidentally graze while typing.

The bottom line: The ThinkPad X300 breaks new ground by packing a broad display, full-size keyboard, and nearly every feature a mobile user needs into a sleek, lightweight case.

We're not even two months into the new year, and we've already seen Apple's remarkably slim MacBook Air and Toshiba's update to its featherweight Portege R500. Both were very strong contenders for the top spot on our list of favorite ultraportable laptops--until this week, when we got our hands on the Lenovo ThinkPad X300. The newest addition to the ThinkPad X series incorporates the best of the MacBook Air (13.3-inch display, full-size keyboard, thickness less than one inch) with the best of the Portege R500 (solid-state hard drive, thorough selection of ports) while also adding its own great features, such as a built-in DVD burner, WWAN connectivity, and GPS. The X300's ThinkPad DNA is evident in its instantly recognizable black, square-edged case, but at 0.73 inch thick and weighing anywhere from 2.9 pounds to 3.5 pounds (depending on your battery and optical drive choices), it's simply the sleekest ThinkPad yet. The biggest criticism of the ThinkPad X300 is its price: the base configuration costs $2,476 and goes up from there. But innovative design, thorough features, and cutting-edge components don't come cheap, and the ThinkPad X300 is truly unique in its balance of portability and usability.

Price as reviewed / starting price $2,936 / $2,476
Processor 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo SL7100
Memory 2GB of 667MHz
Hard drive 64GB solid-state drive
Graphics Intel GMA X3100 (integrated)
Operating System Windows XP Professional
Dimensions (WDH) 12.5 x 9.1 x 0.73 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 13.3 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 3.4 / 4.0 pounds
Category ultraportable
.

Aside from the laptop's dimensions, the design changes with the ThinkPad X300 have been incremental. The ultraportable still features a rectangular black case built around a magnesium chassis. There's still a blue ThinkVantage button above the keyboard, a fingerprint reader below it, and a keyboard light on the top edge of the display. However, ThinkPad fans will notice small changes that make the X300 a bit more attractive. The lid and wrist rest feature an appealing soft matte finish; the ThinkVantage, power, and mute buttons glow when pressed; and the front edge is devoid of any ports or switches.

In addition to the keyboard light, the ThinkPad X300's display bezel includes a 1.3-megapixel Webcam and a noise-canceling digital microphone for Web conferencing. The matte-finish display itself features a 1,440x900 native resolution that's sharper than that of the MacBook Air and other similarly sized screens, resulting in text and icons that are a bit smaller than you'd expect. The sharper resolution doesn't cause tremendous problems, though we did find ourselves pumping up the font size on a newspaper's Web site so we could read a lengthy article. We also zoomed in a bit when working on documents and spreadsheets. The trade-off: more screen real estate for multitasking and, when it's time for a break, beautiful video.

Given the amount of typing the typical executive does through the course of the work day, a keyboard can make or break an ultraportable. The ThinkPad X300 actually uses the same keyboard found on Lenovo's 14- and 15-inch models--which is to say, not the condensed keyboard found on previous X series models and many ultraportable laptops from other manufacturers. After conducting an entire morning's work--and writing this review--on the ThinkPad X300, we still don't feel like we've been typing on a laptop. We love it.

Lenovo decided to include both the red eraser-head TrackPoint pointing stick and a touch pad on the ThinkPad X300. The decision is understandable: many ThinkPad users are viscerally attached to their TrackPoints, while other users can't stand it, so why not include both methods? However, the double sets of mouse buttons seem to run counter to the overall theme of simplification that the ThinkPad X300 embodies. In order to make room for the TrackPoint's buttons, the touch pad is placed rather low on the wrist rest, with its buttons near the laptop's front edge. Fortunately, the ThinkPad X300 is thin enough that we could use the touch pad with our wrist resting on a desk surface--or on our leg, when the laptop was in our lap. Of greater concern is the fact that, during our lazier typing moments when our wrists dropped to the wrist rest, we were likely to graze the touch pad and accidentally misplace the cursor.

