I agree with this article as well and have voiced my opinion about this multiple times on this site. One of Lenovo's main selling point over other brands has always their keyboard and TrackPoint, and they've progressively made these worse and worse so they're not all that much better than the competition. They are still better, which is why I went with a ThinkPad recently over other, frankly, better options, and I often find myself regretting it because of all the problems with it, but I do love the TrackPoint and have a hard time using a laptop without one. But many people aren't going to be willing to put up with all the quality issues for a
slightly better usability experience, and even I have decided that this will most likely be my last Lenovo, especially since, at the rate they're going, even the keyboard won't be a draw anymore once I'm looking to upgrade again.
They're trying to draw people in by having slimmer, "sexier" models, hoping to entice consumers that would otherwise get something else without even considering Lenovo's, due to the other brands' extreme thinness. But those types of people are still generally going to go with those other brands, because people like that don't really care about much else, and Lenovo really doesn't have anything else to set itself apart and convince those people to choose them over other brands. Meanwhile, they're just driving away those people that actually prefer Lenovo for what it does, or did, have to offer that is/was unique. So they're losing customers in an ultimately vain attempt to gain others. They need to keep that crap to the IdeaPad line and leave ThinkPads alone. I'd much rather my T14s be 1-2mm thicker if it meant I could have an ethernet port and better battery life and better/quieter cooling (both of which are terrible), not to mention more storage and non-soldered RAM.
Quote from: gerger on May 24, 2021, 08:27:52
I don't understand why people want 16:10. It's a con in my books, because more content is created in 16:9. I like to consume media between productivity.
If it's higher resolution you want, why not just go for 1440p or 4k?
Aspect ratio in itself doesn't give you more resolution. It's just the shape of the screen.
It's ultimately personal preference, and you should just go with what you prefer. Or at least ideally, but until recently, very few laptops even had the option. Look at it like this: you can always watch a 16:9 movie on a 16:10 or even 3:2 screen, but working with a spreadsheet or a browser with multiple rows of tabs on a 16:9 screen will provide much less real estate for working than on a 16:10 or 3:2 screen, which offers more vertical space. Again, though, it really just depends on what kind of work you do and how you use your computer overall. I do a mix of stuff, and don't really have a strong preference.
I've used both 16:9 and 3:2 extensively, and both work well, obviously each is better for some things than the other, so for me it's a wash and I'm fine either way. A 16:10 would probably be ideal for me because of that. But with 16:9 I do often find myself wishing for more vertical space. If you never do, then you don't really have a need for it and that's just how you use your computer. It's also less important with larger screens, i.e. desktop monitors, since there's just much more space in general.
It also depends on how they compare in size. For example, given the choice between a 16:9 and 16:10 or 3:2 screen in the same chassis, where they're all the same width, I'll always take 3:2 > 16:10 > 16:9, because if I can get more height without losing out on any width, and just have thinner top and bottom bezels instead of the ~1" and 1.5" ones on my T14s, then why not take more screen space? But if the diagonal is the same, so I'm gaining vertical space at the expense of horizontal, it's a tougher decision. So I would have definitely preferred the T14s to make better use of the size of the lid and include a 16:10 or 3:2 and have 0.5" (or less) bezels on the top and bottom, but I probably wouldn't want the top and bottom bezels slightly smaller to make the screen a little taller but then have the screen a little narrower, so the end result is a taller screen with the same diagonal size, because even though it would be better for some things, the loss of that horizontal size would be significant. And since most laptops, due to the space required for the keyboard and trackpad, have a more square shape, i.e. closer to 3:2 or 16:10 than 16:9, it just makes sense to use the most of the available lid space and fill it up as much as possible with display. Hopefully that helps you understand people's preference for it.