As I always ended up with 3/4 of NBC's measured battery life, the runtimes are pretty disappointing. See here's what I don't understand.
Lenovo's own consumer flagship Yoga 910 packs a 4-cell 78 Whr battery in a chassis that practically weighs the same as the T470s. LG's Gram 13" has a smaller display, weighs only 0.94 kg, and yet still packs a 60 Whr battery, all the while, keeping a non-soldered ram slot. Build quality is no longer an excuse for the T470s, especially since both the Yoga and the Gram have both dramatically improved their build quality and battery capacity, while simultaneously not gaining additional weight.
There's more. IME, the T460s' keyboard was significantly mushier and shallower than what I expect from a business laptop. It's more comparable to MSI's Steelseries keyboard, not even the giant gaming rigs but the lightweight ones, which is satisfactory, but still very sub-par from a "business" standard. Keycap texture of backlit keyboard was one of the worst I've used, and I've tested laptops for years. Finger oil and sweat smudge all over and it's virtually impossible to type with nails, so can't recommend to any female clients. Then they went on to use the same cheap keyboard on their most expensive P series, laptops for the pros that cost over three grand, and completely ruined the experience. Frankly, I've no idea why so many reviewers praise the workstation keyboard at all, when it's not even marginally better than many business think&light. Maybe it was due to every internet forum user saying it's a magical experience, but it all turned out to be a huge bluff to me. On the other hand, T460 and T560 were surprisingly good, but travel and tactility varied heavily on keyboard vendors. Only recommendable keyboards with decent quality and QC were the X1C and Thinkpad 13, which unfortunately weren't what my clients needed. In the end, we went with the T460 and swapped out more than half of the units' keyboards with a better vendor's.
Then there's the screen and audio, albeit more personal, but are still distasteful. And many more issues, which I won't go into here.
I do acknowledge, that they don't want to make a single perfect laptop like Apple, Dell XPS, or Gigabyte Aorus. I know that since the beginning, it's been their active strategy to split the laptops into different lines and models, with crippling compromises, to target a larger audience and minimize the costs.
However, what I don't get, is why they won't offer upgrades for select users who're willing to pay the premium price, when they are perfectly capable of providing such. I'll gladly pay for those upgrades, or even better, for a single perfect laptop, with all the best, cherry-picked features from your entire series, if you create such a thing.
Point is, Lenovo has cut too much costs in areas where they absolutely shouldn't have, and charges unreasonably more for less. While Dell has actually done some great work with both their consumer and business lines. This year, more than half of the Thinkpad X,T,P series are difficult to recommend to anybody, and the only reason I do is because they regularly hold massive discounts, and because of relatively cheaper used prices. And as someone with some respect for the brand, that's seriously disappointing to say the least.