Lenovo IdeaPad S12

24.08.2009
The is a portable, affordable, and multimedia-minded with a full-size keyboard and decent battery life. Its 12.1-inch screen makes the S12 big enough for those who lament the tininess of a 9- or 10-inch screen, yet it still retains its netbook status.

What should be the shining gem in the Lenovo S12's crown is an embedded --a netbook wunderkind that will be able to run 1080p video and games () with relative ease compared with just about every other netbook. Unfortunately, this is not that netbook. Lenovo sent us a $499 teaser that packs only an integrated GMA 950.

Considering that the S12 comes from the same factory where chunky, no-nonsense ThinkPads are regularly produced, its design is surprisingly sleek and sexy. It comes in either shiny black or shiny white (ours was black), with a subtle circle design. Even advocates of Mac-sexiness have to admit to its sense of style.

The S12's sizable keyboard is definitely pleasant to see on a netbook, though not exactly groundbreaking on a netbook of this size. For the most part, the keyboard was decent and easy to get around. But the Ctrl and are switched (the Fn key is the lower-left-corner key), which made keyboard shortcuts a pain. After all, if I want to contort my hand in unnatural positions just so I can open up a new tab on Firefox, I'll get a Mac.

The trackpad is neither textured nor indented, which adds to the sleek design--and some problems. It was sometimes hard to distinguish from the rest of the laptop; still, that took just a few days to overcome. The mouse buttons were another story--they felt cheap and were already starting to lose some of their press after only a few days of testing.

The screen, a 1280-by-800-resolution LED back-lit glossy panel, is surprisingly easy on the eyes: After several hours of staring at it, I didn't feel I was straining too much. The colors were crisp and bright, with very little glare, even when I was outside. The higher resolution was a definite plus for a netbook and, compared to most netbooks, this machine has a nice, "large" screen--like HP's tweener-class Pavilion dv2. The only real drawback is that the highest brightness level, whose use is pretty much a prerequisite for testing, saps battery life pretty quickly.