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  • Nvidia isn’t just building AI chips. It’s building an AI-powered world

    <div>Nvidia isn’t just building AI chips. It's building an AI-powered world</div>

    If you missed Nvidia’s (NVDA) keynote at Computex 2025, here’s the short version: AI is no longer just a tool — it’s the infrastructure of the future. Robots, desktops, smart cities, physics engines, and even national computing grids — all of it, Nvidia says, will be built on artificial intelligence.

    Read more…

  • Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2025) review: Blackwell and Arrow Lake make an impressive debut

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2025) review: Blackwell and Arrow Lake make an impressive debut

    MSRP $3,399.00

    4/5

    ★★★★☆

    Score Details

    “The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i is really fast gaming laptop with a really great display.”

    ✅ Pros

    • Superfast CPU performance
    • Very fast GPU performance
    • Promises the best gaming visuals ever
    • Excellent OLED display
    • Very good keyboard
    • Fun gaming aesthetic

    ❌ Cons

    • Expensive
    • Large and heavy
    • Really bad battery life

    Intel and Nvidia have released their newest laptop components for gaming laptops, Intel’s Arrow Lake-HX Core Ultra 9 275HX that coincides with Nvidia’s release of its Blackwell 5000-series GPUs. Both represent important milestones in performance and image quality, respectively, and I had a chance to get my hands on one of the first machines utilizing both.

    Specifically, it’s the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i, which has the Core Ultra 9 and the second-fastest Blackwell GPU, the GeForce RTX 5080. And it’s a very fast laptop indeed, the fastest Windows laptop I’ve reviewed yet, in fact. It’s also a nicely built machine with a fun gamer aesthetic and a gorgeous OLED display. It’s a solid representative of the latest wave of really fast gaming laptops (that will also appeal to creators).

    Specs and configurations

      Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025
    Dimensions 14.35 x 10.9 x 0.86-1.05 inches
    Weight 5.67 pounds
    Processor Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX
    Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080
    RAM 32GB LPDDR5-6400
    Display 16.0-inch 16:10 QHD+ (2560 x 1600) OLED, 240Hz
    Storage 2 x 1TB SSD
    Touch No
    Ports 1 x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4
    1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2
    1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
    2 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1
    1 x HDMI 2.1
    1 x RJ45
    1 x 3.5mm audio
    Wireless Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4
    Webcam 5MP front-facing camera
    Operating system Windows 11
    Battery 99.9 watt-hour
    Price $3,399

    Lenovo is still working out its distribution of the Legion Pro 7i, and that includes both availability and pricing. As I’m writing this review, there has been just one configuration available and it can’t presently be purchased. It was priced at $3,399 for an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX chipset, 32GB of very fast RAM, two 1TB SSDs, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 GPU, and a 16.0-inch QHD+ OLED display running at up to 240Hz.

    That’s more than enough computer for most gamers, and they’ll pay for it. That’s a very premium price. We’ll have to wait and see if Lenovo offers other configurations, and if the prices remain that high.

    Design

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 front angled view showing display and keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Legion Pro 7i is obviously a gaming laptop. That’s apparent first in its overall size, where it’s quite thick by modern standards at a little more than an inch and also heavy at 5.67 pounds. There’s good reason for it, of course. Lenovo had to build in a lot of room to move air around and it incorporate a sophisticated thermal solution to keep heat down and performance up. The Legion Pro 7i can use up to the full 250 watts TDP between the CPU and GPU, which requires a complex “ColdFront” system with vapor chamber, large dual fans, and a “hyper chamber” that pulls cool air in from the bottom and pushes hot air out the back. There’s some marketing hype mixed in there, but the thermal solution works — and while the fans speed up, I’ve heard louder gaming machines.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 front view showing edge RGB LEDs.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The design also incorporate several gamer visual cues, starting with the per-key RGB lighting on the keyboard and the RGB strip along the front edge that projects a nice splash of color across a surface. Turn the Legion Pro 7i around and you’ll see RGB LEDs outlining the stereotypical fighter jet exhaust ports that look even cooler to me than usual. The lighting can be controlled using the LegionSpace app, and you can access more controls in Windows Settings.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 rear RGB LEDs.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Beyond the lighting and the structure, the Legion Pro 7i is relatively simplistic. It’s all-black, and there are no special textures like you’ll find on the Lenovo Legion 9i. The appearance of bulk is increased a bit by the offset lid, where the rear of the laptop extends outward and makes it seem even bigger than it is. The top and side display bezels are very small, but the bottom chin is quite large. Combined with that rear edge, that makes the Legion Pro 7i even deeper than it might otherwise be. It’s an imposing laptop.

