2010 CES: Day 0

I flew to Las Vegas last night; I love Jet Blue but their Boston-Vegas flights are bogus: You fly out at 8:00 pm and arrive here almost at midnight Vegas time, and then the right flight is a red eye. I never choose this type of flight, but I love Jet Blue and the alternative was a non-direct flight, which I'm even less interested in. So next Sunday is going to be a stupid, tired day, but whatever.

Today has been pretty low-key so far, just a few meetings, one of which was quite important (more below), but tonight is the Steve Ballmer keynote, which I'll watch remotely (there's no need to experience that silliness in person), a possibly interesting invite-only Sprint event (which Ballmer will attend), the Pepcom Digital Experience get-together (which I'll absolutely attend), and then a Lenovo event. So it's going to get busy.

Today, I need to finish up a bunch of work for the print magazine, including a quote for the 15th anniversary of the magazine (which started out as Windows NT Magazine, of course), a "Windows 7 Annoyances" article, my monthly column (back up to two full pages), and "Paul's Picks." So even though none of this will hit the web anytime soon, it's going to be a lot of writing.

In the meantime, I wanted to briefly discuss some of the stuff Lenovo is doing. I spent about an hour and a half meeting with them this morning and while I am charitably described as a ThinkPad fanboy, the truth is, they just make the best notebooks on earth. And now they're getting even better. It's dizzying. I posted a bit about this yesterday, but there is so much going on here. In fact, their near-final version of a tiny notebook with a breakaway tablet screen absolutely kills anything Apple could possibly announce later this month. It's not even close. I'll have it on the podcast on Friday morning, when we do a live show from the Las Vegas Convention Center South Hall.

Here's what Lenovo has already announced at the show (and, yes, there is more coming, including a smart phone):

ThinkPad Edge. A new line of ThinkPads featuring cool new "edge" styling, a new-look keyboard (but with the classic and best of breed ThinkPad feel). It's available now in 13-inch guise (I want it) and 14- and 15-inch versions are coming. Awesome, light, and stylish.

ThinkPad X100e. It's basically a ThinkPad netbook, but they're not calling it that because it's aimed at enterprises and they don't want these companies to think the device isn't build to the ThinkPad standard. But it is, and it's supported like any other ThinkPad. (For whatever it's worth, I practically begged Lenovo to make a ThinkPad netbook just a few weeks ago. That was fast.)

New versions of classic ThinkPad lines. The ThinkPad T series got new T410, T510, and T410S upgrades, which feature faster processors and chipsets, better battery life, and more, including powered USB ports that are colored yellow just like the power port. (Smart.) The ThinkPad W series got a new W510 mobile workstation with similar improvements.

Idea PCs. I'm not as familiar with Lenovo's consumer-oriented wares as I am with the Think line, but suddenly these machines are looking quite impressive as well. There are 11 (!) new IdeaPad laptops/netbooks and IdeaCenter desktops, including some amazing all-in-one designs that make the iMac look quaint by comparison.

Skylight smartbook. I'm not a big fan of the "smartbook" name--it basically means a netbook that runs a non-Microsoft OS on non-x86 hardware--but Lenovo's entry is amazing. This little guy weighs next to nothing (OK, 2 pounds), runs on the Snapdragon platform, connects to 3G or Wi-Fi networks, and features a beautiful, innovative interface that's optimized for web apps and media playback. It's brilliant looking, gets killer battery life, and will ship in April. You're going to be surprised by how nice this thing is.

Until you see this.

IdeaPad U1 hybrid notebook. Shipping in the second half of 2010, this is the device that will make Apple's supposed tablet look silly. It's basically a clamshell netbook-class computer running Windows 7. But you can pop-off the screen and use just that as a tablet. That tablet runs the same system as the Skylight smartbook, but with touch-compatible controls (gorgeous, too) on top. Both the screen and keyboard/base have their own batteries. And the two sides sync. So if you're browsing the web in Firefox on the tablet and reattach the screen, the page you're viewing pops up, immediately, in IE in Windows 7 when the connection is made. This thing looks like it came straight out of a science fiction movie about the future but it's here now in working form and you'll be able to buy it later this year.

I will have the U1 on the Windows Weekly podcast Friday, so check out the video version if you can. I doubt I'm going to see anything more impressive at CES this year.

It's early yet, I know. :)

More later tonight around the keynote and Digital Experience.

