This is my new Lenovo laptop PC, but with a 14″ screen. Not being an Apple product it can’t be cool, but Lenovo tries.
Buying it required me to abandon my “never spend more than $300 on a laptop” rule. But it was a good deal for a 14-inch laptop with an aluminum case, an Intel i7 CPU and 16 GB memory, with a touch screen and lighted keyboard. USB-C charging was something else I wanted, which HP doesn’t have yet. The 2-in-1 feature, turning it into a tablet, wasn’t of special interest.
I was surprised to see that its dimensions, except for thickness, are almost identical to the old HP ProBook 11 G2 with its 11.6-inch screen. The ProBook has something that, along with optical drives, is extinct in laptop computers. It has a VGA connector. This makes it perfect for the 4:3 projector that I sometimes have set up in the living room. It’s a 2005 model purchased as new-old stock for $65, plus $10 shipping.
The Lenovo’s 2200×1400 IPS LCD screen and out-of-the-box color accuracy are exceptionally good. The sound of the speakers is impressive for a laptop, but audio is directed to the porch’s 10-year-old Sony Bluetooth speaker. It was an early product supporting Qualcomm’s proprietary Bluetooth codec, aptX.
Not too many changes were needed in Windows 11 to make it behave the way I want. Something about Windows 11 I don’t like is that support for aptX, which is found natively in Windows 10, has apparently been dropped.
Another TLA for VGA should be IAW — It Always Works! Which is not always true with HDMI.
We bought a replacement PC recently for church, to essentially run one specific program. I bought a refurbished small form factor PC to replace a similar one that was doing the job, but had slowed down to the point of unusability: Turn on the computer, go do an errand; log in, start a pot of coffee; start the app, clean the office. As I started unpacking the new one, I realized one thing I had failed to think about was connecting it to the existing monitor. But happily, being corporate oriented, it had that thing that you point out is becoming rarer and rarer — a VGA port. Phew!