http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?t=46890
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wearetheborg Notebook Virtuoso
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I'm not sure about this, to be honest. Everyone has their own relative opinion of each brand. I personally love my T60, but after seeing all the talk about the T61s not doing so well I don't know if I will buy from Lenovo again until they get their act together.
As pipsqueak (on the ThinkPads.com forum) said:
In my personal experience my T60 is very solid and I can pick up my laptop by the hinges or edges or corners without any concern. However I am always very careful with my laptop so I always use both hands and try to be very gentle and safe with caring for my laptop. -
As much as I hate that the T61 has a plastic skin, and as much as I hate that the T61's internal rollcage is a rather incomplete replacement of a thick magnesium, REAL chassis, having a magnesium rollcage as a laptop's structure is a lot better than having the plastic as part of the structure. On the D630, the plastic is part of the structure. Because the plastic on the T61 isn't part of the structure, it doesn't feel as well constructed and cheap, which I also hate. But, while the T61 feels less durable, the outer plastic doesn't matter and the internal rollcage beats out Dell's plastic structure any day.
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Yep, I'm sticking with the T60 series for a long while. It was the last IBM ThinkPad they say.
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I just got my T61 today and we roll out Dell D620s at work. I prefer the D620 personally but considering I got the T61 for $729...I'm not too upset about it.
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I'm not defending either side here, but if you're going to claim something such as this, find an accredited source, not a personal opinion on another forum. -
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My previous experience with owning a Thinkpad is what drove me to not even consider Lenovo when I went laptop shopping this time.
All I remember fromt hat laptop is creeak creeeak creeak creeeak. Every time you moved it, it would creak like an old wooden ship. And then one of the hinges broke. -
The Inspiron I had was an absolute joke, quality wise.
The Thinkpad I've just gotten is build like a tank. -
Sometimes, I wish IBM had not sold their PC-division unit to Lenovo. There is still a gap between US and China
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I must admit that this thinkpad was a 486, and this was around 1991-1992
But still!
All the Dell notebooks Ive used at work have been great, with the exception of one that started to get a flaky touch-pad, so I disabled it and used a mouse. But that was a company laptop that got taken everywhere, by several different people, and was greatly abused (and held up to it admirably) -
Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
I disagree. Dell Latitudes are not better built than Thinkpads.
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And that just came from a guy who owns a Latitude D630
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I thought he was actually agreeing with the asinine sentiment that Dells were better than ThinkPads.
Perish the thought. Seriously. -
wearetheborg Notebook Virtuoso
Ahem, I'm not LOLing because I think its absurd, but rather how DELL is now taking on thinkpads.
I own a DELL precision M90 notebook by the way, My T30 died last year. Our group also has not had good experience with thinkpads, with motherboard failure, fan errors etc -
Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
I only said:
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yea, if your not a loyal thinkpader, than go join the MICHEAL < DELL > show on the isolated Dell forum.
loyalty appreciated! -
Cheers,
Nick -
If I were in the market for a new notebook, I would consider the D630. It's well built and fairly inexpensive with a three year warranty standard. Some swear by trackpoint which is better on the ThinkPad, but I don't use it much so it's not a huge issue for me.
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And I don't have a ton of experience, but to me I haven't seen hinges better than the thinkpads.
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Does the lid on the t61 have the rubberized feel?
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isn't it more expensive than the t61?
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Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
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Just spec'ed a D630 to match a 16U T61.
T7300, WXGA+, 120GB, 1GB, IntelAGN, Bluetooth, FP reader...
D630 came to $1849
T61 is $1549.
Unsure of Dell Coupons in Canada, but via visaperks, the 16U is $1399. -
I have to agree with some of the points about the thinkpads having a lot of flex at certain areas such as above the express cards, above optical drive and the cooling vents. I purchased an R-51 with flexview last year and initially it seemed real solid and built like a tank but with time and use I found out it had a few weaknesses like the plastic grill covering the vent finally broke since it was flexible to begin with.