    Lenovo did a good job of balancing what I think gamers likely want to see without resorting to an overly ostentatious style. The Legion 9i that we reviewed in 2023 was a little more like a “traditional” laptop, but I don’t find this latest machine to be over the top.

    The chassis is made from CNC aluminum, and it feels solid enough. That makes sense, too, because it’s heavy enough that Lenovo had no reason to cut any corners. It’s a load to carry around, and it will feel plenty robust as you do so. The Apple MacBook Pro 16 and the Razer Blade 16 are both solid devices as well and maybe feel a little more quality overall thanks to the density afforded by their thinner chassis, but the difference might be more down to aesthetics than build. The Legion Pro 7i is more than good enough.

    Keyboard and touchpad

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 top down view showing keyboard and touchpad.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Gamers like a certain kind of keyboard. The switches should have a distinct tactile feedback with fast responsiveness, and they should be durable enough to withstand months of key mashing. Lenovo has its TrueStrike keyboard that it touts as possessing the kind of key travel (1.6 mm here, within the sweet spot of 1.5mm to 2.0mm) and actuation response that gamers demand, with 100% anti-ghosting. I’m not the most avid gamer, but the keyboard feels pretty good to me. There’s a numeric keypad squished in on the side, which is good for macro bindings and such. It’s a bit small, though, and it takes space away from the rest of the keyboard. From the perspective of a writer like me who spends a lot more time typing out words than playing games, it’s not my favorite keyboard. But of course, I’m not this laptop’s target user.

    The touchpad is smaller than it could be, but it’s fine. It’s responsive enough, and it’s surrounded by an abrasion-resistant aluminum on the palm rest. It’s good enough, but I’m sure many gamers will use an external gaming mouse. For productivity users, it’s just okay.

    There’s no touch display, which is fine. Once again, I’m sure the target user won’t care.

    Connectivity and webcam

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 left side view showing ports.
    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 right side view showing ports.

    The Legion Pro 7i is a very large laptop and thus has lots of room for a variety of ports. Usually, large gaming laptops have a ton. There are plenty here, with a mix of modern and legacy connections. I wish there was more than one Thunderbolt 4 port, and I prefer this many ports to be placed on the rear of the chassis where cables are out of the way. There’s an Ethernet port, which is important for online gamers who want to cut out wireless latency, but there’s no SD card reader so creators will be disappointed. That makes connectivity overall something of a mixed bag. Wireless connectivity is fully up-to-date, though.

    The webcam is a 5MP version, which is high enough resolution. But, there’s not a lot of attention paid to enhancing quality for videoconferencing, which clearly isn’t this laptop’s focus. And, there’s no infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello facial recognition and no fingerprint reader. That makes things feel a little bare-boned, and it’s weird to rely on a PIN for logging in when almost every other laptop I’ve reviewed and used has one or more biometric method.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 front view showing webcam.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Oddly enough, the Arrow Lake chipsets don’t have Intel’s faster Neural Processing Unit (NPU). Its “AI Boost” NPU runs at just 13 tera operations per second (TOPS), versus the 40+ TOPS of some other Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm chipsets and Apple’s M4 chipsets with a Neural Engine running at 38 TOPS. That means that technically, Arrow Lake laptops don’t quality for Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC initiative that requires 40 TOPS or more, and any on-device AI processes will run more slowly unless they utilize the GPU. However, while GPUs are the fastest at processing AI tasks by a wide margin, they’re also the least energy-efficient. As we’ll see in our battery section, that doesn’t actually matter a lot because you’ll rarely use this laptop when it’s not plugged in.

