lenovo has a new blog entry:
Change Is Hard: Why You Should Give In to the New ThinkPad Keyboard - Products - Lenovo Blogs
on chicklet:
on 6 row:
from an older blog post, it seems that they've went back on their word:
http://blog.lenovo.com/design/differentiation-of-isolation
thoughts, discussion?
imo the 6 row is the real issue. originally i thought the chicklet would be a disaster, but instead, it actually works quite well. however, the loss of the 7 row really messes up any ability to speedily do text editing with keyboard shortcuts.
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Well, it's been two years, and much has changed since then. And Lenovo didn't promise to provide us with 7-row keyboards indefinitely.
I do buy their argument for the island-style design; it does look more modern and keeps the typing feel. But they don't really have much of an argument for the loss of the 7-row keyboard, though they do say that one can quickly adapt (which is true). I would normally say it would save vertical space, but it's not really the case on the Tx30 models.
In any case, this issue has been addressed countless times already, so I'll refrain from rehashing all my stances again -
Funny, when I measured the key caps for my W530 review, they had the same surface area and spacing between the keys. Only the Windows key was bigger on the new keyboard compared to old. As for my opinion on the new keyboard, I'll just copy/paste from my article:
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As for text editing. All those keys still exist, albeit in different locations. Muscle memory will have to be retrained, which is annoying, but I don't see why the new layout is inherently worse in this regard. Of course, it isn't inherently better either. I might have forgiven the next part if it was.
The real problem with the new layout is the keys that have disappeared. Scroll Lock, Back, Fwd, Break, etc have disappeared as dedicated keys, which presents a huge inefficiency to those of us that took advantage of them.
Also, those important missing keys got put onto Fn combos. Annoying. And they also refused to label them. Though muscle memory doesn't need labels, its an insult to those of us that use those keys imho. Or maybe you could look at it as creating a secret society exclusively for people that use the secret functions of their keyboard like a boss.
btw,
Alt + ←/→ does Back/Fwd in most programs. Not as convenient as dedicated keys, but still useful. -
Tsunade_Hime such bacon. wow
After reading that article, I only have one thing to say; if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it.
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Another "improvement" is now lack of the same, identical, keyboard for desktop use ala 55Y9053. Which was a huge benefit of Lenovo ecosystem: one could switch between desktop and mobile use without looking at the keyboard for shortcuts/cursor navigation keys. Now only Apple has this.
Plus, instead of fixing the "Numlock" issue: Fn+Numpad keys on the main keyboard SHOULD work as numpad keys w/o explicitly switching NumLock, they now broke it fundamentally with all these Fn+P etc. "shortcuts".
All that, merely to remove 6 keys from the keyboard, w/o any significant space savings or larger trackpads. I'm sure some internal Powerpoint reported keyboard improvement by 8%, and got a bonus.
Next iteration of improvement could be removing this old-school Trackpoint, and dedicated PgUp/PgDn/Home/End/Insert. Volume keys, mute etc. can go to. Who needs them? Consumer-grade laptops manage w/o them for generations, right? -
Time to give up TrackPoint? - Perspectives - Lenovo Blogs
There's no doubt in my mind that the Trackpoint will be the next thing to go. Not that I care anymore, because we already bought our last "new" ThinkPad in this household...
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Will either the T5x0 or W5x0 series thinkpads ever have a fullsize keyboard (meaning full number pad) someday?
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Thors.Hammer Notebook Enthusiast
Welcome to the new Lenovo. Getting to number 1 is job one. Customer feedback be damned.
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So while I was stewing in disbelief over the new keyboard layout, my wife (who started using ThinkPads somewhere around 36x series, long before I came into the picture in any sense of the word...) ordered a X220T, and that is officially the last "new" ThinkPad that entered this house...
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If they take away the Trackpoint, at least I can leave for HP, Dell, or Toshiba. Sure the EliteBook/Tecra/Latitude trackpoints aren't as good as Thinkpad Trackpoints, but its still several times better than any trackpad can ever hope to be.
This is very different from abandoning the 7row keyboard. There are no laptops that still have the good keyboard layout left, no one to jump ship to.
