Just last week Intel was all “Hey! Thin, light and cheap laptops are the next big thing, TRUST US!” The Lenovo IdeaPad U350, a $650, 13.3-inch ultrathin notebook, is exactly what they were talking about.
Lenovo’s IdeaPad Y-series consumer notebooks are all going 16:9 widescreen, teed off by the 16-inch Y650, which is the thinnest, lightest notebook in that class, thanks to carbon fibre.
Way back in April was when we first showed you details on Lenovo’s Ideapad U8 mobile internet device, and Lenovo’s just launched it at the Beijing Olympics. The palmtop phone/PC has an Intel Atom Z500 ticking away inside at 800MHz, GPS, dual cameras, and with 1GB of RAM and a sizable 6GB SSD. Connectivity-wise, it’s fully loaded with 802.11 b/g wi-fi, Bluetooth, EDGE, 3G support and apparently “WiMAX support.” There’s also a dongle for picking up China Multimedia Mobile Broadcasting signals so you can watch the Olympics for free. But therein lies the rub: The 300 gram, vaguely PSP-like U8 is a China-only gizmo, so you won’t care that it’ll have a price “equivalent” to other smartphones. [Pocketables]
Lenovo recently went official with details on the upcoming Ideapad S10 ultra-portable notebook, and now there’s data on a little brother version, the S9 Lite. The S9 will have a slightly smaller screen, at 8.9-inches, with a 300-kilopixel webcam, 512MB of RAM and a 4GB SSD. It’s got the same Atom N270 and 945 GSE chipset, though, so it sounds very much like its bigger S10 brother, and comes with Linux and a “multitouch function” trackpad. In three colours, the diminutive PC will cost you US$370 upon launch in Hong Kong. [UMPCFever via Engadget]
If you’re interested in the recently announced Lenovo IdeaPad S10, and you’re in the US, we hope you like Windows XP. The US market won’t get the Linux option the rest of the sub-notebook’s customers will, but any self-respecting Linux user would wipe the drive and put their own favourite flavour on, right? [IT World]
Lenovo’s gone official with details on its Ideapad S10 ultra-portable notebook: it’ll come with Windows XP pre-installed, measure 25 x 18 cm, weigh just 1.08kg in its lightest configuration, and pack in a LED back-lit 10-inch screen. Powered by Intel Atom N270 and 945 GSE express chipset, the diminutive PC also has some advanced heat-dissipation tech so that your lap and wrists won’t get overheated. Interestingly Lenovo notes that “In some countries there will be 9-inch versions,” different colours and “Linux preloads”… but doesn’t say if those systems will hit the US eventually. Initially then, the S10 will cost you either US$399 for a 512MB memory, 80GB HDD model or US$450 for a 1GB, 160GB HDD model, and comes in black red or white. Press release info below.
Yes, netbooks and ultra-cheap lappies are being pumped out by everybody, and frankly, boring. But a Lenovo-made cheapie that brings some of their standard features and serious build quality down to a netbook pricepoint would be a bargain-bin laptop worth looking at. Supposedly the first in their IdeaPad G-Series will be 14.1-incher running on Centrino 2. Hopefully the pricepoint is in line with (or better than) its smaller competition. [DigiTimes via I4U]
Lenovo launched the 13.3″ IdeaPad U330 laptop tonight at Intel’s Centrino 2 launch event, and it looked pretty nice. As far as specs go, they only mentioned the Centrino 2-powered device is 2.2cm thick, under 1.8kg and has five hours of battery life. galleryPost('u330', 3, '');
The Lenovo IdeaPad U110 comes in the wake of America’s new obsession with tiny laptops. I could tell you that it’s powered by a 1.6Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo processor (4MB, 800 MHz), packing 120GB of PATA storage and up to 3GB of RAM (2 tested), but all you want to know is that it’s over half a pound lighter than the MacBook Air and will impress the fellow yupps at Starbucks. Still, if you’re interested in seeing if beauty is more than ultra-glossy skin deep, hit the jump to see what I loved and hated about the Lenovo IdeaPad U110.
We’ve got the final spec sheet for Lenovo’s 11-inch LED-backlit U110 lappie, and it looks like past price/specs line up, though this is the first we’re hearing of the “bezel-less screen that looks like an infinity pool.” Inside is a 1.6GHz Core 2 Duo L7500 (4MB L2 Cache, 800MHz FSB), up to 3GB of RAM (part of retail package), Intel X3100 integrated graphics and up to 120GB hard drive. It’s also got facial recognition security jazz, not to mention the swirly design lid. Goes on sale tomorrow at Lenovo.com starting at US$1899, hits retailers mid-May for US$1999.