Lenovo ThinkPad T440s
Review
Continuous Web surfing over wireless until battery drained. Longer is better.
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Lenovo's ThinkPad T Series laptops have a legendary reputation amongst business users or anyone who needs to get serious work done. The 14-inch ThinkPad T440s continues this rich tradition, offering long battery life, strong performance, a best-in-class keyboard and an optional 1080p touch screen, all in a durable, 3.8-pound package. However, with a price of $1,514 ($999 to start), this productivity-centric laptop doesn't come cheap. Is the ThinkPad T440s worth the investment?
Design
The ThinkPad T440s has the same chassis as the ThinkPad T431s, which launched in spring 2013, and carries the same design language as other ThinkPads. You'll find a smooth, raven black casing that features a carbon fiber lid and magnesium chassis. Like the T431s, the T440s has a rather plain matte black lid instead of the luxurious soft-touch, rubberized lids Lenovo used on the older ThinkPad T430s and T420s. A ThinkPad logo on the lid provides a splash of color with a red light in the letter "I" that blinks when the system is asleep. The famous red TrackPoint and a couple of red lines on the touchpad add accents to the deck.
Like other ThinkPad T Series, the T440s is built to take some punishment. An integrated roll cage helps the laptop survive drops and dings while solid hinges allow the screen to bend back 180 degrees, and a spill-resistant keyboard prevents a little water from destroying your system. Lenovo says that the T440s has passed several military standard, or MIL-SPEC, tests, including those for humidity, dust, extreme temperatures and vibrations.
Display
Registering 294 lux on our light meter, the T440s is much brighter than the 210 lux thin-and-light laptop category average, the 169-lux Toshiba Tecra Z40 and the 202-lux T431s with 1600 x 900 display. The 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display was a little brighter at 313 lux.
The 10-point touch screen was extremely responsive to all of our gestures, even allowing us to draw with all fingers on both hands at once in Windows Paint. The T440s is also configurable with 1600 x 900 and 1920 x 1080 nontouch panels.
Audio
While it's fine for conferencing and movie watching, the ThinkPad T440s offers unpleasant music playback. The laptop's bottom-mounted speakers were loud enough to fill a small room, measuring 81 decibels on our sound test, which is fairly loud, but still a tad below the 84-dB category average. Playback also muffled a bit when the system was pressed against our legs.
When we played Patrice Rushen's bass-laden "Forget Me Nots," playback was fairly accurate, though flat. Judas Priest's guitar-heavy "Painkiller" sounded tinny. Enabled by default, the included Dolby v4 audio software made the audio quality more tolerable than it would have been without it . The sound became hollow and lifeless when we turned this feature off.
Keyboard
Unlike the T431s, which marred the typing experience with a hot palmrest, the T440s stayed cool beneath our wrists, allowing us to achieve a very strong score of 92 words per minute on the Ten Thumbs Typing Tutor test, comfortably above our typical 86 wpm score. The keyboard's backlight has three settings: off, low and high, with the low setting more than bright enough for a dark room and the high perhaps a bit too bright.
TrackPoint and Touchpad
Ports and Webcam
The HD webcam is capable of capturing solid images even in a shadowy area of our office, but even pictures we took of our face in a very bright conference room suffered from a bit of visual noise. Like other ThinkPads, the T440s features dual-array microphones for better conferencing, while Lenovo's settings app allows you to set the mics to pick up a single voice or many at once.
Heat
Unlike the T431s, which had a warm right palmrest that made typing uncomfortable, the ThinkPad T440s stayed pleasantly cool throughout our testing. After streaming a video for 15 minutes, the touchpad measured a cool 81 degrees, the keyboard a chilly 84 degrees and the underside a breezy 88 degrees Fahrenheit. We consider temperatures below 90 degrees imperceptible and those under 95 degrees comfortable.