    Performance

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 rear view showing vents.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX is a high-end member of the Arrow Lake-HX series, aimed at gamers and creators who require the ultimate in CPU performance. It’s a 24-core (eight Performance and 16 Efficiency), 24-thread chip running at up to 5.4GHz (Performance cores) and 4.6GHz (Efficiency cores) and consuming a base of 55 watts of power. It can ramp up to 160 watts total.

    The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 is a member of the Blackwell 5000-series CPU lineup, and it features Nvidia’s latest CUDA cores, streaming multiprocessors, and RT and Tensor cores, all supporting the new DLSS 4 that utilizes AI-driven upscaling and frame generation to provide much better visual quality while maintaining similar framerates as the previous generation. The RTX 5080 can consume up to 175 watts, and as mentioned above, the Lenovo Legion 7i can dynamically provide up to 250 watts total power. That’s a lot.

    The LegionSpace utility also lets you control performance, although that’s limited to selecting a few preset modes or tweaking a few custom settings. You can also opt to switch from a hybrid mode that switches between the integrated graphics and the RTX 5080, or run with the RTX 5080 alone to ensure the fastest performance. Some other laptops do provide more control over system components, however. In addition, Lenovo uses a custom LA3 AI chip as part of its Lenovo AI Engine+ that uses machine learning to optimize performance by adjusting fans and power distribution — as a gaming laptop, the goal is to maximize framerates and not necessarily enhance performance in productivity and creative applications.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 rear view showing lid and logo.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    In our benchmarks (reported below in each laptop’s performance mode), the Legion Pro 7i is the fastest Windows laptop we’ve tested in almost every task. The Core Ultra 9 275HX is almost universally faster in both single-core and multi-core performance than the Core i9-14900HX and the AMD Ryzen AI MAX+ 395. It also closes the gap with Apple’s M4 Max 16/40 chipset, which remains much faster in single-core tasks and faster in some (but not all) multi-core tasks. Note that the Legion Pro 7i achieved the fastest score ever in our Handbrake test that encodes a 420MB video as H.265 — so fast, in fact, that if chipset performance gets any faster, we’ll need to update our benchmarking process. I’ll also note that in all but the Cinebench R24 multi-core test, the AMD Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 was almost as fast as as the Core Ultra 9 in CPU-intensive tasks.

    I also ran two PugetBench tests that run in live versions of Adobe’s Premiere Pro and Photoshop applications, to see how the Legion Pro 7i can function as a creator’s workstation. Both tests can utilize a discrete GPU for faster performance, and the Premiere Pro test leverages faster multi-core performance while the Photoshop test is impacted most by single-core performance. Those tendencies show up in our scores, where the Legion Pro 7i was slightly faster than the MacBook Pro 16 with the M4 Max chipset in Premiere Pro, while the MacBook Pro 16 was considerably faster in Photoshop thanks to its insanely fast individual cores. Among laptops, both are the fastest machines we’ve tested in both of these tests, making them excellent choices for creators.

    Geekbench 6
    (single/multi)
    Handbrake
    (seconds)
    Cinebench R24
    (single/multi/GPU)
    PCMark 10
    Complete
    PugetBench
    Premiere Pro
    Pugetbench
    Photoshop
    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2025)
    (Core Ultra 9 275HX / RTX 5080)
    3,136 / 20,228 33 135 / 2,054 / N/A 9,361 10,377 9,087
    Lenovo Legion 9i Gen 9
    (Core i9-14900H / RTX 4090)
    1,873 / 13,175 71 117 / 916 / 8,873 9,122 N/A 6,622
    Asus ROG Strix 18
    (Core i9-14900HX / RTX 4090)
    2,946 / 17,622 N/A Bal: 124 / 1,533 / 22,067 N/A 7,430 N/A
    Asus ROG Flow Z13
    (Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 / Radeon 8060S)
    2,993 / 20,659 36 121 / 1,568 / NA N/A 7,250 7,250
    Alienware m16 R2
    (Core Ultra 7 155H / RTX 4070)
    2,366 / 12,707 N/A 103 / 1,040 / 10,884 7,028 5,590 5,590
    Apple MacBook Pro 16
    (M4 Max 16/40)
    3,626 / 25,332 48 179 /2,072 / 16,463 N/A 9,347 13,856

