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Lenovo Intros the Monstrous ThinkPad W700

Engadget recently got their hands on an early delivery of Lenovo's new powerhouse of a laptop, the W700. Aimed at graphic artists and photographers, this beast is designed to really pack a punch. No word on how much for the extra fusion generator to power it for longer than 20 minutes. "Containing enough computational artillery to level a small village, this for-creatives-only behemoth is designed for sheer pixel pushing ... and little else. The system packs in two features aimed at graphic artists and photographers which are fairly unique to a laptop: a built in Wacom digitizer just to the right of the trackpad, and an on-board color calibrator. But what's happening under the hood you ask? Well, for starters the 17-incher sports the first-ever Intel Quad Core Extreme CPU in a laptop (no word on speeds at this point) as well as the first showing of NVIDIA's Quadro FX 3700 graphics chipset (with a hefty 1GB of memory on-board). The workstation also serves up dual hard drive bays configurable as RAID 0 or 1 (SSD or traditional disk, naturally), up to 8GB of DDR3 RAM, and an optional Blu-ray burner. Of course, that's fully kitted out -- the W700 starts at $2,978 and moves skyward from there."

3 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. Discrimination by Spad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a built in Wacom digitizer just to the right of the trackpad

    Ideal unless you're left handed and therefore cursed to spend all your time catching the trackpad while trying to write/draw anything.

  2. Re:My wife's reaction... by argent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If she was rejecting any non-Mac product without having experience with Windows, possibly.

    But I doubt that any computer user in the world has too little experience with Windows. If you've used Windows and you still don't like it, that's a rational choice (obviously one you disagree with, but de gustibus non erat disputandum), not prejudice.

  3. Re:Discrimination by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So where would you put the Wacom on this laptop...

    Oh I don't know, on the screen, maybe? You know, like a normal Tablet PC, which is exactly what this is except that Tablet PCs have bigger digitizers and work better because the strokes appear where the user actually drew them.

    I mean really, what kind of idiot would want this?! It's like getting a really tiny Intuos when you could have had a nice big Cintiq for less!

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    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz