Touchscreen. Thin bezels around the display. USB-C 3.2 gen2 with Power Delivery support. Fingerprint scanner. Wi-Fi 6. Fast charging. Webcam shutter. Keyboard backlight.
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16 ", 2560x1600 (16:10), IPS, 120 Hz, Ryzen 7, 8845HS, 3.8 GHz, RAM 32 GB, LPDDR5X, Radeon 780M, SSD M.2 NVMe, 1024 GB, USB 3.2 gen1, USB C gen2, USB4, no OS, Wi-Fi 6E, fast charge, 3D face scanner, long life, 1.9 kg
16 ", 1920x1200 (16:10), IPS, Core i7, 13620H, 1.8 GHz, RAM 16 GB, LPDDR5, UHD Graphics 64EUs, SSD M.2 NVMe, 512 GB, USB 3.2 gen1, USB C gen1, no OS, Wi-Fi 6, fast charge, 3D face scanner, 1.9 kg
Overall, everything is good. I've been using it for almost a month. For this price, I haven't found anything better available in Ukraine at the moment. All pros and cons are listed below. I'll focus on two points...
Up/down arrows are combined. I don't understand this practice at all... If the manufacturer doesn't want to exceed the rectangular area of the keyboard (by making the left, down, right arrows below), it's better to sacrifice the long shift and zero in the numeric keypad (trim them and shift the arrows to the right). The arrows are obviously much more important! Stupidity, basically! For the browser and Word, I had to disable hardware acceleration, otherwise, the screen would flicker. I thought it was a defect, but Google says it's apparently a normal situation) I unchecked the box and everything works. I don't know whose fault it is... Lenovo, Intel, or the programs themselves.
Price/characteristics (visible), design, IPS, metal cover, ucb-c power delivery, keyboard backlight, digital unit not limited, plastic dot receiver, camera shutter.
Thin charging plug (I worry about catching it and breaking it when it’s connected), lack of LAN port (I would choose it instead of a card reader), plastic gets dirty easily and flexes (though this is noticeable only when deliberately pressed), only 2 USB ports (possibly nitpicking), combined up/down arrows, the need to disable hardware acceleration in some programs.
Up/down arrows are combined. I don't understand this practice at all... If the manufacturer doesn't want to exceed the rectangular area of the keyboard (by making the left, down, right arrows below), it's better to sacrifice the long shift and zero in the numeric keypad (trim them and shift the arrows to the right). The arrows are obviously much more important! Stupidity, basically!
For the browser and Word, I had to disable hardware acceleration, otherwise, the screen would flicker. I thought it was a defect, but Google says it's apparently a normal situation) I unchecked the box and everything works. I don't know whose fault it is... Lenovo, Intel, or the programs themselves.