    Gaming

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 top down view showing LED power button and keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    As mentioned above, the RTX 5080 is aimed more at enhancing visual quality than it is at increasing performance. That’s readily apparent when running games that are optimized for DLSS 4, of which there are well over 100 available. We don’t test performance using these games, however, so you’ll just have to take my word for it that you’re getting a real boost in realism when running your favorite games — even if framerates aren’t significantly higher than, say, with a laptop built around an RTX 4080.

    Of course, that doesn’t mean the Legion Pro 7i isn’t a really fast gaming laptop. It might not be the fastest machine ever, but as mentioned just now, it will be as fast and it will look so much better with games that are fully optimized for the platform. I want to keep stressing that, because my benchmarks show some inconsistency, and it’s very likely that games that are fully optimized will also be faster in addition to looking better. I know that gamers tend to focus on faster framerates in evaluating a new GPU generation, but there’s a lot to be said about being “only” as fast but offering up significantly better visuals. And over time, that will hopefully result in better and better games.

    So, how did the Legion Pro 7i perform? Our benchmarks are a little spotty across different laptops, but we have enough data here to get an idea of how the RTX 5080 performs in our standard suite of gaming benchmarks. Note that, again, these results were generated in each laptop’s performance mode.

    To begin with, in the 3DMark Time Spy benchmark, the Legion Pro 7i is the fastest laptop we’ve tested. The only faster machines in our database used desktop RTX 4090 GPUs. It’s faster than laptops running both the RTX 4080 and the RTX 4090, which bodes well for the RTX 5090 that I’ll be reviewing soon in some other machines. In this benchmark, Blackwell is faster.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 top down view with lid closed.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The Legion Pro 7i also did particularly well in Civilization VI, blowing away every other machine in our database — including desktops. This title is impacted by the CPU in addition to the GPU, and the Core Ultra 9 275HX is obviously a very fast chipset for running this particular game.

    In Cyberpunk 2077, the 1440p ultra results were run with FSR 2.1 engaged while in Ultra RT, frame generation was turned off. The Legion Pro 7i was fastest among our comparison group in most tests, but not by a significant margin against the previous generation Legion Pro 7i and the Legion 9i. With DLSS turned on, the Legion Pro 7i 2025 hit 134 fps. Unfortunately, we didn’t test the other laptops with this setting and so I can’t make a direct comparison.

    The Legion Pro 7i 2025 wasn’t the fastest laptop in Red Dead Redemption, but it was close enough to prove the point that while it’s not always significantly faster, it’s not much slower, either. You won’t get Blackwell’s visual improvements in this title, but you won’t see a meaningful speed penalty, either.

    Finally, in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, the Legion Pro 7i 2025 was significantly faster than the previous generation. Again, though, we don’t have many direct comparisons.

    Overall, the Legion Pro 7i with the RTX 5080 was a very strong performer. It will run any modern title at its native 1440p resolution at very high framerates, and the newest games optimized for DLSS 4 will look better than ever.

    3DMark
    Time Spy
    Civ VI
    1600p Ultra
    CyberPunk 2077
    1600p Ultra/Ultra RT
    Red Dead Redemption
    16oop Ultra
    Assassin’s Creed Valhalla
    1440p Ultra High
    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2025)
    (Core Ultra 9 275HX / RTX 5080)
    21,486 296 fps 114 fps / 77 fps 94 fps 146 fps
    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2023)
    (Core i9-13900HX / RTX 4080)
    18,382 223 fps 110 fps / 45 fps 99 fps 126 fps
    Lenovo Legion 9i Gen 9
    (Core i9-14900H / RTX 4090)
    20,293 N/A 1o6 fps / 88 fps N/A N/A
    Asus ROG Zephyrus M16
    (Core i9-13900H / RTX 4090)
    18,372 191 fps 80 fps / N/A 99 fps N/A
    Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6
    (Core i7-13800H / RTX 4080)
    13,615 170 fps 71 fps / 57 fps N/A N/A
    Asus ROG Flow Z13
    (Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 / Radeon 8060S)
    10,532 88 fps 61 fps / N/A 73 fps 67 fps

