Replacing a Thinkpad?
An anonymous reader writes "As a very happy Thinkpad T20 user (still working after 7 years), I always planned on replacing it with another Thinkpad T-series. However, Thinkpads are now produced by Lenovo, a Chinese company, and I can't quite bear to buy Chinese while the Burmese military are shooting at monks with the Chinese Government as their biggest backer. Maybe this is silly, as whatever I buy is likely to be made (at least in part) in China... but still, what are my options for something as well built as the Thinkpad T-series?"
----- Documentation is worth it just to be able to answer all your mail with 'RTFM' - Alan Cox.
I'd go with the T-1000. Those things are rugged as hell.
Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
I considered that option, but I work in a steel mill, so it wouldn't work for me.
Actually, the appropriate term is LEGO and my son is 4 and daughter is 6 and they're not touching my collection for a few more years. the last time I let me daughter play with my LEGO sets she lost the face plate on one of my astronauts and those things are expensive to replace (Astronaut Series from mid 90s, not late 90s) ;)
As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.
I'd rather go with the T-X for its... erhm... features.
Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
While the Toughbooks may survive a drop into a vat of molten metal, I have on good authority that they don't take well to being dropped into a spinning dynamometer.
Buddy of mine who works for one of the "Big Three" had the Toughbook on the hood of a car on one of the dynos. Walked away from the laptop and the testing tech gunned the engine. Computer vibrated off the hood and went into the dyno's rollers.
My friend picked up all the pieces, put 'em in a box, went back to his desk, and called the HelpDesk and said: "There's something wrong with my laptop. It won't boot. It booted up fine this morning. I think you need to send someone out to take a look at it."
The look on the HelpDesk technician's face when he looked into the box is said to have been priceless.
> The US has their problems, but if you want to compare them to China, it's not even
> close. Where are the listings for the Chinese government's transgressions?
Forgive me for not having an orgasm of patriotism at the revelation that we're not the
single most oppressive regime in the world. Lowering the bar much?
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