Quote from: booglaooo on April 19, 2023, 23:28:22I think Lenovo did this intentionally, but you can get a better X-Rite Pantone factory color-calibrated (delta E < 2) display which I don't think is an option with the T14 G3 although looking at the T14g3 psref it looks like they may offer something similar. Hmmm
No professional will rely on a "factory calibration" done who knows how and how accurate it is in reality.
Moreover, on any screen, the calibration floats with time, even if it is done individually by a hardware calibrator. It needs to be repeated. Mandatory, at least once every 1 year.
Which inevitably leads any owner working with color by occupation to the need to have a personal hardware calibrator or rent it for a while or use the services of professionals for money.
There are no other options. The IPS listed in the review for this model is perfectly calibrated with a dE value of less than 1.5 - see newest review - notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-ThinkPad-P14s-G3-AMD-laptop-review-Lightweight-workstation-without-dGPU.708002.0.html
Once again, almost no AMOLED panel from this class of notebooks could pass the test even at dE<2. And this is a death sentence for AMOLED for works with colors.
Calling this model a "workstation" is certainly ridiculous when it doesn't have a discrete and doesn't even have a USB40 with an eGPU, although other models have this port with the same processor.
To buy or not to buy is up to the buyer. Is it worth 1500 euros in 2023 with such restrictions on soldered memory and the inability to use a powerful external discrete chip (including professional series - for example, only AMD for April 2023 offers professional series with full DP2.0 +, other options for today no) through the riser? It's a personal question, and so is the answer...