Also, note about the trackpoint. Other companies still offer them. Which means that they still are required by major customers. Unlike the 7row keyboard which was completely abandoned by everyone else well before Lenovo finally let go of it. I would start getting worried if trackpoints when disappear from Latitudes and EliteBooks.
And Lenovo does a pretty decent job at listening, the problem is that we aren't the customers that they are interested in. They listen to big institutional buyers, and on the rare occasion that said buyers listen to the actual users, said users are not properly trained to use all the features of their keyboards, thus are fine with having those features being removed. Win for the institutional buyer that gets what they want, win for Lenovo that gets said buyers money, and lose for us who really don't matter to them, despite being some of their biggest fans. Damn, this world sucks. -
Get rid of the trackpoint????? Are you joking? I use it constantly.
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The $40 backlit option is undoubdetly very profitable for them. Combine that with savings on the supply side and its easy to see why theyre pushing this. Sucks for us.
Lack of pg back and forward are the biggest downsides along with the lack of texture on the keys. -
I finally gave in to temptation and commented on that blog entry yesterday. -
If Lenovo tries to claw their way up to number one, then they can pull more strings to get what they want. When they can do that, I figure it will no longer be as risky or relatively less costly to cater to our presumably niche market.
They can't slip their hand as to whether they'll ever come back around to us for the sake solidarity, so one would just have to go on a combination of faith and wishful thinking. -
What Lenovo is interested in is converting Mac users to "serious" business machines...although by the time they're done with redesigning ThinkPads they'll be anything but serious business machines... -
Thors.Hammer Notebook Enthusiast
I've used the new keyboard and do like having the backlit option. The chiclet keys feel good and I can get used to that. The layout is a bit odd but I'll get over it.
I would prefer to have the old style, but just backlit. -
If Lenovo drops the trackpoint, I would have no reason to ever buy another computer from them. That would be suicide for them IMO.
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what if they got an ultra-great touchpad? i know it's probably not the majority, but i know i've read of lots of people who use the trackpoint as an alternative to the horrible touchpads.
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Tsunade_Hime such bacon. wow
Hopefully the X240 tablet will be better, but I'm not too hopeful. -
Maybe there was some genius marketing person who said that a standard 7 row keyboard scares away mainstream, macbook customers and that 6 rows are more attractive or something. Forgetting about the sheer ridiculousness of that, why even go for that market with the ThinkPad brand when it's meant for power users? Again, no reason to get rid of the standard 7 rows on your core models for power users. The whole thing smells of trying to attract that consumer market at the expense of people who rely on ThinkPads for their consistency. -
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SecretAsianMan Notebook Consultant
I added my response as well.
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I'm fairly certain that I'm the only one who doesn't mind the 6 row layout and actually prefers the new cliclet keyboard....
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Thors.Hammer Notebook Enthusiast
That blog post is up to 81 comments which is pretty high for a Lenovo post. I wonder if this change is going to have a material effect on their bottom line.
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While I personally much prefer trackpoint (and IBM/Lenovo's in particular is great, compared to the same from Sony, HP and Dells I used) to any kind of touchpad, I just can't see the reason why Thinkpad's touchpad is that bad by default (it can be improved a bit by tweaking the settings). Even single-finger scrolling on the edge of touchpad works more reliably on most other laptops (including Lenovo consumer series) than it does on Thinkpad, and the touchpad hardware is probably the same or better in Thinkpads. -
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We traditionalist keyboard lovers are hopelessly outnumbered by people who prefer the new keyboard.
btw, Menu key is pretty legacy compared to Print Screen. People seem so surprised when I use the Menu key, but nearly PrtSc is used often for screenshots.
This is an example of how engaging the Thinkpad user community would have been stupid market research. It contains a lot of users that are in no way representative of average Thinkpad users. Only a few of us power users would notice that the Menu key disappeared.
As for the Trackpoint and Touchpad.