  Lenovo ThinkPad X300 Average for ultraportable category
Video VGA-out VGA-out
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks Headphone/microphone jacks
Data Three USB 2.0 Two USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, mulitformat memory card reader
Expansion None PC Card or ExpressCard slot
Networking Ethernet, 802.11 a/g/n, Bluetooth, WWAN, GPS Modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g Wi-Fi, optional Bluetooth, optional WWAN
Optical drive DVD burner None, or DVD burner

The ThinkPad X300 is an interesting exercise in minimalism. The laptop lacks some features that would be considered standard on an ultraportable, such as an expansion card slot or multiformat memory card reader, both of which are found on the Toshiba Portege R500. But it adds features that will likely be of higher value to mobile workers, such as WWAN, wireless USB, and even GPS. More notably, it incorporates many features that the MacBook Air does not, including two more USB ports, an Ethernet connection, and a built-in DVD burner. These additions make the ThinkPad X300 a realistic choice for use as a primary computer, which is a major advantage over its Apple competitor, especially given the price.

The base model of the ThinkPad X300 costs a hefty $2,476. Much of that price can be attributed to the laptop's 64GB solid-state drive, which promises faster application launch and boot times as well as a longer lifetime than a traditional hard drive with moving parts. (Unlike the MacBook Air, which comes in a low-cost configuration with a traditional spinning hard drive, the ThinkPad X300 is available only with a solid-state drive.) Our review unit included a few upgrades--twice as much RAM as the base configuration, plus WWAN, GPS, and an extended-life six-cell battery--that brought the price to $2,936. That's a bit high, even for an ultraportable, but still below the cost of a MacBook Air equipped with a solid-state drive.

Like the MacBook Air, the ThinkPad X300 incorporates Intel's new small-form-factor Core 2 Duo CPU, though with a slightly slower clock speed. That slower speed is at least partly to blame for the ThinkPad X300 trailing behind the MacBook Air on the multimedia multitasking portion of CNET Labs' performance benchmarks. Fortunately the ThinkPad's 2GB of RAM helped it keep up with the MacBook Air on our Photoshop test, where it also scored well ahead of the Toshiba Portege R500. As with any Core 2 Duo system, the ThinkPad X300 proved more than adequate for typical business productivity tasks, including Web surfing, media playback, and running office applications. We were able to conduct a full morning's work while streaming music over the wireless connection without any stuttering or noticeable performance issues.

In anecdotal testing of the ThinkPad X300 with the six-cell battery, we were able to get between 3 and 4 hours of battery life, depending on our usage and screen brightness settings. On CNET Labs' DVD battery drain test, the ThinkPad X300 died out after 3 hours, 43 minutes, just 20 minutes before the MacBook Air. That's obviously not enough juice for a full day of work away from the desk, but it is nearly an hour longer than the Portege R500's battery life. Here's another place where the ThinkPad X300's built-in DVD is an advantage: you can purchase an additional three-cell battery that fits inside the drive bay to extend your mobile computing time. Also an advantage: the ThinkPad X300's removable battery, which is remarkable only because users cannot replace the battery in the MacBook Air.

As Lenovo has moved toward offering built-to-order systems, the company has dropped the baseline warranty for ThinkPads to a single year. Extending coverage to three years costs $119; other reasonably priced upgrades add coverage for accidental drops or spills and LCD damage. The preloaded suite of ThinkVantage applications helps users troubleshoot problems, and Lenovo's support Web site includes the expected troubleshooting topics, driver downloads, and user guides.

Multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Lenovo ThinkPad X300
1,585 
HP Compaq 2710p
1,671 

Adobe Photoshop CS3 image-processing test (in seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
  
Apple MacBook Air
274 
Lenovo ThinkPad X300
286 
HP Compaq 2710p
411 
Toshiba Portege R500-S5003
472 

DVD battery drain test (in minutes)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Apple MacBook Air
243 
Lenovo ThinkPad X300
223 
Toshiba Portege R500-S5003
169 
HP Compaq 2710p
143 

Find out more about how we test laptops.

System configurations:

Lenovo Thinkpad X300
Windows XP Professional SP2; 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo L7100; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 384MB Mobile Intel 965GM Express; 64GB Samsung Solid State Drive

Apple MacBook Air - 1.6GHz / 13.3 inch
OS X 10.5.1 Leopard; Intel Core 2 Duo 1.6GHz; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 144MB Intel GMA X3100; 80GB Samsung 4,200rpm

HP Compaq 2710p
Windows Vista Business Edition; 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Ultra Low Voltage U7600; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 148MB Mobile Intel 965GM Express; 80GB Toshiba 4,200rpm

Toshiba Portege R500-S5003
Windows XP Professional SP2; 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Ultra Low Voltage U7600; 1024MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 224MB Mobile Intel 945GM Express; 64GB Samsung Solid State Drive

