Of course they are seeing a sales and profit rise. They are doing 2 things, firstly operating on wafer thin margins to undercut rivals such as Dell and HP. Secondly they are giving the customer what they want, a no frills product that is the right price.
Lenovo posts an INCREASE in desktop PC and notebook sales
Lenovo, the world’s largest maker of PCs, saw its profits leap 24 per cent this spring. The China-based manufacturer reported first-quarter profits of $211m, compared to $170m for the year before. That was from revenue that jumped 18 per cent to £10.39bn. Earnings per share for the giant were up, from $1.65 to $2.03 for the …
COMMENTS
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Thursday 14th August 2014 14:13 GMT Peter Storm
This is true. A couple of weeks ago I had to buy in another new PC for our company. Usually I go for HP workstations but everything that didn't come with the Windows 8 abomination was hugely over specced (and priced). Had a choice with Lenovos with Win 7 pro loaded. Seems like a good solid PC too.
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Saturday 16th August 2014 11:59 GMT JeffyPoooh
"...there is no good reason not to use 8."
There's a point where such willful blindless is actually effectively deceptive and counterproductive. You're there.
Here are some examples of a fully truthful and precisely accurate statements, just so you'll learn the differrence.
There is no good reason why Microsoft cannot include an alternate Win 7 like GUI that would be a selectable option. That $5 aftermarket Start Menu fix should be bundled and supported by Microsoft.
There is no good reason why Microsoft should take it upon themselves to forcibly bundle a sub-optimal childlike tiled GUI, ideal for 5 year old little girls drawing happy faces for daddy, with other valuable and necessary OS improvements.
There is no good reason why Microsoft should literally withdraw Win 7 FPP (Retail) from the marketplace to force people to change.
They have made bad, stupid, decisions for seemingly GUI-religious reasons.
"Convert or die" is simply pure evil. There are vastly more evil examples in the world, but Microsoft are still clearly in the wrong.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 13:31 GMT Anonymous Coward
Would be even better
If they operated in a fully free market, or however you define success myth criteria. When I bought my Lenovo, it was available for £100 less in Germany and Austria because it was not sold with windows. Here I was told that it was not possible to buy it without windows. So the UK is still a stronghold of that intelligence-abusing "naked PC" nonsense that MS was trying on some years ago, and it seems is trying to revive. Makes you wonder what Lenovo could achieve without the millstone that MS has become.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 15:48 GMT h4rm0ny
Re: Would be even better
>>"how easily do BSD or Linux systems install on Lenovo machines? Searching the web tends to get me disorganized lists with little useful information."
About the same as on any other mainstream x86 system. I.e. generally pretty well. (Not sure about BSD as I don't use it, but any modern GNU/Linux distro should be fine).
The problem with searching online for this stuff is that you naturally end up with page after page of all the problems people have because all the people who are just fine with it aren't posting about how fine it is.
Not sure what most GNU/Linux DE's are like with touchscreens, as a caveat. Lenovo sells laptops with these and I've never used KDE or GNOME on a touchscreen device. May well be fine - just thought I'd better qualify my answer.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 15:52 GMT h4rm0ny
Re: Would be even better
>>And what pray, would grandma do with a brand new PC, and accompanying blank hard drive when she switches it on? Get real.
And supposing it wasn't "grandma" but someone who wanted to put Ubuntu on there? You don't get to pick whoever you want as the representative person just to make a request look bad. If you'd made an argument about managing extra supply lines you might have had a comment. But just trying to make out that there aren't plenty of people who want a blank machine or don't know what to do with one is silly.
People shouldn't be forced to buy things they don't want to get the things they actually do.
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Friday 12th December 2014 21:48 GMT Longtemps, je me suis couche de bonne heure
Re: Would be even better
Get real? Perhaps you meant "Get a chromebook"...
...says someone with recent experience of trying to help a friend with a Windows 8.1 PC whose wireless printer prints effortlessly from his wife's Apple Mac but refuses to even display the printer in the TIFKAM email client he was trained to use by the shop that sold him the PC. Twice re-installed the printer driver, same result. But having sampled MS forums about people with very similar problems being given more and more sweeping remedies that fail to work but would leave the PC in a worse state than before, I was not brave enough even to go back to the previous restore point...
But if you are a Microsoft employee posting, as I suspect you may be, please disregard this, and I apologise for my discourtesy.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 13:52 GMT Efros
lenovo replacement
A few months ago it became clear that my 5 year old lenovo Y550 was ready for retasking and that a replacement was in order. I could not get a lenovo even close to the spec and price I got from HP (quad core, SSD boot, secondary HDD). I was very disappointed as I like lenovo but $200 difference for the same spec means I went with the HP.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 15:54 GMT h4rm0ny
I would love to buy one of Lenovo's high-end laptops. But I just can't justify that amount of cash. Of course they sell lower-spec ones, but I can't bring myself to buy one of those either.
