Lenovo is doing a reversal when it comes to the repairability of its ThinkPad T series: The new Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 5 features two SO-DIMMs and a user-replaceable internal battery. To prove its progress in modularity, the Chinese manufacturer had it reviewed by iFixit - the new ThinkPad laptop scored a near perfect 9.3/10.

7 points

At least there will be a somewhat usable laptop to upgrade to when my T480 falls apart. Too bad they went for a small, internal battery. I really like having a big, hot swapable battery that lasts all day. I don’t see any mention of an SD card slot either.

permalink
report
reply
15 points

That the picture shows windows 11 and microsoft copilot is just anti advertising, driving more people away from that laptop.

permalink
report
reply
20 points

They don’t market these to consumers. The corpo buyers will use Windows no matter what.

permalink
report
parent
reply
9 points

My corpo provides now even ubuntu laptops, its probably an edge case but nice that they do.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Let me guess: you’re a developer? The average sales droid likely wouldn’t even know what Ubuntu is.

permalink
report
parent
reply
9 points

My corpo only provides ThinkPads with Ubuntu for everyone, occasionally macbooks where required for specific applications.

permalink
report
parent
reply
14 points
*

But they no longer sell it with Linux as an option, both in the US and UK, which is just disappointing. However, they are selling their laptops in India with the option to choose your OS.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

They are ? Link me

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

I’ve sorted the laptops by newest, but the filter is kinda broken, because it puts the older product as the topmost result, which is weird.

Here’s the link to the US webpage (Linux) with all Lenovo laptops available for Linux. As you can see, there’s only one device available, which is the Thinkpad X1 Carbon Gen 11.

Here’s the link to the Indian webpage, (No operating system) with all Lenovo laptops available for Linux. You have a choice between 53 devices. If you want specifically the Thinkpad, the choices drops down to 40, which is still not bad.

Some of the laptops are slightly outdated by one generation, which isn’t a bad thing per se. As you can see, Z16 Gen 2 isn’t available with Linux in the US, but it is available in India. There’s also P14 Gen 4 with Linux in India, but sadly, they don’t sell with Linux in the US. I did not check the other series, but I’m assuming that there’s also the E series and the T series with current and modern generations available.

The only issue is that they’re expensive, almost double the original cost - the Z16 Gen 2 costs around ₹186,854 ($2,255) in India, but in the US, it is around ₹1,06,400 ($1,284). Honestly, I would have bought a cheaper AMD Phoenix/Hawk Point Thinkpad from the US through my blood relatives to avoid paying the high import duties, if not for this Windows-exclusive nonsense. Maybe the HP Elite-book or the Dell XPS looks really good right now, given how they have great Linux support, although I still don’t trust both these brands.

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points
*

deleted*. foreva. loser

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

Isn’t it possible for you to buy it from the US through your relatives and to install linux yourself ? If it’s anything like the older models I have, everything works out of the box with most popular distributions.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

why is the battery internal ffs

permalink
report
reply
3 points

Because external batteries take up precious space to attach. Internal ones can just sit there with maybe a few screws.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points
*

yeah, but the t480 isn’t too thick and it had external batteries

I feel like we’re just making laptops thin for the sake of it which I don’t like

permalink
report
parent
reply
15 points

Well I look forward to seeing the result. Quite frankly the t14s we have is stupid, the easily replaceable keyboard of the t460 days are long gone, and the WiFi card that has failed 3 times already within my company is glued to the mobo. Anything that lets me do a quick repair myself instead of having to phone a call centre and book a technician will be highly appreciated.

permalink
report
reply

ThinkPad

!thinkpad@lemmy.ml

Create post

IBM and Lenovo ThinkPad laptop enthusiasts!

Community stats

  • 50

    Monthly active users

  • 115

    Posts

  • 432

    Comments

Community moderators