Discuss this Article 24

Waethorn
on Jan 6, 2010
FIRST!!!!!1!!!
NoNameAtAll
on Jan 6, 2010
"Shipping in the second half of 2010, this is the device that will make Apple's supposed tablet look silly." Let's hold off on that until Apple actually announces one. To be fair at least. Rumor mills suck.
lotsamystuff
on Jan 6, 2010
"Let's hold off on that until Apple actually announces one. To be fair at least." Paul....fair....BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA Good one.
Keleko
on Jan 6, 2010
So the Lenovo IdeaPad U1 is a laptop you can browse without Windows and keyboard, but what else can it do when the screen isn't connected? What other apps work with the separated screen part? Why do I WANT to charge two separated device batteries? Why do I want to go from Firefox to IE when I avoid IE as much as possible? I can see cookies and other such session tracking getting all confused by that switcheroo. What if I have Word open and pull off the screen? What does it transfer to then? If I'm watching a movie bought through iTunes, what does it switch to when disconnected? Why pay for two processors, two batteries, two sets of RAM, two storage systems, etc? Why learn two different ways of using the device (Windows and Skylight)? To me a better solution would be to make the internals all in the screen so there's no clunky switch from one OS to another (any OS switch is clunky, no matter how seamless it appears - see above questions for why). Make the keyboard bluetooth wireless. It may or may not be necessary to attach the screen to it, but it would make a nice storage method if it did. The IdeaPad sounds neat on the surface, but the deeper I look and think about it, the more I see FAIL.
roteague
on Jan 6, 2010
""Shipping in the second half of 2010, this is the device that will make Apple's supposed tablet look silly." Let's hold off on that until Apple actually announces one. To be fair at least." From the pictures I've of that device, especially if it doesn't have Windows 7, then I think Apple has nothing to worry about.
whiplash55
on Jan 6, 2010
Paul, mailbag post was very helpful keep them coming. Thanks
anonymous
on Jan 6, 2010
This post was mentioned on Twitter by WinObs: SuperSite Blog: 2010 CES: Day 0 - http://bit.ly/5n7pb7
de Silentio
on Jan 6, 2010
I think I would like the snap off that continues to run Windows 7 the way I was runnin it when it was connected. Also, I like the mailbag idea too.
paulisadouche
on Jan 6, 2010
Lenovo? Douche.
Grigoris
on Jan 6, 2010
One short article, three mentions of Apple; talk about an inferiority complex.
Grigoris
on Jan 6, 2010
He's right, though: the IdeaPad U1 DOES look like it comes from a science fiction movie. . . albeit one made in 1988.
tayme
on Jan 6, 2010
@Waethorn - Really? Wow...you have truely shown your intelligence once again! What a douche! --tayme
Dipsh t Admin
on Jan 6, 2010
Regarding the Lenovo Skylight and U1, that sound you hear is the caveman from Fusion Garage making ape noises and throwing his joojoo in the garbage.
FalKirk
on Jan 6, 2010
"their near-final version of a tiny notebook with a breakaway tablet screen absolutely kills anything Apple could possibly announce later this month" Better than anything Apple COULD POSSIBLY announce. Really? I'd like to make fun of this, but frankly, I don't have the heart. Your comments make you a self-parody as it is.
chuckb84
on Jan 6, 2010
"IdeaPad U1 hybrid notebook. Shipping in the second half of 2010, this is the device that will make Apple's supposed tablet look silly. It's basically a clamshell netbook-class computer running Windows 7. But you can pop-off the screen and use just that as a tablet. That tablet runs the same system as the Skylight smartbook, but with touch-compatible controls (gorgeous, too) on top. Both the screen and keyboard/base have their own batteries. And the two sides sync. So if you're browsing the web in Firefox on the tablet and reattach the screen, the page you're viewing pops up, immediately, in IE in Windows 7 when the connection is made. This thing looks like it came straight out of a science fiction movie about the future but it's here now in working form and you'll be able to buy it later this year." So, I was watching "Welcome to Macintosh" on CNBC last night, and Guy Kawasaki said it all about Windows, "I can take you to Fry's and and show you rows and rows of ugly desktops, ugly towers, ugly mp3 players. They couldn't even figure out what to steal." Steve Jobs was, typically, more succinct a few years ago, "Microsoft just has no taste." The only thing he got wrong was failing to generalize beyond just Microsoft. Really, it is pretty sad. The paragraph quoted above is so clueless, so utterly divorced from anything that any real person will ever want to use, that it just defies belief. And, not only clueless, but VAPORWARE, not even shipping. Sigh. Falkirk was also succinct, "sel-parody" is exactly right.
kent909
on Jan 6, 2010
