Lenovo 3000 V100 Pottstown PA

An integrated Webcam and other features make this model stand out from the crowd.

Local Companies

Waratah Communications, LLC
610 616-2177
P.O. Box 759
Downingtown, PA
Altek Business Systems, Inc.
215 721-9355 Ext.115
50 South Third Street
Telford, AK
Rapid Copier Service Co
215-942-9766
757 Route 113
Souderton, PA
Codi Inc
(717) 540-1337
5340 Jaycee Ave Ste B
Harrisburg, PA
D J T Business Supply
(610) 678-3358
Reading, PA
Cartridge World
(215) 357-1033
508 2nd Street Pike
Southampton, PA
Epius Technology of PA
(610) 495-7800
130 Futura Dr
Royersford, PA
Media Supply
(610) 458-9100
410 Eagleview Blvd
Exton, PA
Point Computer Products Inc
(412) 766-4020
300 Camp Horne Rd
Pittsburgh, PA
Besl Transfer
(724) 225-7160
RR 70 Box 221
Washington, PA

Lenovo 3000 V100

Lenovo's latest ultraportable, the 3000 V100, offers good performance, light weight, and plentiful multimedia features for a reasonable $1599 (as of 6/26/2006). Though I found much to like, its disappointing keyboard is a reminder that this is not a ThinkPad.

The V100 weighs a fairly light 4.4 pounds. Equipped with Intel's 2-GHz Core Duo T2500 processor plus 1GB of main memory, it turned in strong performance results in our tests, with a WorldBench 5 score of 93. The battery lasted just over 4 hours, also a good showing.

The overall design is not bad, but it's not superb, either. Although the ThinkPad T series, about the same weight at 4.5 pounds, offers a bigger, 14.1-inch screen, the V100's 12.1-inch WXGA screen is crisp and easy to read. The machine also features a fingerprint reader for biometric security, and a dual-layer DVD burner.

The V100 sports three handy volume buttons--raise, lower, and mute--atop the keyboard, just like the ThinkPad; next to these is the Lenovo Care button, which, to its credit, launches a help system and Acrobat manual very similar to the ThinkPad's. Although this manual lacks animation, a feature that makes ThinkPad manuals uniquely helpful, the illustrations are useful, and Lenovo Care is very thorough and well organized overall; for example, all the recovery options are grouped together for quickly rectifying problems.

The V100's five-in-one media card reader is far more versatile than the ThinkPad's SD-only slot. The three USB ports, the FireWire port, and the ExpressCard slot are also handy features for the price. For consumers, the V100 offers two popular items found on a lot of multimedia notebooks these days: a built-in 1.3-megapixel Webcam, and an instant-on multimedia button. Neither are top-shelf implementations, though: Unlike some Webcams that swivel and come with extra options, the V100's is a fixed USB device paired with the bare-bones Bisoncam software.

The notebook's instant-on button--which launches DVDs, CDs, videos and photo slide shows without requiring the notebook to be turned on first--is a nice convenience that saves battery power. But navigation is clunky--you must employ keyboard shortcuts; other notebooks with an instant-on feature let you use the mouse.

However, these minor complaints pale next to the V100's uninviting keyboard and touchpad. I could live with the hard keystroke (versus the ThinkPad keyboard's comfortable, smooth action). But the touchpad buttons on my review unit were so stiff and unresponsive that I had trouble using them. They had to be pressed so hard that even simple operations such as selecting text were difficult, if not impossible, to complete. In the end, I finally gave up and attached a USB mouse.

The V100 is a nice ultraportable with plenty of get up and go, but other notebooks in the same weight and price range have better keyboards.


Carla Thornton
Lenovo 3000 V100Lenovo 3000 V100Lenovo 3000 V100

Featured Local Company

Waratah Communications, LLC

610 616-2177
P.O. Box 759
Downingtown, PA
http://www.waratahcommunications.com

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