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Lenovo ThinkPad T430s review

This post covers the second half of my experience moving back to a Linux desktop but I figured it was a good opportunity to focus on the ThinkPad T430s itself as well as the Lenovo ordering experience. If you follow me on Twitter, you know about my service experience. I’ll save that for the end of this post.

This post is a little on the long side, so here’s a TL;DR for you if you’re in a big hurry:

  • Good: build quality, port quantity/location, input devices, battery life, quiet operation
  • Bad: LCD display is very washed out and has a blue tint, poor sales support from Lenovo
  • Suggestions: Don’t buy via Lenovo, try GovConnection and get faster delivery with better service

The Laptop
If you asked me for a one-sentence description of the T430s, I’d have to say it’s a well-built, lightweight laptop with a good keyboard and a less than mediocre screen.

The island-style keyboard was very easy for me to use coming from a MacBook Pro with chiclet keys. The spacing between the keys and the size of the keys themselves were good. I kept pushing the Function key when I meant to push Control, but that can be quickly swapped in the BIOS to make things easier.

Even coming from the MacBook’s amazing trackpad, the trackpad on the ThinkPad was superb. It tracked gestures and taps extremely well without much configuration in Linux or Windows. It’s light years ahead of the Samsung Series 9′s trackpad and it’s marginally better than the latest Dell laptops. The “nipple” controller wedged in the keyboard was easy to use and the extra set of mouse buttons below the keyboard (but above the trackpad) were convenient.

I really like having the hardware WiFi on/off switch on the front right side of the laptop for situations where I want to ensure my laptop doesn’t start searching for access points before I can be sure it’s connecting to the right one. The USB ports were well placed and the “always on” port on the back is handy for charging phones and tablets when the laptop is powered off (you can disable that in the BIOS if you prefer). The fingerprint reader hasn’t been tested since there aren’t any open source drivers available for it in Linux.

It’s apparent that build quality is above average with this laptop. It’s certainly not terribly attractive (when compared to a Mac), but for a solid business laptop, it’s ahead of the curve. The screen hinges are tight and they don’t flex even when typing on a wobbly surface. This really helps when you’re using the webcam with the laptop resting on your legs. The ThinkLight above the webcam is a little quirky (this is my first ThinkPad) but it is really useful in lowlight situations.

Now, about that screen. I ordered my laptop with the 1600×900 HD+ screen (best one available). The color representation is downright terrible. Almost everything is washed out with a blue tint. If you open a web page with a mostly white background, the text is readable but it hurts my eyes to read it. You can almost see gaps between the pixels on the screen at regular intervals and it gets really distracting when you’re editing photos. Even after applying different monitor profiles in Linux and Windows, I’ve found the screen to be frustrating to use. The panel on mine is a Samsung panel and I’d expect a better performing screen from them.

Outside of the screen itself, the video performance of the Intel HD4000 is impressive. Onboard GPU’s have really come a long way. I hooked up a second monitor via the DisplayPort and found that the graphics performance was still extremely good. You can play games like Civilization V on this laptop with onboard graphics pretty easily.

All in all, I really do like the ThinkPad. If the screen doesn’t bother you, the remainder of this laptop is very convenient and powerful. However, for my use, I need something that performs well for business work as well as creative work. I’ve yet to find something better than the MacBooks for this kind of workload.

The Service
I generally try to start out with something positive when I try to review something, but the only positive thing I can say about Lenovo’s ordering experience is that it’s consistent. Consistently bad. Here’s a timeline of my first order:

  • Sep 3 – Ordered laptop. Sales page said laptop would ship around Sep 12.
  • Sep 4 – Order confirmed. Ship date pushed to Sep 27.
  • Sep 8 – Order status showed “Released to Manufacturing”.
  • Sep 10 – Order status page showed laptop shipped Sep 9 and would be delivered Sep 16.
  • Sep 12 – Received an email saying a part had delayed my shipment.
  • Sep 17 – Order status page shows laptop shipped Sep 14 and would be delivered Sep 21. I emailed Lenovo for more detail.
  • Sep 18 – Lenovo representative replies saying the graphics card was the constrained part. Due to ship in 3-4 weeks or less. I emailed back asking about canceling the order. My email was never acknowledged.
  • Sep 19 – I emailed Lenovo stating that I wanted my order cancelled immediately. My email was never acknowledged. I received an automated email stating that my order was delayed and would ship within 30 days. I called Lenovo’s support line to cancel and waited on hold for almost two hours. Gave up.
  • Sep 20 – I called Lenovo again and my call was answered after 90 minutes on hold. The representative tried to talk me out of canceling several times and then finally canceled it. My cancellation was only a “request”, not a guarantee. I was referred to sales and they wanted me to order a different laptop — I declined.
  • Sep 21 – My order was confirmed cancelled.