    Battery life

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 side view showing lid and ports.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Let’s face it: no laptop with a 16.0-inch high-res OLED display and such fast, power-hungry components is going to get great battery life. Lenovo fit in the largest battery you can put in a laptop at almost exactly 100 watt-hours, but the Legion Pro 7i isn’t made to last long on a charge.

    And it didn’t. In both our web browsing and video looping tests, it shut down at right around two hours. In the most demanding Cinebench R24 test, it lasted an hour. This is a laptop that you’ll be carrying around with its very large and heavy power supply. There’s just no way around it.

    Display and audio

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 front view showing display.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Lenovo fitted the Legion Pro 7i with a 16.0-inch 16:10 QHD+ (2560 x 1600) OLED display that runs at up to 240Hz. Out of the box, it looks as spectacular as all OLED panels, with bright, dynamic colors and inky blacks.

    My colorimeter agreed, showing very high brightness at 523 nits, perfect blacks, and very wide colors at 100% sRGB, 95% AdobeRGB, and 100% DCI-P3 that are also extremely accurate at a DeltaE of 0.55 (less than 1.0 is indistinguishable to the human eye). The display will be excellent for every potential use, including the creative work for which this laptop is incredibly fast. And the high refresh rate means there will be zero tearing in games running at full speed.

    I also appreciated its high dynamic range (HDR) performance. Turning HDR on in Windows sometimes results in poor colors, but that’s not the case here. Everything looks great with HDR turned on, and running Dolby Vision content in Netflix was awesome. It wasn’t as bright as the MacBook Pro 16’s mini-LED display, so that laptop remains the king of streaming HDR. But, the Legion Pro 7i was still better than most Windows laptops. And, while I didn’t test any HDR games, I’m certain that it will make for a great experience.

    Lenovo Legion Pro 7i 2025 top down view showing speakers.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The audio is powered by a quad speaker system with Nahimic 3D Audio for games that support the standard. The sound was loud with clear mids and highs and a fair amount of bass. Compared to the best laptop speakers, the six-speaker setup on the MacBook Pro 16, I found the Legion Pro 7i to be just one notch below. Audio just wasn’t as crisp and clean as on the MacBook, and the bass wasn’t quite as impactful. But, it’s still very good and will enhance the gaming experience — although many gamers will use gaming headphones, and while the speakers get loud, the fans are still loud enough during intense gaming that a headphone is recommended anyway.

    Conclusion

    As the first gaming laptop I’ve reviewed with Intel’s Core Ultra 9 275HX and Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 5080, I have absolutely no complaints. It’s incredibly fast at any task you can throw at it, including its core gaming focus, and it has an excellent OLED display that runs at a fast refresh rate that will leverage Blackwell’s visual enhancement for a phenomenal gaming experience.

    It’s expansive at $3,399, and assuming that price holds once more configurations and inventory are available, that makes it an expensive laptop. It’s hard to say whether it’s the most competitive option given that there are so few reviews available, but taken on its own, there’s a lot to like for hardcore gamers.

  • Lenovo’s new gaming tablet could bring a boost to battery life and performance

    If you’re looking for a new gaming tablet, Lenovo might be working on something that’ll catch your eye. According to a new leak, Lenovo is preparing a refresh of the Legion Y700 gaming tablet, and the new version will come with subtle, but meaningful upgrades. Here’s what we know.

    The leak originates from Digital Chat Station, and as is often the case with leaks such as this, it’s a short message that’s just jam-packed with information. Although not specifically pointed out by name, the leak is most likely talking about the Lenovo Legion Y700, or rather whatever follows that tablet. The Y700 is still a fresh release, having launched in September 2024, but Lenovo might already have something better up its sleeve. As always with leaks, keep in mind that none of this is confirmed until Lenovo itself says so.

