Tested: Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Update W/ Intel Broadwell, Self-Encrypting SSD 87
MojoKid writes Lenovo just revamped the ThinkPad X1 Carbon and in this third generation of the machine, they've adopted Intel's latest 5th generation Core Series Broadwell processors, along with a few other updates. In addition, they've retooled the keyboard and trackpad area, returning back to more traditional roots versus the second generation machine, which was met with some criticism due to its adaptive function key row and over-simplified, buttonless trackpad. Notable upgrades to this 3rd gen model are a faster Core i5-5300U processor and a self-encrypting Opal2 compliant SSD. Performance-wise, the new ThinkPad offers up some of the best numbers in utlrabooks currently, though battery life is a bit middle of the road, but still able to last over 8 hours under light, web-driven workloads.
Fuck em (Score:5, Informative)
I do not want SSL busting malware nor support a company which does so
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Re:Fuck em (Score:5, Informative)
Lenovo has also become infamous for BIOS Whitelisting, where if you attempt to upgrade your WLAN card, or switch to one more friendlier to your OS, but not Lenovo's OEM hardware, the BIOS arbitrarily decides, that since your PCI card isn't in the Whitelist, the BIOS is going to disable that device and prevent use of it with the system.
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People hack the bios and disable that. I'm typing this from a T410 which such a hacked bios.
Scared the crap out of me after first flashing it. The hacked bios beeps the system speaker 5 or 6 times to show you it's hacked, but I didn't expect that and thought the machine was now bricked since I flashed it, rebooted, and started hearing system beeps.
But after the 5 or 6 beeps are up, the system loaded normally and I had to go clean my drawers...
Anyways that isn't a problem. We will hack the bios and kill the
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bull fucking shit. wlan cards have their own certification separate from the laptop itself, and excludes the antenna.. which is just a wire, usually wrapped part way around the display bezel or keyboard and has no certification of its own
Oh have they? (Score:1)
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Lenovo aren't the only ones who whitelist PCI cards. HP, Toshiba and others do it too. It's to help pass FCC testing and meet their regulations.
There are two issues that whitelisting helps with. Firstly, manufacturers like to put high gain antennas in their laptops. If they allowed users to change wifi cards it is possible that some perfectly legal high power cards with exceed the intentional radiated power limits, so they limit the options to a list that they have approved with the FCC.
The second issue is
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Lenovo aren't the only ones who whitelist PCI cards. HP, Toshiba and others do it too. It's to help pass FCC testing
More like: it helps ensure their customers' compliance with maximum revenue for Lenovo. Ditto for HP. This doesn't apply just to wireless cards.... the devices from HP that have whitelisting require whitelisting of ANY miniPCIe component, not just WLAN cards.
Once the computer is out of Lenovo's hands, they have no burden with regards to FCC certification after the end user makes any mod
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HP also does this (or at least it did last time I tried to upgrade a NIC on an HP laptop). It wouldn't accept an Intel Wifi NIC from a non-HP machine, though it did accept a faster NIC from another HP.
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I do not want SSL busting malware nor support a company which does so
There are people on Slashdot, of all places, who are clueless enough not to wipe their machine with a clean OS image *regardless* of which OEM it came from? Guess all the technical people really have bailed out on this pesthole.
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Lenovo made ThinkPads are overheating garbage. You do understand that, right?
Soldered RAM (Score:3, Insightful)
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What does everybody call that pointer thing. I call it a nub. My wife calls it a clit.
Re:Soldered RAM (Score:5, Funny)
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What does everybody call that pointer thing. I call it a nub. My wife calls it a clit.
Alternatively, my recommendation for a long, happy marriage is that you *never* refer to your wife's clitoris (nor she your penis) as either "that pointer thing" or "a nub". Just my $0.02.
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Alternatively, my recommendation for a long, happy marriage is that you *never* refer to your wife's clitoris (nor she your penis) as either "that pointer thing" or "a nub". Just my $0.02.
I'd think the real secret is to never prefer using a mouse.
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It's called a trackpoint.
Re:Soldered RAM (Score:5, Interesting)
I still use and love my x60t. It's a great linux laptop. I could live with 8gb of soldered ram because it's 8 gb, although a bad ram chip will not be fun.
The real thing I want to know is how Linux-friendly this new laptop is, and can you get it without a Windows tax.