The salesperson suggested ordering a different laptop without the NVIDIA Optimus graphics card, so I did that on September 21. The order page showed a ship date of September 27, so I was quite pleased. As soon as I paid for the order, the ship date immediately slid out to October 16. Needless to say, I felt like I’d been bait-and-switched once again.

It’s important to note that through both orders, Lenovo’s public-facing order status page worked while the internal order status page accessed via my account page showed timeouts. The internal order status page hasn’t worked before, during or after shipping at all after multiple attempts. I’ve notified them more than once about it so they could make repairs.

Someone on Twitter suggested trying GovConnection to order a ThinkPad since they keep models in stock with fast shipping. I ordered one on a Sunday and it shipped on a Monday. The back panel behind the screen was badly damaged and they cross-shipped me a replacement the next day. Their service has been superb and they provided timely updates for my order.

In the end, Lenovo did actually ship my second laptop (without the NVIDIA Optimus card) and it did arrive slightly ahead of schedule. I’ll be sending it back to them since I already received a ThinkPad from GovConnection.

Some of you might be saying that I should expect some delays when a laptop is built to order. I’m generally fine with that and I’ve had minor delays from Dell and Apple in the past with previous orders. The big difference is that the other companies warned me about the delays prior to purchase and also warned me about the parts I added that might cause delays to my order. That bit of forward thinking allowed me to decide whether a certain part was important to me or if I was able to wait for the product to arrive. When it comes down to communication, Lenovo has a lot to learn.

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See you at LinuxCon North America 2012!

I was sitting at my desk yesterday when I saw a tweet from @LinuxFoundation:

The tweet that got the ball rolling.

I’ve always wanted to attend LinuxCon, so I fired back with a reply: “@linuxfoundation Fedora! #linuxcon #cloudopen”. This popped into my Twitter timeline yesterday evening:

Woot!

Wow! This sure was a surprise since I rarely ever win a contest of any sort.

I’d like to give a big thanks to the Linux Foundation for making this possible and to Rackspace for letting me travel on such short notice. If you don’t already give the Linux Foundation some support, be sure to do so.

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Off to the 2012 Red Hat Summit

Red Hat Summit 2012I’m on my way to my first Red Hat Summit and I’m really eager to learn some new things, meet new people, and share my experiences with others. This is my first time attending the summit and my first time in Boston.

If you’re not attending, but you’d like to follow along with some of the keynotes, you can register online to live stream those events to your desktop. I’ll try to share some of the best parts of the keynotes and the sessions here on the blog if TL;DR is a little more your style.

As some of you probably know, I can’t stay away from Twitter for very long. I’ll probably be posting interesting stuff there during the summit.

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Keep tabs on OpenStack development with OpenStack Watch on Twitter

It’s no secret that I’m a fan of Twitter and OpenStack. I found myself needing a better way to follow the rapid pace of OpenStack development and I figured that a Twitter bot would be a pretty good method for staying up to date.

I’d like to invite you to check out @openstackwatch.

First things first, it’s a completely unofficial project that I worked on during my spare time and it’s not affiliated with OpenStack in any way. If it breaks, it’s most likely my fault.

The bot watches for ticket status changes in OpenStack’s Gerrit server and makes a tweet about the change within a few minutes. Every tweet contains the commit’s project, owner, status, and a brief summary of the change. In addition, you’ll get a link directly to the review page on the Gerrit server. Here’s an example:

Hey! It's Dan!

If you’re not a fan of Twitter, there’s a link to the RSS feed in the bio section, or you can just add this URL to your RSS feed reader:

If you can come up with any ideas for improvements, please let me know!

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Do professional certifications belong in your e-mail signature?