    The new tablet, said to be aimed at esports gamers, is said to ditch the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip in favor of the Snapdragon 8 Elite. This alone should give it a nice boost to performance, as the Snapdragon 8 Elite has a faster and better CPU and GPU; some sources claim it’s up to 45% faster than the Gen 3.

    Next, we’ve got a boost to battery life, and who doesn’t like that? Last year’s Y700 sports a 6550 mAh battery, and although it’s not clear what the new model will bring, it should have a larger battery, all the while offering a thinner frame.

    The leaker also pointed out that the new Lenovo Legion tablet would come with dual speakers and dual X-axis monitors. The screen size is said to stay the same at 8.8 inches.

    When is this new tablet set to come out? Hard to say, and the leaker didn’t specify. Notebookcheck tentatively mentions that it’ll arrive in the second quarter of 2025, which would be less than a year after the release of the Y700.

  • Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 review: an iconic laptop continues to evolve

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 review: an iconic laptop continues to evolve

    MSRP $1,659.00

    3.5/5

    ★★★☆☆

    Score Details

    “The Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 is a well-made ThinkPad that doesn’t really look like one.”

    ✅ Pros

    • Solid build quality
    • Thin and light
    • Good productivity performance
    • Great OLED display
    • Excellent keyboard and touchpad
    • Range of consumer and business features

    ❌ Cons

    • Battery life isn’t great
    • Expensive
    • Thinness a bit of a gimmick

    Buy at Lenovo

    For years, the ThinkPad lineup was easy to spot. Every ThinkPad featured the same iconic design, from the red-on-black color scheme to the keyboard design to the TrackPoint nubbin. Then, Lenovo introduced the ThinkPad Z series that altered the design a bit, and now there’s a new model that takes the lineup even further away from tradition.

    The ThinkPad X9-14 is a brand-new design that looks — and feels — even less like the ThinkPad of yesterday. That’s not a bad thing, because the new laptop has a lot going for it — although it doesn’t quite make it onto our list of the best business laptops. But it’s a sure sign that Lenovo isn’t holding onto the past.

    Specs and configuration

     Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14
    Dimensions 12.28 x 8.36 x 0.26-0.68 inches
    Weight 2.8 pounds
    Display 14.0-inch 16:10 FHD+ (1920 x 1200) IPS, 120Hz
    14.0-inch 16:10 2.8K (2880 x 1800) AMOLED, 60Hz
    CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 226V
    Intel Core Ultra 5 228V
    Intel Core Ultra 5 238V vPro
    Intel Core Ultra 7 258V
    Intel Core Ultra 7 268V vPro
    GPU Intel Arc 130V
    Intel Arc 140V
    Memory 16GB
    32GB
    Storage 256GB SSD
    512GB SSD
    1TB SSD
    2TB SSD
    Ports 2 x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4
    1 x HDMI 2.1
    1 x 3.5mm headphone jack
    Camera 8MP with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello
    Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetoth 5.4
    Battery 55 watt-hour
    Operating system Windows 11
    Price $1,239+

    The ThinkPad X9-14 is a business laptop that most likely will be purchased by companies on contract that will have customized pricing. But, if you were to go to the Lenovo Web store and purchase the laptop yourself, you’ll pay $1,239 for the bast configuration with an Intel Core Ultra 5 226V chipset, 16GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD, and 14.0-inch FHD+ IPS display. I reviewed the laptop with a 14.0-inch 2.8K OLED panel ($100) and a 512GB SSD ($100). You can upgrade up to a Core Ultra 7 268V chipset with vPro for $360, which also ups the RAM to 32GB. Upgrading to a 2TB SSD costs $240. The most expensive configuration runs $2,289.

    Those are all expensive prices, but not unusually so for business-focused laptops. Some premium laptops with similar configurations cost around the same or more, such as those from HP and Dell. Even some consumer premium laptops cost the same. So, the bottom line is you’re not paying a huge premium for those business-centric features.

