Tuesday, August 6th 2013
Lenovo ThinkPad Edge Refresh Gets AMD Kabini Inside
According to a couple of new listings in Austria and Germany, Lenovo is preparing to launch a refresh of the ThinkPad Edge. This time round, the internals will pack AMD hardware. More specifically, the CPU will be based on AMD's Jaguar architecture, part of the company's Kabini platform. The listing reveals a Lenovo ThinkPad Edge E145 powered by a 1.4GHz dual-core E1-2500 AMD APU, which is a 15W TDP part and packs AMD's Radeon HD 8240 IGP (128 compute units) clocked at 400MHz. You get a 11.6" 1366 x 768 display, 4 GB of RAM and 500 gigs of storage. The display is said to have a matte finish, doing away with any glare issues whatsoever. Connectivity is covered by two USB 3.0 ports, WiFi 802.11n and Bluetooth 4.0. There's no info regarding weight, battery rating or expected battery life yet. We do know the expected final price, to lie between the range of ?460 to ?505 as per retailer listings. According to the report, stocks will land in a couple of weeks.
Source:
Techeye.net
21 Comments on Lenovo ThinkPad Edge Refresh Gets AMD Kabini Inside
i bought a thinkpad x131e a few weeks ago with an ivybridge cpu
its really amazing
E-mail, light web, youtube, light gaming (which I promise I've never tested on my work computer), etc. Does okay for all that, but trying to get any actual work done.. just doesn't happen.
EDIT: While we didnt get the edge 130, we did get the lenovo x131e with windows. while it seems to be more aimed at school children, with a large tough top cover, it appears to be nearly identical in construction and specs.
Now Kabini is a different story, it should be faster and have better battery life than these ones
What id like to know is this new CPU going to be as good or worse then what im currently running? it seems to have everything that ive got now apart from the difference in CPU Arch.
Id like to install some faster Memory (1333 to 1600 or above) to to make it perform even better (Faster RAM = Better FPS in games with any APU) , but in the BIOS I cant change anything :confused:
Crapware is a problem, but also, when my customers tell me their system is running slow, I look if there are 2 antivirus or more. I also take a look at the energy icon at control panel and see if they switched to minimum performance. And of course, a classic, when a system hangs for some seconds, with the hard drive led turned on completely, i check the hard drive for bad sectors
although, this would be solved if lenovo put the a6-5200 in one of these laptops.
The choice for 1600Mhz memory could be also because of failure rate, most likely a 1600 mhz memory with a failed cell will work ok set to 1333 speed, I believe. On the other hand, a 1600mhz module could work better than a regular 1333Mhz by lowering cas latency and setting it to 1333Mhz. You get a slightly speedier 1333Mhz memory, It will depend on their choice in the factory bios, who knows...