Mixing business and pleasure can be a recipe for disaster, but Lenovo got it entirely right with its ThinkPad X1 Carbon. Achieving the ergonomic excellence we'd expect from a ThinkPad in a chassis that weighs 1.36kg can't have been easy, and the result is an Ultrabook to aspire to.
Breakneck performance partners with business essentials such as mobile broadband, TPM and a fingerprint reader, and the matte 1,600 x 900 display is both bright and colour accurate. The top-end model nudges the £1,600 mark, which is significantly more expensive than its consumer-focussed rivals, but it's a price worth paying. It's been around a while, but remains the best boardroom Ultrabook.
Breakneck performance partners with business essentials such as mobile broadband, TPM and a fingerprint reader, and the matte 1,600 x 900 display is both bright and colour accurate. The top-end model nudges the £1,600 mark, which is significantly more expensive than its consumer-focussed rivals, but it's a price worth paying. It's been around a while, but remains the best boardroom Ultrabook.
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