Thursday, June 20, 2013

The New Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet 2




The Tablet 2 is one of the most attractive Windows 8 tabs yet, standing out from identikit slates with a black, blocky build and a curved left-hand edge to hide the digitizer. At 580g, it’s lighter than the iPad 4, and with all of your ports on the tablet part you can get along just fine without the keyboard/cover. 


Well, unless you’re doing any typing that is. The keyboard is a mixed bag; it slots together with the Tablet part, but only connects via Bluetooth, and it lacks the flexibility of the likes of the Acer Iconia W510's hinged keyboard dock. There’s also no track pad – just an optical track point – but that at least leaves space for roomy keys that are a pleasure to type on. 



The ThinkPad’s 10 mm border is fitted with the usual ports and sockets: a full-sized USB 2 port, a 3.5 mm headphone output and a mini-HDMI output, and a proprietary docking connector along the base. There’s a slot for a microSD card, but it’s not SDXC compatible so can only accept an extra 32 GB of memory.

The move to a more mobile form factor has involved compromise – the Tablet 2 can’t match the best ThinkPad laptops for build quality because of a little give in the rear panel. It’s not a big issue, though, and the Tablet 2 is still in the top tier when it comes to strength; this is a device that’ll withstand the rigours of the working day.

The x86-based ThinkPad Tablet 2 runs (32-bit) Windows 8, with the mobile broadband model getting Windows 8 Pro.
The processor is the same dual-core 1.8GHz Intel Atom Z2760 Dual-Core found in other Atom-based Windows 8 tablets like the Asus VivoTab and Dell Latitude 10. You get 2GB of RAM and 64GB of internal storage, with storage expansion available via a microSD card slot.

Dual-band Wi-Fi (802.11a/b/g/n) and Bluetooth (4.0) are both present, while the top-end model, as already noted, supports mobile broadband (HSPA+). The ThinkPad Tablet 2 also supports Near Field Communications (NFC) and includes a GPS receiver.