Hey you guys, leave Dalalone! They are a great manufacturer, yes not everything
they produce is amazing but when it comes to value for money they are one of
the best! I wouldn’t consider paying anywhere near £1400 for a laptop, it’s too
much money.
On 13 Feb 2019, at 22:11, Amro Bilal <info@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Quite. I have no idea what came over me when I decided to try Dell in spite
of my reservations. Boy the keyboard was absolutely awful, and that was just
the start.
Amro
On 13/02/2019 09:50 pm, dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:-
Thanks, and no I don't touch del with a stick of ram *smile*
-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Amro
Bilal
Sent: 13 February 2019 21:48
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: FYI, ThinkPad X1 Extreme laptop review
Hi,
The ThinkPad X1 Extreme base configuration starts at around £1450.
However, in the X1 line there is the X1 Carbon too, and you have the
ThinkPad flagship laptops, the T series, which are just as good and for
lower prices.
The X1 Extreme machine I got cost around £2000, but I upgraded few
components the processer (i7-8750H), RAM 16GB, 1TB storage, a better web
camera (which in reflection I could have done without) plus a couple of
extras and some additional warranty services.
If anyone decides to buy Lenovo, after they choose what they want, I would
strongly recommend that they give the Lenovo customer support team a call
and it is very likely they will get a discount on the online price. They
shaved off around £160 from the laptop’s online price. And when I phoned
again to buy the docking station I had in mind, I saved about £40.
One thing I would say though, the Lenovo website is a little awkward to
navigate even for a sighted person. So, if you have the chance, get sighted
help to make your life that little bit easier.
I would say whichever make you decide to go for, do not try your luck with
Dell. Based on my experience and others I heard from you are quite likely to
run into unsolvable problems with Jaws on their machines. And after I have
had my hands on both ThinkPad and Dell, I honestly do not see why anyone who
has the choice would go for a Dell, Jaws user or otherwise.
Lastly, I think I forgot to say in my review that the X1 Extreme is a
15.6-inch screen laptop.
All the best
Amro
On 13/02/2019 08:39 pm, dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:-
What was the price of this laptop? I'm in the market for a new pc sometime
soon.
-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Amro Bilal
Sent: 13 February 2019 20:30
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] FYI, ThinkPad X1 Extreme laptop review
Hello all,
Some people were interested to hear of my experience with the ThinkPad
X1 Extreme laptop which I bought recently so here are few words.
I will start with the audio, as some of you may remember that I had to
return a Dell XPS 15.6-inch XPS laptop I had bought because Jaws sounded
distorted and was very irresponsive on that machine.
On the ThinkPad Jaws sounds just fine with no issues. I noticed a couple of
times that the volume loudness has fluctuated ever slightly but this could
be my ears playing tricks on me. The built-in speakers are more than
adequate but they won’t beat your external desktop speakers obviously.
The machine is very responsive with Jaws and it behaves as you would expect
it to, so no issues there either.
The web camera is in the normal place near the top end of the screen, as
opposed to where Dell places it near the hinge, so whoever is video
chatting to you won’t be greeted with a vista of your inside nose! And ah,
unlike Dell, it supports Windows Hello so I have the option to use either
face or fingerprint to sign-in to my computer.
Now the keyboard. I have to say I am impressed! The keys are large,
well-spaced and very comfortable to type for a laptop of this size. The
keys have a very nice clicking feeling to them and the F keys are even
clustered in fours just like with desktop keyboards. Warranted, this
laptop’s keyboard is not as comfy as my £80 Cherry keyboard but, to my
delight, it is a close match. That how good it is.
This machine is classified as business laptop so it came with a clean
installation of Windows and no bloatware. It only has a couple of
pre-installed utilities one of which is Lenovo Vantage, a utility to update
drivers and software etc. I have used it, and with the help of the virtual
cursor, it works fine with Jaws.
I am mainly using this machine on AC power, but in the couple of times I
used it on battery I was pleasantly surprised in how long it lasted.
The machine is very light weight, in a small form and well-built as one
would expect from ThinkPad. It fits easily in my hand luggage for when
travelling. I have not compared it side by side with the Dell 15.6-inch XPS
laptop, which claims to be the world’s thinnest laptop, but from having it
in my hands I honestly cannot tell the difference. In any case, if it is a
couple of millimetres thicker or wider, who cares when you have a superior
machine.
I am writing this quick review after my bad experience with the Dell
15.6-inch XPS laptop so I cannot help but to compare the two, and I can say
that the ThinkPad X1 blow the Dell machine out of the water in all aspects.
I have used this laptop for only ten days so I hope my initial findings
remain as they are now, but from other people I know and their experience
with Lenovo ThinkPad laptops, they are not likely to change in regards to
the quality of this machine.
Hope this is of interest to some.
Amro
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