So you have to ask yourself, if Paul thinks the Lenovo is such a great computer why did he buy a MacBook and then install Windows on it? It must have something to do with the quality of the hardware. They way he is talking today it sounds like he would buy a Lenovo with Windows already on it. This man must think no one listens to his podcasts. I think that when people make stuff up they forget and end up with the "foot in the mouth" situation. I am sure very soon Paul will say something contradictory to today's statement. I predict it will come on about January 27.
Waethorn
on Jan 7, 2010
"Really? Wow...you have truely shown your intelligence once again! What a douche!" I'm not the douche that keeps coming back here for a pummelling after saying that they left for good.
tayme
on Jan 7, 2010
"I'm not the douche that keeps coming back here for a pummelling after saying that they left for good." Pummelling[SIC]? Really? What are you, 15? Is it Daddy's computer store that you rant on and on about? That would explain a lot! I don't recall saying that I was leaving for good. I said that I was considering posting my username and password on one of the account sharing sites. I still might...when I am done with it - which may or may not come soon. I did ask Paul and Penton do delete the account, though. Since they haven't yet fulfilled my request, I figure that I might as well use it for entertainment, watching you simple minded brand loyalists go at each other! --tayme
tayme
on Jan 7, 2010
The things that go on in the basement Waethorn's daddy's computer shop - http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20100107 --tayme
Waethorn
on Jan 7, 2010
"I don't recall saying that I was leaving for good." You said you were contacting Penton Media to have your account terminated and that you weren't coming back. Or do you forget what you wrote?
tayme
on Jan 7, 2010
Well golly, Waethorn...you could be right. I guess I'd better go back and check. Maybe, just maybe I am actually one of those people from the account sharing site...kinda like you are one of those P 0 R N queens in the evenings and weekends. --tayme
Waethorn
on Jan 7, 2010
"Maybe, just maybe I am actually one of those people from the account sharing site..." Nah. You're no less a douche over the original.
smiddlehurst
on Jan 7, 2010
Here's my problem with the U1, well okay, my main problem with the U1: It runs two different operating systems. So I'm... oh, say I'm watching a movie on the laptop and decide to pop off the screen for easier watching on the couch. Does that transfer automatically? What if it uses a particular codex I can install on Windows 7 but not the tablet OS? More importantly, say I'm carrying this thing as a work tool where I can build documents using the laptop but present using the tablet. Does the tablet OS have Office compatibility? Will it be 100% or just 95%? Am I going to have to double check everything I do and on and on and on. Frankly I also don't really see the point in a device that does this. It's geek chic I guess but.... if you want a tablet then buy a tablet. If you want a CULV laptop then go ahead and buy one. I just don't see what advantages you get from the U1, it's not as if the tablet is small enough to stick in a pocket and go, you're going to be hauling the laptop with you most of the time (in fact I'm willing to bet that for the average user it'll spend almost all its time as a laptop after the first couple of weeks). It's a great tech demo but not even Paul listed any real use for the machine, just that it was impressive.
daveinla
on Jan 7, 2010
Is Paul converting to IT Oracle Analyst now !!!?! He has not seen what the Apple tablet looks like but he already knows it will be blown away by a Lenovo notebook (???) that nobody has seen !!!! Is it me or something's not right here !!! You were really sucking hard at everything that sales guy from Lenovo had to tell you and were not even able to digest it with a grain of salt and got all excited to at last have an anti-Apple material to post !! ...but at the cost of making yourself look like a fool !! Seriously look at the picture that you dared to post about a Windows tablet PC from Compaq with the look and the form factor of the 80's !!!! They provide the suitcase to carry it !!! :))) It's supposed to compete with the tablet from Apple !!??! LOL !!!! I think the best rendering of what to expect from Apple is this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHRSDWZC_m4&feature=player_embedded To finish with a comment it's amazing how an Irrelevant company like Apple with 3% of the PC market share (Hey we're still in the PC era right !!??!?) can steal the thunder from company like Compaq (hey it's still 1980 right ??!?!) with they great tablet. Seriously CES is on and everybody is Abuzz about 1 thing, that will not even be shown there (just to show you the degree of influence and confidence Apple has gained): the Apple tablet.... and maybe also the next gen iPhone that's gonna be unveiled soon too... But seriously I don't get it why is Apple getting so much press when my PC from Compaq is just so great !!!???

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