Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 13 review

Look and feel

Though the 1.2-inch thick Edge isn't as thin as some other modern ultraportables, like the inch-thick ASUS UL30A and ThinkPad X200, at 3.5 pounds it feels extremely light in a hand and it slipped nicely into a backpack for a weekend trip. Ports-wise it's a standard affair; scattered along the right and left edges are three USB ports, HDMI, VGA, Ethernet, a SD card slot and a hybrid audio plug for headphones and/or a mic. Like most other CULV machines, there isn't an optical drive.

Thankfully Lenovo has still kept the infamous TrackPoint, but for those who prefer a touchpad, below is a fairly large multitouch pad with two, firm dedicated right and left mouse buttons. Two-finger scrolling was quite responsive, but we disabled the pinch-to-zoom function since it was overly sensitive when we had two fingers on the pad at the same time.
The 1366 x 768-resolution 13.3-inch screen is surrounded by a seemingly unnecessary thick bezel -- which actually raises the screen up by an inch -- but the screen itself is sufficiently bright and vibrant. Above the display is a low-light webcam like the one found on HP Envy 15, which displayed our face fairly clearly during a video call in a dimly lit room. The creepiness of this function is not unchanged, however.
Performance, battery life and software

Like most ULV laptops the Edge lies somewhere in between a netbook and a higher-end Core 2 Duo laptop. The Edge notched 1,637 on GeekBench, whereas the Atom-powered Eee PC 1005PE scored 942, and the ASUS UL30A, which is powered by the same SU7300 processor, a slightly higher 1,705. When it comes to graphics the GMA 4500M card isn't going to be a gaming demon, but it was capable of streaming the Avatar YouTube HD trailer and a 1080p QuickTime video smoothly.
| GeekBench | 3DMark06 | Battery Life | |
| Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 13 | 1637 | 905 | 5:12 |
| ASUS UL30A | 1705 | 765 | 6:25 |
| ASUS Eee PC 1005PE (Intel Atom N450) | 942 | 157 | 8:10 |
Lenovo's battery life prediction of seven hours is pretty on the mark. Its six-cell, 63Whr battery lasted 5 hours and 12 minutes on our video rundown test, and 6.5 hours with the screen at near-full brightness and WiFi on while listening to Slacker and typing in Microsoft Word 20078. Though it's not as long-lasting as some netbooks or the ASUS UL30A, it's still commendable for a 13-inch laptop.
Lenovo ships a pretty crapware free laptop, but does include its proprietary ThinkVantage wireless and battery tools. We discovered that our review unit was WiMax compatible while poking around the Access Connections wireless software; too bad there's no WiMax signal within miles of our location in New York, but this is a laptop review and not a Sprint/Clear one.
Lenovo ships a pretty crapware free laptop, but does include its proprietary ThinkVantage wireless and battery tools. We discovered that our review unit was WiMax compatible while poking around the Access Connections wireless software; too bad there's no WiMax signal within miles of our location in New York, but this is a laptop review and not a Sprint/Clear one.
Wrap-up

As far as we're concerned there's no reason to preserve tradition for the sake of it -- especially when you can save some cash by tweaking the formula. Sure, the ThinkPad Edge 13 may not carry some of the premium features of the X301 or other higher-end ThinkPads, but for a budget ultraportable we've got very little to complain about. Of course, there are other options on the market, like the $799 ASUS UL30A with slightly longer battery life and the $825 ASUS UL80Vt with discrete graphics, but this ThinkPad has the edge with a superb feeling keyboard, better build quality and comparable CULV performance.



























@Colonel Panic
Battery life, weight, heat, noise, not having someone elses greasy little fingers all over it.
That basically sums it up.
Idk what's gotten the goat of some of the commentators here, but so far every review of Ms.Stern that I've read has been fair, balanced and accurate. Most of the people here seem to make uninformed proclamations rather than informed opinions based on usage of the device. Hopefully some of the other reviewers here follow suit and look at things based on their merits rather than making sweeping judgments based on their usage patterns.
-----
I have not had a chance to play with the recent crop of ULV machines but have been left severely unimpressed till the N280 Atom.
How much of a performance gain does the ULV chip offer? Can it handle the average use of flash via chrome and the occasional dvd rip or does it fold and freeze like the Atom and require frequent restarts?
Also, could anyone tell me how hot this/these machines get after, say, 2-3 hours of mild usage? (web browsing, word etc).
Ty.
Until they start offering an IPS option again, I'll stay away from these "ThinkPads". And glossy screens are rubbish. I want to see everything behind me as well?
And it seems no one values vertical screen real estate anymore either. Easier to have your iTunes, Facebook, and Twitter all open at the same time so you find out who is dating who faster and what happened on American Idol.
Yeah, I'm a crusty old fart, bite me.
@CMA
you had me at crusty
never thought i'd see this-lenovo making thinkpads i may buy
The pricing is a bing on! $549 will be a direct competitor to the amd powered HP ultraportable, aka DV-2.
Moving further, I assume, there should be a $100-$125 increase in the config to upgrade to an Intel ULV which would very well make it a competition to the Acer timeline....
and even if the same configs in other brands are selling for $100 less...I guess the Lenovo brand value, reliability and quality of construction pretty much justifies the premium.
Wild guesses about the configurations when this thing comes up on Lenovo site:
$75 for bumping the 2gb ram to 4gb.
$50 to upgrade to the 160gb hdd to 320 gig.
$100-$125 for the intel culv.
$80 for the 6cell battery.
$50 for the win7 pro.
$50 for upgrading the b/g wifi to N spec.
Is a Mac running Win7 a PC?
Just asking.
"Thankfully Lenovo has still kept the infamous TrackPoint"
This seems like a typo. Infamous means bad, but you're using infamous as if you like the TrackPoint (which almost everyone does).
@manekineko2 I'm using a ThinkPad SL400 right now, and I have to agree with the TrackPoint. This is the first ThinkPad I've used (although can't really call it a true ThinkPad, with it's optical drive and such,) and I love it.
The first computer I personally think has actually done good with it. (As Toshiba's cheap little grey pimples they stuck on the older models are complete crap.) ((I'll admit to having only seen Toshia and ThinkPad's with TrackPoint...))
Regardless though, the TrackPoint is a great thing, there is no reason for it to be called "infamous," although I think it's an acquired tasted. My sister and her boyfriend use Mac's, and think the TrackPoint is rubbish, whilst one of my sisters friends uses an older model ThinkPad, and adores the TrackPoint.
To each their own, I guess.
http://www.discount-laptop-battery.co.uk/ibm-laptop-battery.htm
http://www.discount-laptop-battery.co.uk/ibm-thinkpad-x200-battery.htm
http://www.discount-laptop-battery.co.uk/ibm-thinkpad-x300-battery.htm
Why the heck Sony can make a 13.3'' portable with DVDROM and 3.4lbs weight, and lenovo and others makes it 3.5lbs and no DVD? At least make it below 3lbs, so we can justify no DVD.
@nigel
What is the price of the Sony? It probably uses magnesium and/or carbon fiber for the body. The Thinkpad T400s is a better comparison don't you think? Durability should also be a factor; reinforcements add weight.
Joanna, I'm going to call you on what I perceive to be major shortcoming of an otherwise adequate brief review (I say brief because it's not in-depth in any particular area).
My beef: in the beginning you say "overall we're impressed with the aesthetics and the solid build quality of the budget system" and at the end you say give it the edge over competing systems referring to it's "...better build quality.."
Sorry but other than saying the keyboard is firm, I didn't see anything in your review that substantiates any claims one way or another about build quality of this machine. Did you use and abuse it in the way you have your T400 or other machines? What did you do that we, your readers and current ThinkPad owners and possible upgraders, would see as proper assurance that this notebook is really worthy of the ThinkPad brand as far as "build quality" is concerned?
What material is the edge made out of?
@Unverified User: a Mac is a PC no matter what it's running. PC = "personal computer". don't give in to marketing ploys.
I just read the Thinkpad EDGE is supposed to have AMD chipset... I guess it will have a choice. I guess I'll find out more at CES.
Thinkpads are just... phenomenal computers. They're so tough, they feel so solid, and the big feature? The keyboard is toddler-proof.