I go to the site. I click on a base laptop. I go through the configuration tool and add things I want. Price is now too high. I go round again and try to find things to remove. Can't - I want everything.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 22:05 GMT CADmonkey
You're holding it wrong...
1. Spec it out at Lenovo.com
2. Find it at a much better price online for any number of 'laptop outlet' type places
3. Win!
Did this 5 years ago with a Thinkpad W700. Prebuilt, rather than custom, so with me in a matter of days.
Wish I could replace it...8gb 17" 1920x1200 RAID 1, hardware colour calibrator that I've never needed but Hey!...and a Wacom Pad & Pen, active anti-shock HDDs, and a 170W PSU that weighs about a kilo.
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Monday 18th August 2014 11:26 GMT JeffyPoooh
Lenovo laptops
Buy used.
I've done so several times in the past month or so.
Win 7 Pro, i5, discrete Nvidia graphics, $250 price class.
Have to be willing to take some risks, and use your IT skills to deal with issues. It's worked out fantastic for us. Kids use one for Steam gaming, they're happy.
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Monday 18th August 2014 11:29 GMT JeffyPoooh
Lenovo laptops
I've bought three ThinkPads in the past month, and now eyeing a 4th. Some for the kids, a couple for me. All came with Win 7 Pro, acceptably snappy i5 processors, discrete Nvidia graphics, loaded with features. eBay, used, great cosmetic condition. $250 price class each.
One has to be willing to accept some risk, work an hour to scrub them clean, possibly repair any minor issues, update the software (a GB of updates) and hunt down drivers. Likely buy a replacement battery pack or two. Might get SSDs for some of them.
Required being brave enough to click Buy, having faith in people's honesty, some luck, and some trivial IT skill.
Overall, happiness with these purchases is about 15+ out of 10. Seriously.
I've also been stocking up on Win 7 desktops too, four or five of those this summer. Same sort of deals. Mostly good results, with a few glitches along the way.
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Thursday 14th August 2014 18:17 GMT Anonymous Coward
Not always cheaper, better made
I own a bit of Lenovo kit, I havent ever bought a whole system from them though, what attracts me is the QUALITY.
The Lenovo keyboards and mice I have are the BEST I have ever had the pleasure of using - regardless of price, my only gripe is the "Caps Lock" key being a tad too close to the "A".
Even my baby daughter has failed to kill my keyboard, despite walking all over it (and a bit of stomping).
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Thursday 14th August 2014 18:56 GMT Anonymous Coward
I don't think there is a real slowdown in demand for PCs.
The real reason no one is buying is they all come pre-installed with the Windows 8 crap.
Go into pc world / john lewis etc and you have row after row of unbuyable rubbish. And yes, even with 8.1 update-whatever, it's still rubbish.
All the pros I know have switched to macbooks and run Win 7 via vmware or parallels. And after using a macbook's touch pad, there's no need for any touch screen crap.
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Friday 15th August 2014 20:36 GMT wdmot
I would add to the continued laptop sales numbers but I can't find a good laptop...
I love my old IBM Thinkpad t60 but I'd like to get something a bit more powerful while retaining its usability. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find a new laptop that has a similar touchpad & trackpoint (joystick/pointer thingy). All the new models -- from all manufacturers it seems -- have a "precision touchpad" (PTP), which IMO is a Bad Thing: one of the idiotic requirements for MS to certify PTP for Windows 8 (and of course all manufacturers are building for Windows 8 even if we don't want it) is that the touchpad *cannot* have separate buttons -- the whole touchpad is a button, and right-click is determined by a click while your finger is in the correct region, or a two-finger tap. I think there is a workaround to get a middle-click. I hate that. I want individual left, middle, right buttons. And although separate buttons are allowed for a trackpoint device (which can be on the same computer of course), Lenovo isn't providing them based on all the pictures on their website. I don't know how you'd press buttons while using the trackpoint if there aren't any buttons...
Plus, their keyboard quality and usability has really gone downhill. I like the keyboard on my t60 but not the one on my wife's newish Y580. It looks like all their keyboards are that way now -- and other manufacturers as well (HP and Dell, certainly).
Add to that the sad state of affairs regarding screen sizes and resolutions, again across manufacturers. My laptop's primary purpose is not watching movies; I need something with more vertical real estate. Looks like I'll have to go with more expensive quad HD just to get something more than 1080 vertical pixels, and I'm not sure I can find that in 17 inches. Why don't they make laptops with 2400x1600 displays? I've seen enough requests for something like that on various forums; seems there's a fair demand for them.
Anyone else feel the same way? Or am I just a whiner? ;-)
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Monday 18th August 2014 11:23 GMT Anonymous Coward
Thinkpads
Am I the only person who has had issues with Lenovo kit?
In a previous life I had 2 Thinkpads die with fan issues, a hard drive issue and when that was replaced, an occassional BSoD.
They were good machines in the IBM days, but there is a reason why Lenovo can undercut their rivals....
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