Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Photo Galleries
  4. Legacy Archives

Up close with Lenovo’s new ThinkPad notebooks at CES 2012

Add as a preferred source on Google

We already had a chance to poke and prod Lenovo’s clever new X1 Hybrid earlier this week, but Wednesday brought the opportunity to get some real hands-on time with these matte black beauties: The X1 Hybrid, T430u Ultrabook, and a number of new Edge models including the E130 and S430.

Despite what essentially amounts to a smartphone heart transplant, the X1 actually looks and feels precisely like the old model, which – in case you’re not acquainted – boasts remarkable thinness and rigidity. Though slightly more portly and less powerful, the $849 T430u Ultrabook is shaping up to be one of our favorites of the show. It offers two of the three factors that made us so smitten with Samsung’s Series 5: the option of conventional hard drives up to 1TB, and the option of a discrete GPU with 1GB of video RAM (this one’s an Nvidia, Samsung uses AMD). The 11.6-inch E130 might pass for a netbook at first glance, but without the power handicap: You can get them with full power Intel Core Series or AMD CPUs, and the option of discrete graphics, with a starting price of just $449. Not bad, though the tiny trackpad had us jumping to use the red track pointer instead. Finally, the S430 represents the higher end of the Edge line, almost stepping into Ultrabook territory with a depth of just 22mm. If you’re not hung up on the Ultrabook name, it offers some great perks for the extra millimetes, including optional Nvidia Optimus graphics, Thunderbolt connectivity, Dolby Home Theatre v4, and an optical drive.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
AI image generators have escaped nightmare fingers and entered the fake premium era
Meta Muse, Gemini, and ChatGPT can now make clean, usable images. They also keep making reality look like a product render with feelings.
Terminal, Railway, Train

I expected this comparison to be uglier. Meta Muse, Gemini Nano Banana 2, and ChatGPT Images 2.0 sounded like a perfect setup for plastic faces, mangled hands, fake products, and posters written in haunted alphabet soup. Instead, they were mostly competent, which somehow made the whole thing more suspicious.

These aren’t identical tools wearing different logos. Meta pitches Muse Image as a social image model living inside Meta AI and its apps. Google frames Nano Banana 2 around speed, editing, and Gemini’s broader knowledge. OpenAI sells ChatGPT Images 2.0 on text rendering, visual control, and stronger prompt handling. Different ambitions, same polished little showroom.

Read more
DuckDuckGo’s browser now blocks the YouTube ads everyone hates
DuckDuckGo adds a Brave-like YouTube ad blocking feature
Text, Aircraft, Airplane

DuckDuckGo has spent the past few months gaining fresh attention as more users look for alternatives to Google’s increasingly AI-heavy Search experience. Now, the privacy-focused company is adding a feature that could make its browser even more tempting for everyday use. DuckDuckGo says its browser can now block most video ads, including those on YouTube, when a video is playing inside the browser.

What’s happening?

Read more
ChatGPT Live could make talking to AI feel straight out of the movies
We might finally get the AI sidekick sci-fi movies promised
Elderly women using ChatGPT live on a smartphone

AI voice assistants have been chasing the sci-fi dream for years, but they still have a hard time holding a conversation with humans. Most voice systems still need clear turns, clean pauses, and a few seconds before they respond. OpenAI is now rolling out GPT-Live, a new voice model for ChatGPT Voice that is designed to make those exchanges feel faster and less scripted.

The main upgrade is what OpenAI calls a full-duplex architecture. In simpler terms, GPT-Live can listen and speak at the same time. It continuously processes what the user is saying while also generating its own response, allowing it to decide when to talk, when to pause, when to keep listening, and when to use a tool.

Read more