After a discussion amongst coworkers about professional certifications in e-mail signatures yesterday, I decided to throw the question out to Twitter to gather some feedback:

rackerhacker: Quick Twitter poll for the nerds: How many certification abbreviations do you put in your e-mail signature? [Permalink]

The question must have struck a nerve with folks as I had over 50 replies in less than 10-15 minutes. I expected to hear a lot of people say “zero”, and there were quite a few responses that didn’t surprise me:

minter: @RackerHacker Zero
stwange: @RackerHacker none it’s pretentious
nickboldt: @RackerHacker Zero. My cert-fu is weak.
scassiba: @RackerHacker none, I don’t feel it’s necessary to fluff up an email signature with certifications
errr_: @RackerHacker 0
chrstphrbrwn: @RackerHacker Zero. I don’t use an email signature.
DamianZaremba: @RackerHacker none, makes you look a bit stuck up imo
saiweb: @RackerHacker 0
jirahcox: @RackerHacker 0. Job title only if absolutely necessary.
jtimberman: @RackerHacker None mine are almost all expired anyway :)
ckeck: @RackerHacker zero
billblum: @RackerHacker None.
puppetmasterd: @RackerHacker zero, or preferably fewer
ripienaar: @RackerHacker zero, they dont add value. Much rather link me to your github account so I can make up my own mind :)
redbluemagenta: @RackerHacker None. People can see for themselves through other avenues (blog, github, references) if you’re any good.
ubuntusoren: @RackerHacker none

There were a few people who disagreed:

bwwhite: @RackerHacker Just one because that’s all I have :) But I think 2 should be the limit. Pick the 2 most relevant to your current role
jwgoerlich: Generally 2. Depends on the email topic.
whitenheimer: @RackerHacker just one, some of them aren’t worth putting
russjohnson: @RackerHacker Currently none but have done upto 4
rbp1987: @RackerHacker I only put the most relevant or the highest level of cert that i have. Why what do you do at the moment?
hotshotsphoto: @RackerHacker MCP, MCP+I, CNA MCSE ITIL Practitioner….but only when I’m working in the IT field

There were quite a few that were strongly worded or humorous:

rjamestaylor: @RackerHacker I hate them – R Taylor, SCJP, MCP, RHCP, BSci, SAG
mshuler: .@RackerHacker I regard email signatures similar to SUVs – the size is relevant to the compensation factor
iota: @RackerHacker zero; as number of reported certifications increase, respect for sender decreases – my law #1514
raykrueger: @RackerHacker http://theoatmeal.com/comics/email
hjv: @RackerHacker I’m Ebay A+++ Certified.
unixdaemon: @puppetmasterd @RackerHacker I’d love to see “Failed my MCP due to realising 10 minutes in that it would taint my soul. Forever.” on a CV.
swimsaftereatin: @mshuler @RackerHacker And ASCII art is to the signature as a huge purple spoiler is to a pickup truck.
anoopbhat: @RackerHacker none. unless there is a cert whose acronym is BADASS.
sarahvdv: @RackerHacker None because I only have one and it’s almost embarrassing to put “CompTIA Network+ Certified” in my signature.
0×44: @RackerHacker Zero. Certifications are nerd short-hand for “Don’t hire me.”

I’m certainly not against certifications — they’re a good way for vendors to ensure that there are trained professionals that meet a certain set of minimum knowledge levels about their product. When you hire someone with a particular certification, you should be able to assume that they have this minimum knowledge level (for most certifications).

However, a certification says absolutely nothing about how a job candidate has actually applied these skills to their previous work. For example, consider a systems administrator with a CCNA. If you ask the job applicant something like “So, how much experience do you have working with Cisco” for a Cisco-heavy job position and they reply that they’ve set up a Cisco PIX a few times, but they mainly focus on Linux administration, then what is that certification worth to your company?

As for e-mail signatures, I’d leave out the certifications. If you’re sending e-mails to coworkers that you already know, there shouldn’t any reason for you to “fluff” your signature with those abbreviations. They should already be familiar with your abilities and the addition of certifications to the e-mail doesn’t add anything valuable to the e-mail itself. If you’re sending e-mails to people you don’t know (especially for a job), it makes your e-mail look pretentious.

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