• Primarily0617
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    492 years ago

    4/5 products will be repairable

    the fifth would’ve been, had lenovo not filled it with a bunch of glue for a laugh

    • @pastermil@sh.itjust.works
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      32 years ago

      As if soldering RAM & SSD isn’t enough, the chasis would be solid epoxy and there’s no way you’re taking out the battery or the keyboard, let alone the mainboard.

  • HidingCat
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    192 years ago

    I mean, given they sell Thinkpads, the bar is likely to be easier to reach for them. I do wonder by what metric of “repairable” they mean. The quote has him saying batteries and SSDs, but those are already fixable in most of their existing line up. It’s the RAM (so many are soldered, even in the Thinkpad line) I’m mostly thinking about, and there’s also the screen and keyboard, two other common failure points.

      • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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        162 years ago

        I’ve never heard of RAM disconnecting in the laptop. They’re clipped so I don’t see how that could happen.

        • circuscritic
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          142 years ago

          Really? My RAM is always falling out. I can’t even chuck my laptop over the fence and cushion it’s landing on my trampoline without my RAM just falling out. Fucking shoddy.

        • @OneOrTheOtherDontAskMe@lemmy.world
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          42 years ago

          Yeah I think I’d shake the fans out of the thing before I’d be able to unseat a stick of RAM. My theory is that anyone who unseat it without opening it had a bad clip

      • HidingCat
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        42 years ago

        What? That is one of the crazier takes I’ve seen. RAM upgradibility is so much better, never heard of RAM disconnecting.

  • @Aeonx21@lemmy.world
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    192 years ago

    I’m only here to say, why the fuck would you put wrenches in this pic? Imo Should be screw drivers

  • FireWire400
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    2 years ago

    ThinkPads once were pretty easy to work on and repair, but then the whole soldering stuff to the system board and removing power bridge batteries happened.

    If you look at something like a T430, it has access doors for everything on the bottom in addition to being built like a tank.

  • TheMurphy
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    82 years ago

    Well, yeah. They kinda have to by EU law in the future. But good to see they start the change now.

  • @somenonewho@feddit.de
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    82 years ago

    I love ThinkPads especially the “good old” ones. Especially for their accessibility of parts and easy repair/upgradability.

    My personal laptop has been a Thinkpad since 2013 (Thinkpad Edge E135 > Thinkpad X220 > Thinkpad x260) and at work we are also given ThinkPads (currently running a T14 gen 3).

    Most ThinkPads I encountered are also sturdy built and not Gleis together or some crap like that. However I recently had an issue with my x260’s power button no longer working and to get it to work I had to replace the top bezels. Well maybe to put it more bluntly I had to get a replacemt bezel and put my Thinkpad into it since to replace the bezel I had to take out almost everything and then put it back in the reverse order. The mere fact that I managed to do it and there are officiall step by step instructions on how to (hmm) are a big upside of ThinkPads. But like others have said it used to be even better.

    Well long story short: I’ve recently preordered a framework 13 amd while I honestly would have preferred a “Thinkpad black” Chassis framework just seems to have the right idea to me.

  • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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    72 years ago

    I like to think that this means you take your device to a repair centre and they have you spin a big wheel to see if you get to have your device repaired.

  • @pastermil@sh.itjust.works
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    52 years ago

    I took apart a Thinkpad *20 series laptop including the main board and put it back together with not a single issue. I heard thingd went downhill from the *40 series onward and became unbearable for the Thinkpad enthusiasts since the *90 series.

    Now they’re saying this like they haven’t fucked it up in the first place. What a joke.

  • @olicvb@lemmy.ca
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    52 years ago

    They better be repairable, 2-3 in 10 of them will need it out of the box. smh Lenovo i used to have better expectations of you.

    For the curious: My work has us get batches of them, some have camera issues, others simply don’t turn on.

    • @nameisnotimportant@lemmy.ml
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      32 years ago

      I’m a bit surprised by this, looking at common recommandations for PC laptops Lenovo is mentioned 90% of the time then alternative manufacturers like frame.work. What would be your recommandation then?

      • @EyesInTheBoat@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        Probably framework. I think they are reading the writing on the wall with all of the Thinkpad fans I know either having purchased one or on preorder for the new ones.

          • @EyesInTheBoat@lemmy.world
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            12 years ago

            Yeah, they’re still on backorder since everyone (understandably) lost their minds when they dropped the current gen models. Should be cleared up by early next year.

      • @olicvb@lemmy.ca
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        22 years ago

        mmh imo all the main manifacturers cheaps us out in the laptop category (unless you go into the expensive side i guess). There’s always some compromise somewhere :/

        But to be fair, i’m not some reviewer and haven’t seen all that the land of laptops has to offer. My advice would be to go looking at different youtube reviews on different channels too.