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According to their website (or at least, the Australian version), you get the choice of Win7 or Win8.
As for Linux support, it seems that the mouse buttons don't work [freedesktop.org]. Apparently there's a patch for the kernel which will be included in the next release.
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I think the ThinkPad X220 was the pinnacle of ThinkPad design: Perfect keyboard, light, IPS display, easily serviced and upgraded, no need for dongles. It's been downhill ever since. For the life of me, I can't understand why Lenovo felt the need to mess with their keyboards after the X220/T420/W520. They were absolutely perfect.
It's telling that the biggest feature of the newest X1 Carbon is the return of the same keyboard as the first X1 Carbon. It was good machine. No doubt this one is too, but I'll be
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...don't know why anyone would buy this rather than Dell's XPS 13... (Too bad it doesn't have a trackpoint.)
You answered your own question - no Trackpoint. On several occasions I've used my Lenovo to do CAD work without a mouse. Not the best for a long session of schematic capture or PCB layout, but actually quite viable. Wouldn't even attempt it on a Touchpad. And even in day-to-day browsing and e-mailing, Trackpoints rule and Touchpads drool.
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I have 4 Thinkpads in my house. One personal, one from my employer, and one from each of two clients. They're all within two years old and they all have horrible trackpads. Enough so that I do most of my work on a macbook.
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Yea, how you'd buy a Thinkpad instead of a Macbook and run Windows/Linux on it, I dunno.
The 5300U is lackluster at best. (Score:2)
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It averages less than 4000 on the PassMark CPUMark test. Roughly the same as a SandyBridge i3 (i3-2xxx series) or to put things into perspective a Core 2 Quad from 2008.
I'm using a Core 2 Quad from 2007 to type this right now, you insensitive clod!
(I need a new computer. *sniffle*)
Re:The 5300U is lackluster at best. (Score:4, Informative)
The i3 was a 35W part and the C2Q was a 95W part.
The broadwell is doing that in 15W, and throwing down a really half decent GPU at the same time.
It's built to purpose, not win benchmarks.
Nice Slashvertisement (Score:5, Insightful)
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Better, is anyone considering buying cryptographic hardware from a company with a track record of shipping MITM malware and tampering with ciphered transmissions?
Superfish already included? (Score:2)
=P
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No, they moved the equivalent into the ROM.
love my carbon (Score:2)
i bought a first-gen with SSD last year, loaded it with ubuntu. it's awesomely fast , simple and light, Iike it far better than my Macbook. Real touch typists know the value of the trackpoint far outweighs Mac's "gestures".
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you don't have to move your hand off the keyboard to use the mouse.
pre-installed with Pokki App Store (Score:5, Insightful)
Pokki App Store came pre-installed on my X1 Carbon 2015. At first, I thought it was the official Microsoft App Store. It mimics the Microsoft Windows App Store, but I assume Lenovo gets a cut for apps purchased through Pokki App Store.
Pokki does not show up in control panel's uninstall list. You have to click on uninstall.exe located at /users/~/appdata/local/pokki. Besides Pokki, other programs I uninstalled were Norton, Nitro PDF, and MS Office trial.
X1 Carbon is an excellent laptop, though overpriced. I would have been just as fine with the T450s or Dell XPS 13.
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Thanks, don't understand the zero today mod.
The Superfish (Score:3)
Whatever you do don't mention the Superfish. I mentioned the Superfish but I think I got away with it.
I'll pass (Score:2, Insightful)
Lenovo? More like Oh-hell-no. Sorry, guys, but you've cratered your brand by selling out your customers for a few pieces of silver. I will never again by anything Lenovo makes. Hope that $250K was worth it.
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And surely they wouldn't sell out their other users. Only the one's they've already been caught selling out.
Mandatory xkcd (Score:1)
http://xkcd.com/243/
Will not buy Lenovo again (Score:1)
After they swapped the old Rock solid thinkpad keyboard out for a island style keyboard I decided I did not want a new Lenovo, The superfish fiasco just made double sure
Nothing self encrypts in the whole world (Score:5, Insightful)
Encryption is a software process, in all cases. If something "self encrypts", that means it has access to the key, and produced cyphertext from plaintext, and plaintext from cyphertext. There's literally NOTHING stopping:
> It could keep the key in some scrambled (and recoverable) form, rendering the encryption meaningless to anyone who knows how to access it physically.