    Design

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 rear view showing lid and logo.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The first thing you’ll notice when you handle the ThinkPad X9-14 is that it’s incredibly thin — at least outside of what Lenovo calls the “Engine Hub” that houses the critical components and the thermal system to keep them cool. The laptop is the thinnest ever at 0.26 inches in that front portion, even thinner than the Apple MacBook Air 13 at 0.44 inches. But, it bloats up to 0.68 inches at the hub. So, it’s both extremely thin and just very thin at the same time. It’s reasonably light at 2.8 pounds, but not the lightest 14-inch laptop you’ll find. Ultimately, I’d rate the design as just a little bit of a gimmick.

    The laptop feels very robust, as do all ThinkPads. It’s subjected to a host of MIL-STD 810H tests, meaning it’s guaranteed to last. That’s thanks to an all-aluminum construction that feels quite solid. It’s as good as any other similar laptop in this regard, and better than most. That’s important for a laptop that’s aimed at business users, who are as likely as any users to be traveling extensively with a laptop in tow.

    Aesthetically, the ThinkPad X9-14 doesn’t look much like a ThinkPad of old. It’s all-black and features the iconic red dots over the “i” on the lid and the palm rest logos, but the similarity ends there. ThinkPad’s have historically sported more red throughout the design, even the ThinkPad Z13 that eschewed the all-black aesthetic. The ThinkPad X9-14 cuts a slim figure thanks to the thin front portion of the chassis, but the Engine Hub kind of sticks out a little more than I like. It’s a good looking laptop, but nothing that really stands out to me.

    As a laptop aimed at business users, the ThinkPad X9-14 has several features aimed at better security and manageability. You can get Intel vPro capabilities that support enterprise management solutions, along with enhanced security and access to a higher level of support.

    It’s also a member of Lenovo’s Aura Edition laptops, with a variety of extra functionality. They include additional privacy guard and alerts, timers for extra distraction-free work, collaboration features, wellness, and power modes to optimize performance. Those aren’t unique to the Thinkpad X9-14, but they’re available to any users who want them.

    Keyboard and touchpad

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 top down view showing keyboard.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    ThinkPad keyboards were once indistinguishable. They had highly sculpted keycaps, tight spacing with seven levels of keys, and deep switches that required a bit of force to depress. Really, they weren’t my favorite, because I prefer more key spacing and lighter, more precise switches. That’s exactly why Apple’s Magic Keyboard is my favorite, and the ThinkPad X9-14’s version is very similar. The switches are a little deeper, but they’re still snappy with a bounce in the bottoming action. And there the layout is more traditional (i.e., non-ThinkPad) and spacious, with Ctrl and Alt keys that aren’t annoyingly reversed from the usual. I’d rate it very high on my list in terms of comfortable long-term typing, and an improvement over the old-school ThinkPad keyboard.

    Similarly, the touchpad is larger than usual for ThinkPads. First, there’s no red TrackPoint nubbin in the middle of the keyboard and therefore some of the touchpad space isn’t taken for an extra set of buttons. That’s huge departure, dropping on of the most iconic ThinkPad features. I suspect, though, that not too many users will be upset at the omission. The touchpad itself is an excellent haptic version that’s almost as good as Apple’s Force Touch version. Apple’s has the advantage of a Force Click feature where clicking a little “harder” invokes extra functionality. But, the ThinkPad touchpad arguably has more customization options.

    The display is also touch-enabled, which I like. Overall, this is probably my favorite ThinkPad I’ve reviewed in terms of controlling things and entering information.

    Webcam and connectivity

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 left side view showing ports.
    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 right side view showing ports.

    Connectivity is light for a 14-inch machine. There are two USB-C ports with Thunderbolt 4 and an HDMI 2.1 connection, along with a 3.5mm audio jack. That’s one of the prices you pay for that ultra thin section. Each port is located at the Engine Hub. Wireless connectivity is fully up-to-date with Wi-Fi 7.

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 front view showing webcam.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    The ThinkPad X9-14 has an optional 8MP webcam, which was on my review unit, and it provided a clear image in my testing. It supports the Aura Edition collaboration features mentioned above, including low light enhancement, better background blur, virtual presenter, and more. In addition, the Intel Lunar Lake chipset has a fast Neural Processing Unit (NPU) supporting Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC initiative for more efficient on-device AI processing.