Everybody. Disable the damn touchpad. The Trackpoint is several times better than the stupid thing, and it really only takes 15-30 minutes to learn. Preach the wonders of the Trackpoint to everyone Thinkpad user you know. Make Trackpoint users the majority again! -
My only complaint is the lack of menu key, I used to use it all the time and you can still even find it on most consumer grade notebooks. I'm going to try some keyboard mapping programs and see if I can reassing it to Menu and the thinkvantage key to PrtSc
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@OCM,
you can use Shift + F10 for the menue key. -
two finger scrolling is working by DEFAULT on my w530
i didnt need to install anything
i was very impressed -
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Plus, One of the things holding me back from getting a X2xxT tablet was the lack of a thinklight. I love it on my T410s.
While the backlit option is not as good as the thinklight IMHO, it was a reasonable compromise since the X series tablet was never ever gonna come with a thinklight. Played a big role in helping me decide to go for thr X230T
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I wish they had a USB keyboard with a full numpad. They had one back in the IBM days but no longer
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For me, having an external USB numpad on the desk solves the issue much better than squeezing the numpad and placing Enter key into the middle of the keyboard. All is centered and convenient both on the desk and on the lap. The numpad is sub-$10 on ebay. -
Personally, I normally despise chiclet keys, although I do trust Lenovo engineers with keeping the same feel as the normal 'classic' keyboard. I'd be willing to give that a go.
However, the 6-row layout is just horrid. There's enough physical space on the notebook to keep the layout, so why change it? I use the forward/backward keys on my other ThinkPads quite often, and was pleasantly surprised once they came around in the T4x era. Fact of the matter is that I just don't use Page Up/Down all that often, and the possible typo implications from having them right next to the arrow keys... ergh. From a general use standpoint this defies all logic.
I hate to say it but ever since Lenovo purchased the business from IBM years ago the overall design of these machines entered a slow decline. There have been some things they have done right, but to me the principal reason for owning a ThinkPad was because it was a better-built, better-designed machine than the multitudes of consumer oriented junk on the market. As it stands I'll just get a loaded W520 after my trusty T500 bites the dust and call it a day. -
I actually think that the "overall design" has improved in most, but not all respects. I've owned most ThinkPads produced at one point or another and my general impression of the Lenovo models thus far is that they're better engineered, about equally-well-built, more durable, and a hell of a lot cheaper. That's a net win in my book.
This is not one of the areas where I think that improvement has occurred though. I dislike the layout change quite a bit, but I'm also not unrealistic enough to think that my use case for the old layout (Magic SysRq) is common. For people like me, yeah, this is a step back.
That said, I do believe that Lenovo did their market research and the blog post is not lying in that regard. They probably *did* do quite a bit of focus groups/studies, etc. The question is whom they sampled and how strongly those sample users cared about layout changes, etc.
And I'll criticize them for removing the TrackPoint when they do. Until then, I'll hold off on the predictions of doom since the last seven years have provided a pretty good indication that us folks in the peanut gallery aren't too great at predicting future product quality. -
All that said, I can't say that I think that blog post was a great idea, PR-wise. Then again, it's not the first time that the Lenovo Blogs have displayed surprisingly-bad PR sense (remember the post about the T400 keyboards?)
Edit: Awesome. So apparently the new forum software replaces "P R" (without the spaces) with "Google Page Ranking".
Edit 2: I was going to slag "v bSEO" (again without the space), but apparently it expands the first two characters of that too to vBulletin. Even more awesome. Pro tip: turn that garbage off. It's a wonderful way to irritate users. -
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Chiclet, 6 rows, and no forward/back keys? I was down to keyboard and TrackPoint being my sole reasons for sticking with Lenovo... and now I'm down to TrackPoint. I'm not sure if that one reason will justify me sticking with them the next time I upgrade. Oh well, like others said, we aren't the majority or Lenovo's target audience.
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I don't mind switching to chiclet keyboard at all, in fact I welcome it, however departing from the 7 row keyboard layout is outright criminal, why can't they take it one step at a time, switch to chiclet now but retaining the 7 row layout and keep the colored keys? I have a T410 and T420 right now, will receive my T430 in a week or so time, maybe I'll keep my older machines a little longer.
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Why you should give in to the new Thinkpad keyboard
Discussion in 'Lenovo' started by mikew3456, Jul 18, 2012.