> It could use an escrow algo such that the vendor or their appointed agents (aka, a distant freedom hostile government, hackers) can gleefully decrypt anything forever.
> It could use an implementation with a weakness (deliberately or accidentally) which allows anyone with knowledge of the weakness and sufficient cryptanalysis capabilities to decrypt.
Now, you COULD get around this in a few ways- but ultimately, it's just a bad idea to trust hardware encryption. It is fundamentally not trustworthy.
This is not a problem with the new lenovo, or lenovo in general, but rather with all self encrypting USB sticks, hard drives, SSD,s etc. Because nothing self encrypts!
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Now, you COULD get around this in a few ways- but ultimately, it's just a bad idea to trust hardware encryption. It is fundamentally not trustworthy.
As with all things, its a question of what you are trying to accomplish.
If you don't want to have your laptop stolen out of your car and then find your identity stolen a self-encrypting drive isn't a bad idea; and might work out quite well.
If your a suspected terrorist and want to keep the US or Chinese government out... no, its not good enough.
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Plenty of reasons to want real encryption besides being a "suspected terrorist". The point is, if the government can get in, you have to trust ALL governments... and if the government can get in, so can a hacker.
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I can't build an impregnable vault that the government can't get into either if they are so inclined. But its still a pretty safe place to store valuables in the meantime.
The fact that a given hacker or government might be able to defeat a self-encrypting drive doesn't mean it necessarily won't defeat most people most of the time.
Encryption not so useful (Score:1)
If spyware is active on the running OS, then encryption is pretty much useless... just sayin'/
I've had my Lenovo X1 Carbon Gen 3 for a week now (Score:4, Interesting)
...and it rocks. Seriously. I've got Arch Linux loaded on this thing and it screams. The keyboard kicks ass. The trackpad is easily the best I've ever seen on a PC laptop. Picked mine up for a reasonable price with a 10% off coupon (I5, 8 gigs, 128 gig SSD which I upgraded to 512 gig on my own later in an effort to avoid the extortion like upgrade prices Lenovo charges on their site) for around $1100. I'm getting between about six and eight hours of battery life in Linux at the moment.
It's a sweet piece of hardware. Superfish? Who gives a fuck? I didn't even boot the M.2 SSD the thing came with. I immediately opened up the laptop and changed out the SSD as my first order of business. Buying a laptop this nice just to run Windows 8.x probably just means you are some kind of moron. Do yourselves a favor and move onto a better operating system.
Still while it is a great Linux laptop - it's not perfect - yet. The Trackpoint buttons dont work quite right in Linux yet but numerous patches (libinput, xorg synaptics driver and the kernel) are making their way into source trees everywhere. So for now it's a trackpad only experience as the trackpoint is useless without working hardware buttons.
In any event I couldn't be more pleased with this purchase.
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The hardware has changed in some way. There are numerous discussions on the patches required to deal with the changes. There is also an arch thread that covers it and links to all of the pertinent details:
https://bbs.archlinux.org/view... [archlinux.org]
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For starters - they haven't broken my SSL. Secondly, Superfish was only installed on non-Thinkpad machines. So in a sense I have voted with my wallet by buying a machine that was guaranteed to not have Superfish installed by default rather than purchasing a cheaper and ultimately less well built model that likely would've had it installed.
As for obvious distaste for Arch users, you are kidding right?
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Frankly your response only serves to show me just how far the standard for discourse here at Slashdot has fallen. I remember the days when Slashdot was a reliable community of Linux users. The fact we've got users here now that actually get their panties in a bunch over me taking a pot shot at Windows 8 is a sign of the times I suppose. What a sad, sad sign it is however.
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A lot of premium "high end" laptops still max out at 16: Alienware (pretty sure), HP Origin gaming system, Macbook Pros etc. Dropping 2k+ on a laptop I'd expect more but nope. 8GB is decent for a mid level machine. + the system has a o hum CPU so the users it is targeted for are probably not doing anything that requires > 8GB ram (watching videos, surfing, maybe in this posters case some sysadmin or dev work on relatively light weight editors/IDEs). My home computer just has 4GB which I can live with for
Self-encrypting SSD? (Score:4, Interesting)
How much does it cost for the password?