The data seems a bit odd for Lenovo. The study was based on only six Lenovo devices, while half the other companies had ten devices and the rest had either eight or nine. I can't even name ten distinct Apple laptops - Neo, Air, Pro?
Lenovo also had the biggest change from last years grade, where they had an F. Other companies moved, at most, one letter grade, but Lenovo moved two.
Also kinda sad that only four phone companies were identified, especially since they are selling in much greater quantities than laptops.
Classic IBM Thinkpad was pretty good. I replaced keypads twice on an X30. I did heaps of inside-the-box fiddling. They never complained.
I think the carved aluminium unibody thing was the death knell. Hard to be fashionably sleek and also easy to mod/fix/replace. But then they made hard a feature.
Stuck down memory and SSD is just evil nickel-and-dime stuff.
The data seems a bit odd for Lenovo. The study was based on only six Lenovo devices, while half the other companies had ten devices and the rest had either eight or nine. I can't even name ten distinct Apple laptops - Neo, Air, Pro?
Lenovo also had the biggest change from last years grade, where they had an F. Other companies moved, at most, one letter grade, but Lenovo moved two.
Also kinda sad that only four phone companies were identified, especially since they are selling in much greater quantities than laptops.
Classic IBM Thinkpad was pretty good. I replaced keypads twice on an X30. I did heaps of inside-the-box fiddling. They never complained.
I think the carved aluminium unibody thing was the death knell. Hard to be fashionably sleek and also easy to mod/fix/replace. But then they made hard a feature.
Stuck down memory and SSD is just evil nickel-and-dime stuff.
that's what Louis Rossmann has been saying all along