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IBM ThinkPad R51
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IBM ThinkPad R51

ThinkPad is the brand name for a highly successful range of portable laptop and notebook computers originally designed and sold by IBM. Since early 2005 the ThinkPad range has been manufactured and marketed by Lenovo, which purchased the IBM PC division.

The ThinkPad range was introduced at Comdex 1992 using the series designators 300, 500 and 700 (allegedly analogous to the BMW car range and used to indicate market), the 300 series being the "budget", the 500 series "midrange" and the 700 series "high end". This designation continued until the late 1990's when IBM introduced the "T" series as 600/700 series replacements, and the 3,5 and 7 series model designations were phased out for A (3&7) & X (5) series. The A series was later partially replaced by the R series.

Traditionally black, ThinkPads feature innovations such as the magnesium or titanium composite, TrackPoint pointing device that allows the performance near that of a mouse, ThinkLight, an LED keyboard light put on the top of the LCD screen, solidly constructed full size keyboard (including the fold-out butterfly keyboard on the 701 models), the Active Protection System, a device that detects when a ThinkPad is falling and shuts the hard drive down to prevent damage, biometric fingerprint reader, dual wireless antennae that allow for more stable connections, and the Client Security Solution that allows for industry standard TPM encryption and password management to counter keylogger spywares. ThinkPads have a reputation for generally being solidly built, dependable, and innovative.

Design history

The Japanese lunchbox that inspired the ThinkPad design
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The Japanese lunchbox that inspired the ThinkPad design

Tom Hardy, corporate manager of the IBM Design Program met with Italian-based designer Richard Sapper (noted then for the design of the Tizio lamp and was later commissioned to design a ballpoint for Lamy) and Kazuhiko Yamazaki, lead notebook designer at IBM's Yamato Design Center in Japan. Sapper proposed a design inspired by the Shōkadō bentō, a traditional black-lacquered Japanese lunch box.[link]

IBM launched the ThinkPad line in 1992 with the ThinkPad 700 (monochrome LCD) and 700C (active matrix TFT color LCD). The original ThinkPad was a tablet computer, without a keyboard. It featured a monochrome LCD screen, 40 MB flash memory (instead of hard disk), with PenPoint OS from Go, and handwriting recognizer from IBM. The keyboard version with Microsoft Windows 3.1 was next and sold for US$4,350, weighed 3 kg (6.5 lb), and had dimensions of 2.2 by 11.7 by 8.3 inches (56 by 297 by 210 mm). It featured a 10.4 inch (264 mm) LCD (the largest at that time), a 25 MHz 486SLC processor, a 120 MB hard disk drive, and an easy-to-use keyboard featuring the TrackPoint pointing device. The bright red TrackPoint, embedded in the keyboard, enabled the notebook to be used on an airline tray table without a mouse. Although the tablet version was not commercially successful, the ThinkPad Tablet and Apple Newton were the beginning of PDAs and mobile computing.

The ThinkPad name was inspired by the leather-bound pocket notebooks issued to all IBM employees with the corporate motto 'Think' embossed on the cover. IBM's corporate naming team was initially against using the ThinkPad name since all previous IBM computers were referred to by model numbers rather than names. However, the popularity of the ThinkPad brand with the press convinced IBM to retain the name.

ThinkPad model types

IBM ThinkPad R32
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IBM ThinkPad R32

The following is a list of various recent families of ThinkPad models.

Model specific information

Lenovo UltraBay

UltraBay is Lenovo's name for the swappable drive slot. Introduced on the 750 series ThinkPads, this technology has gone through redesigns with almost every new generation of ThinkPad, leading to some confusion. The following table gives an overview of the different UltraBay types, in which models they occurred and what drives are available for them. Note that the optical drive bay in G series ThinkPads is not an UltraBay in that the drives are fixed and not removable.

On the media side different UltraBays relate to the form factor of the drives they accept; for example, early A, T and X series models can accept UltraBay devices up to 12.5 mm thick, whereas current T and X series machines are limited to devices no more than 9.5 mm thick.

Lenovo UltraBay nomenclature

Overview of UltraBay types and available devices
UltraBay Type Featured in Available devices
UltraBay All 760s and 765s FD, CD, Extra PCMCIA, HD, Battery, ZIP-100
UltraBay II 770, 770E, 770ED, 770X, 770Z FD, CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, HD, Battery, ZIP-100, ZIP-250, LS-120
UltraBay FX 390, 390E, 390X FD, CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, Battery
UltraSlimBay 570, 570E, 600, 600E, 600X FD, CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, HD, Battery, ZIP-100, ZIP-250, LS-120
UltraBay 2000 A20, A21, A22, T20, T21, T22, X20, X21, X22, X23, X24 FD, CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, Multiburner, HD, Battery, ZIP-100, ZIP-250, LS-120, LS-240
UltraBay Plus A30, A30p, A31, A31p, R30, R31, R32, R40, T23, T30, X30, X31 all UltraBay 2000 devices, WorkPad Cradle, Numberpad
UltraBay Slim R50, R50p, R51, R52, Z60t, Z60m, Z61t, Z61m, T40, T40p, T41, T41p, T42, T42p, T43, T43p, X4 UltraBase CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, Multiburner, HD, Battery
UltraBay Enhanced R50, R50p, R51, R52, Z60m, Z61m CD/DVD, CD-RW/DVD, Multiburner, and all UltraBay Slim devices

Trivia

ThinkPad pointing devices. The TrackPoint (top left) has been a distinctive feature of the ThinkPad range for many years, while the touchpad (centre) is a relatively recent addition.
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ThinkPad pointing devices. The TrackPoint (top left) has been a distinctive feature of the ThinkPad range for many years, while the touchpad (centre) is a relatively recent addition.

External links

 


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