Performance
Thanks to its 1.6-GHz Intel fourth-generation Core i5-4200U processor, 8GB of RAM and 256GB LITE-ON SSD, our configuration of the ThinkPad T440s offered very strong performance that was good enough for demanding productivity work. On PCMark 7, a synthetic benchmark that measures overall performance, the T440s scored an impressive 4,970, well above the 3,445 thin-and-light laptop category average, the Toshiba Tecra Z40's mark of 2,524 and the T431s' 2,884 score.
With its speedy 256GB SSD, the T440s booted Windows 8 in just 14 seconds, half the 28.4-second category average and a bit less than the ThinkPad T431s (16 seconds). The drive took just 27 seconds to complete the LAPTOP File Transfer test, which involves copying 4.97GB of mixed media files. That's a rate of 188.5 MBps, more than triple the 57.9 MBps category average and eight times the Tecra Z40 and its 7,200-rpm hard drive. The 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display notched a more impressive 299.4 MBps performing the same test in OS X Mavericks.
The ThinkPad T440s took just 5 minutes and 14 seconds to complete the OpenOffice Spreadsheet Macro Test, where we match 20,000 names with their addresses. That time is more than a minute faster than the 6:21 category average, but almost 30 seconds slower than the Tecra Z40 and its 1.9-GHz Core i5-4300U CPU.
Graphics
The T440s' integrated Intel HD 4400 graphics chip achieved a modest score of 930 on 3DMark11, a leading synthetic graphics benchmark. That's a little below the 962 category average, but well above the Toshiba Tecra Z40 (869) and ThinkPad T431s (530).
When we fired up "World of Warcraft" at the T440s' 1920 x 1080 native resolution, the system achieved a not-quite-playable frame rate of 29 fps, which dropped to just 15 fps when we turned up the special effects. Both rates are well below the 66 and 29.9 fps category averages.
Battery Life
With the 3-cell 23.2 watt-hour battery, the T440s lasted 7 hours and 1 minute on the LAPTOP Battery Test, which involves continuous surfing over Wi-Fi on 40 percent brightness. That time is more than 30 minutes longer than the 6:27 category average, but not as lengthy as the Tecra Z40's runtime of 9:28. (To be fair, though, the Z40 has a much dimmer screen.)
With its high-capacity battery, the ThinkPad T440s lasted an epic 14 hours and 36 minutes, making it one of the longest-lasting laptops we've ever tested, Though the the high-capacity pack costs just $5 more on Lenovo.com, it juts 0.5 inches out from the bottom of the laptop and adds 0.4 pounds.
Software and Warranty
Lenovo QuickConnect lets you remote control your laptop from an Android phone, but when we tried it, it only allowed us to use the phone as a touchpad and to change display modes on the laptop, not to do an actual remote control session. Lenovo Companion provides shortcuts to a variety of apps and services, including promotional videos that come from the company's partnership with the NFL.
Interestingly, Lenovo does not preload the T440s with Windows 8.1, though downloading the new OS is a free upgrade. A Lenovo rep said the company will not start selling the T440s with Windows 8.1 preloaded until sometime in 2014.
Lenovo backs the ThinkPad T440s with a standard one-year warranty on parts and labor. You can extend the warranty up to 4 years and add accidental damage protection or on-site service for prices ranging from $59 to $489.
Configurations
Our review unit of the ThinkPad T440s carries an MSRP of $1,514. For that price, you get the Intel Core i5-4200U CPU, 8 GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD, Windows 8 Pro and the 1920 x 1080 touch screen. For the starting price of $999, you get the same Core i5-4200U CPU, but just 4GB of RAM, a 1600 x 900 nontouch screen, Windows 8 and a 500GB hard drive with 16GB flash cache.
When you buy through Lenovo.com, you can configure with a choice of CPUs, screens, batteries, Wi-Fi cards, hard drive and RAM amounts. You can also choose Windows 7 Pro instead of 8 or 8 Pro.
To get the largest possible workspace, we highly recommend upgrading to a 1920 x 1200 screen in either touch or nontouch configurations. Though the extended battery adds serious heft, the additional 7 hours of endurance it adds is well worth the $5 premium.
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