        In my experience:

        Microsoft devices while not too good on repairability (hard to open) are often solid and reliable, they tend to be able to keep up with the time. Ex: my surface pro 4 is still used and is surprisingly keeping up. I’d say the same on the surface laptop side. They are more work oriented and less for gaming sadly.

        Asus has a nice gaming oriented catalog, but they feel cheap material wise. I’ve got the ROG Flow Z13 tablet and it’s amazing the amount of power they managed to put in there, the casing is all metal so my previous statement doesn’t apply to this one, but the screen is plastic(?) and has some damage already. I’ve use a Strix laptop a few times and that’s where i found the quality lacking.

        I used to think HP was a brand to avoid, but with the ones we ship out, they seem to be decent. I have yet to use it.

        I had an Acer aspire that had a pentium in it, probably got it around 2008-10. Used to game on it until it overheated itself off, and rinse repeat many times. Great laptop for everyday use, suprisingly still running to this day. I’d recommend for people who dont want to get a chromebook, as some form of step up.

        I’ve no experience with other brands.

        • @rambaroo@lemmy.world
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          22 years ago

          Every time I’ve tried Acer or Asus I’ve had a deal breaker hardware issue immediately. I see people recommending them a lot but they must have QC consistency issues of some kind. Maybe I just had bad luck, but I always end up going back to Lenovo and I never have issues.

  • @MrSnowy@lemmy.ml
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    22 years ago

    But they aren’t repairable now because you keep setting your fucking wrenches on top of them

  • @Gino_Pilotino667@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    What a crazy carousel. I still use the t430, which I would call repairable - I just hope that there will be a current motherboard with appropriate CPU For it

    • @float@feddit.de
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      22 years ago

      T480s user here. It’s perfectly fine, too. I think it went downhill from the 90-series onwards.

  • BigFig
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    -42 years ago

    Don’t buy Lenovo, unless you like your Chinese spy machines

      • @pimento64@sopuli.xyz
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        22 years ago

        I take it you don’t remember the SuperFish scandal? Lenovo just settled the class action lawsuits not too long ago. I don’t blame anyone for not trusting Lenovo after they sold PCs with built-in spyware that ran MITM attacks using self-signed certificates and hijacked their SSL/TLS connections. You really don’t need a study for something that Lenovo admitting to doing.

        • @sorrybookbroke@sh.itjust.works
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          2 years ago

          I don’t remember the superfish scandal, had never heard of it actually. Thank you telling me about it though, I was a child when this was a thing. Looks like it came out in 2015 and settled in 2017. That’s not recent. Thank you again, I’m glad to know this, and won’t think of Lenovo when suggesting laptops again.

          I can understand the aggression you’re giving me seeing as how you’re being downvoted for something which may be a legitimate concern. I’m sorry for that, and would like to confirm I’ve not been participating. (Edit: sorry, you’re not bigfig. This apology was to them) My thanks was honest. Though, I cannot see the link to it being a “chinease spyware” situation. Would you be able to provide links for that one? I see superfish is and was headquartered in california. What makes it chinease?

          Edit: @Brunbrun6766@lemmy.world would you be able to advise? (BigFig)

          For the lazy, here’s some excerpts from a PCWORLD article:

          According to the FTC, the software allowed VisualDiscovery to see all of a consumer’s sensitive personal information transmitted over the Internet, including log-in information, Social Security numbers, and more

          In 2015, Lenovo CTO Peter Hortensius called the decision to use Superfish a “significant mistake.”

          (Big whoopsy daisy, we sent all your personal information to an add company, we really ballsed this one up)

          For 20 years, Lenovo will be required to put in place a “comprehensive software security program for most consumer software preloaded on its laptop,” subject to external audits, the FTC said. If Lenovo does put adware onto its laptops, it must “get consumers’ affirmative consent,” it added.

          Wow, maybe that one shouldn’t be limited to 20 years. Maybe that one shouldn’t be limited to lenovo, huh

          According to McSweeny, VisualDiscovery and its Superfish software “would alter the very Internet experience for which most consumers buy a computer,” she wrote.

          I assume for the better right guys? right?

          According to McSweeny, the Superfish software slowed Internet browsing, specifically downstream traffic by 25 percent and uploads by as much as 125 percent. In addition to simply slowing browser speeds, VisualDiscovery also used an insecure method to replace digital certificates, exposing users to risk and preventing their browsers from warning them that the website they were visiting could have been spoofed. And on every e-commerce site, VisualDiscovery’s software would display ads.

          That ones fun

          Here’s the original article for the curious: https://www.pcworld.com/article/407332/lenovos-superfish-bloatware-scandal-reveals-a-sneaky-tactic-we-thought-microsoft-had-started.html

          • @pimento64@sopuli.xyz
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            22 years ago

            I was a child when this was a thing. Looks like it came out in 2015 and settled in 2017. That is not recent.

            Bro you are fucking killing me right now