It's not like the Thinkpads have some magic ingredients that make them the toughest notebooks and no other company can or will ever build solid laptops like them if not better. I have noticed the quality of thinkpads to suffer in recent years since I have used older Thinkpads before IBM sold their division (yes I know Lenovo made thinkpads before too) but the older ones never had that flexible feel as the newer ones seem to have. -
We all long for the glory days of the T20-era but with new technology to cram into a small and ever lighter case there are bound to be compromises. My T43 has weak plastic bits on the sides, for sure, but the overall feel is nice, and the T4x series is not considered to be as well built as the T6x by some. I've also never had to make use of any IBM warranty on any of my machines. All have worked flawlessly for the time I had them.
The key factor for me is how the case stands up over time. With the four thinkpads I've owned over the years I've never had a problems with hinges, parts breaking off etc. I've seen Dells with floppy hinges and cracked cases. Having said that, however, Dells are so widespead in the business world and with the amount of abuse I've seen people put loaner computers through I'm amazed at how well they hold up. Kudos to Dell.
I'm curious why everyone is so down on the rollcage and "cheap" plastic skin of the T61. I would've thought that the rollcage design is no cheaper to manufacture than a plain old alloy skin design so therefore it was implemented for legitimate performance reasons, not just to cut costs. Am I wrong?
Despite my continued support of Thinkpads I did consider the D630 but thanks to my EPP contact the T61 worked out a lot cheaperI was also able to order a 4:3 T61, which was another factor. But I do stand by my comment on Thinkpads.com that no dynasty lasts forever.
In the 1990s, Thinkpads used to be known as Stinkpads by some of the IT folks I worked with due to their implementation of buggy proprietary technology. Then they went more mainstream and won accolades for their rugged and conservative design (and great keyboards). Now that a few other manufacturers have started building notebooks to withstand more abuse (allegedly), Thinkpads are starting to lose that edge. Who knows how Thinkpads will be defined in another few years?
Thinkpads will have to start proving themselves in some other way and IMO Lenovo missed a huge opportunity by dropping the 4:3 ratio screens (or at least making them impossibly hard to get hold of). I believe there would be a huge, unfulfilled market for 4:3 notebooks as all other manufacturers go widescreen. Offer widescreen as an option, sure, but don't turn your back on the 4:3 market.
I still cling to the glory days of IBM in other ways... I'm typing this on my tank-like Model M-13 keyboard -
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wearetheborg Notebook Virtuoso
They are hell bent on ruining their reputation.
I believe Dell's business division is more professional. -
T40/41 are considered better built. T42 onwards is Lenovo built. -
I was talking more about the overall design... the T20 was built like a tank, the T30 was a dog for other reasons, and the T4x series all had the same design AFAIK, with the thin plastic bits and creaky palmrests. My T40 was made in China and had a creaky palmrest and the same flimsy plastic bits on the sides!
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T61 is comparable to a Latitude D630, but the latter is more expensive currently.
Most would agree that Lenovo/IBM is better than a Dell Business class notebook.
So the way I look at it, why pay extra for an inferior piece of machine? -
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Notebookreview.com polls are dubious. Many TP fanboys on NBR vote just on reputation in brand vs. brand polls and don't actually even own a TP.
Bad evidence. -
Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
EDIT: I am disappointed Lenovo did not release a 14.1" T61P with WSXGA+ resolution. -
Im just comparing the same series laptop i.e the R where one was from the pentium 3 era and mine is Pentium M, so I know for sure that the build quality has definitely taken a hit, maybe to reduce the prices further which does make sense since Lenovo wants to make money more than anything else. -
My R60 is still very solid, probably more so that my T42, after nine months of use though I don't abuse it much. -
I said most (as in most here on NBR) think thinkpads are better. I don't know if there is a better way to find evidence for this claim. -
No, I didn't.
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Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
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basically I was trying to show most here on NBR think IBM/Lenovo is better, which doesn't mean NBR is right...but just one opinion as a whole. -
Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
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Just curious what's your opinion? -
Homer_Jay_Thompson blathering blatherskite
I think they are about the same. I received a better price on a D630, but if I received a better price on a T61 I would be typing on a T61 right now instead.
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Soooo did you guys hear ? Dells are now better built than thinkpads !
Discussion in 'Lenovo' started by wearetheborg, Jul 31, 2007.