(Originally posted on CNET Reviews)
User opinions - Lenovo ThinkPad X300
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Very good

7.3

out of 10
Average user rating from 29 users

Sort 29 user opinions by:

10 out of 10 - Perfect
You can disable the touchpad if you don't like it!
Just for people who is NOT familiar with thinkpads, you can disable the stick or/and the touchpad if you ... Read more
by yangkuan81 (see profile) - February 22, 2008

13 out of 17 users found this user opinion helpful.
1 comment posted to this opinion

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
worth my time
I have never considered buying an ultra-portable before because of how hard they are to use and because of how ... Read more
by cbaisa (see profile) - February 22, 2008

10 out of 13 users found this user opinion helpful.

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
best option for roadwarriors. period.
this computer is perfect for who it is targeted for: roadwarriors, traveling businessman..thats it.

i really like this computer,

...
Read more
by silvershox (see profile) - February 23, 2008

4 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
2 comments posted to this opinion

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
Apple - Take some notes here...
Honestly, I couldnt believe my eyes when I saw the Mac World presentation of Macbook Air. I couldn't believe ... Read more
by hash0217 (see profile) - February 22, 2008

8 out of 15 users found this user opinion helpful.
1 comment posted to this opinion

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
The perfect Ultra-portable ... ALMOST
I have had 8 Thinkpad notebooks over the years, including X20,X21,X23,X31,X40 and Z61T. I was really ... Read more
by samhobbs (see profile) - March 26, 2008

2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
2 comments posted to this opinion

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
Great start for an UltraPortable ssd system
This is great evolutionary ssd technology. So if you wanna be one of the first on the block, expect to ... Read more
by rctech1 (see profile) - March 4, 2008

2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
Man I want one!!!
While this is a pricey laptop, it's justified for the specs. It's a Thinkpad, so you knows it'... Read more
by Nooorm (see profile) - February 23, 2008

2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.

7 out of 10 - Very good
More practical than Macbook Air
The biggest issue for me would be lack of space for my media, which sets me at about 80 gigs ... Read more
by norbert6464 (see profile) - February 22, 2008

3 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.

4 out of 10 - Mediocre
Beware defective touchpad
Unlike some reviewers, I actually own one. I eagerly waited 6 weeks for it, and started playing with it right ... Read more
by ann o (see profile) - June 23, 2008

1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
Best in Class as of 02/26/08
The MacBook Air is a far inferior product to this, more meant to stun the audiences than be a real ... Read more
by Schuyler Davis (see profile) - February 26, 2008

1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.





Full specifications - Lenovo ThinkPad X300
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Manufacturer: Lenovo
Part number: X300_DVDRW
Greenpeace 'Guide to Greener Electronics'
Greenpeace 'Guide to Greener Electronics' manufacturer rating (Mar 2008) 7.3
CNET Labs' Benchmarks
CNET Labs Battery Drain Test: DVD Playback (min) 223
Publish these specs on your Web site
Product series - Lenovo ThinkPad X300
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Lenovo ThinkPad X300
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs:
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 w/ 3-Cell Bay Battery
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: EPEAT Gold, EPA Energy Star 4.0, RoHS, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 1 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.2 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6478 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: EPA Energy Star 4.0, RoHS, EPEAT Gold, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.4 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6478 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: RoHS, EPEAT Gold, EPA Energy Star 4.0, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.2 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6477 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: RoHS, EPA Energy Star 4.0, EPEAT Gold, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.4 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows Vista Business
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6477 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: RoHS, EPEAT Gold, EPA Energy Star 4.0, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 4 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.4 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate
Lenovo ThinkPad X300-6477
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: RoHS, EPEAT Gold, EPA Energy Star 4.0, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.4 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows Vista Business
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6478 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: EPA Energy Star 4.0, EPEAT Gold, RoHS, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.2 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows Vista Business
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 6478 - Core 2 Duo SL7100 1.2 GHz - 13.3
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs: EPA Energy Star 4.0, EPEAT Gold, RoHS, Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2 GHz), 2 GB DDR II SDRAM, 3.4 lbs, 13.3 in TFT active matrix, Microsoft Windows Vista Business
Lenovo ThinkPad X300
Manufacturer: Lenovo
Specs:
Manufacturer Info - Lenovo ThinkPad X300
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Manufacturer info
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http://www.lenovo.com/us/en/
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Website: http://www.lenovo.com/us/en/
Address: 1009 Think Place
Morrisville, NC 27560
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