    Performance

    Lenovo Thinkpad X9-14 top down view showing Engine Hub.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    There are several 8-core/8-thread Intel Lunar Lake (Core Ultra Series 2) chipsets available with the ThinkPad X9-14, from the Core Ultra 5 226V up to the  Core Ultra 7 268V chipsets. All run at a base of 17 watts, with various clock speeds. Lunar Lake is primarily focused on efficiency, and its performance falls somewhere between the older 15-watt U-series and 28-watt H-series Meteor Lake chipsets. You can also get versions with Intel’s vPro functionality.

    As you can see in our benchmarks, there’s not a huge difference between Lunar Lake versions in performance in CPU-intensive tasks. It’s considerably slower than the other Windows efficiency option, the Qualcomm Snapdragon X chipsets, and the AMD Ryzen AI 9 and Apple M4 chipsets are a lot faster.. The Core Ultra 5 226V also uses the slower Intel Arc 130V integrated graphics, and that shows up in the 3DMark Wild Life Extreme benchmark.

    The ThinkPad X9-14 is fast enough for productivity work, but gamers and creators won’t be too excited.

    Cinebench R24
    (single/multi)
    Geekbench 6
    (single/multi)
    Handbrake
    (seconds)
    3DMark
    Wild Life Extreme
    Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360
    (Core Ultra 5 226V / Intel Arc 130V)
    114 / 573 2587 / 10260 92 4740
    HP EliteBook X G1a
    (Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 / Radeon 890M)
    109 / 1095 2769 / 14786 60 7236
    HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    116 / 598 2483 / 10725 99 7573
    HP Spectre x360 14
    (Core Ultra 7 155H / Intel Arc)
    102 / 485 2176 / 11980 93 N/A
    Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    109 / 630 2485 / 10569 88 5217
    Asus Zenbook S 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V / Intel Arc 140V)
    112 / 452 2738 / 10734 113 7514
    HP OmniBook X
    (Snapdragon X Elite / Adreno)
    101 / 749 2377 / 13490 N/A 6165
    MacBook Air
    (M4 10/8)
    172 / 854 3751 / 14801 87 7827

    Battery life

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 side view showing lid and ports.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    There’s just a 55 watt-hour battery in the ThinkPad X9-14, likely a result of the incredibly thin chassis in all but the engine hub. Frankly, that’s not a lot of battery capacity for a 14-inch laptop with a power-hungry high-res OLED display. The Lunar Lake chipsets are efficient, but I wasn’t expecting great battery life.

    And, I didn’t get it. Compared to the other laptops in the comparison group using today’s more efficient chipsets for Windows, including also Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X, the ThinkPad X9-14 wasn’t even close. Some of those also have OLED displays, although they also have larger batteries. Interestingly, the HP EliteBook X G1a with the AMD Ryzen AI 9 chipset also didn’t get the same kind of battery life as Intel’s and Qualcomm’s latest chipsets. As has been the case for several years, Apple Silicon is overall the most efficient.

    The bottom line is that battery life is not a strength here.

    Web browsing Video Cinebench R24
    Lenovo Thinkpad X9-14
    (Core Ultra 226V)
    7 hours, 39 minutes 6 hours, 27 minutes 1 hour, 33 minutes
    HP EliteBook X G1a
    (Ryzen AI 9 HX 375)
    N/A 7 hours, 27 minutes 1 hour, 27 minutes
    Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360
    (Core Ultra 5 226V)
    12 hours, 50 minutes 19 hours, 30 minutes 2 hours, 18 minutes
    HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    11 hours, 5 minutes 15 hours, 46 minutes 2 hours, 14 minutes
    Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    14 hours, 16 minutes 17 hours, 31 minutes 2 hours, 15 minutes
    Asus Zenbook S 14
    (Core Ultra 7 258V)
    16 hours, 47 minutes 18 hours, 35 minutes 3 hours, 33 minutes
    Microsoft Surface Laptop
    (Snapdragon X Elite X1E-80-100)
    14 hours, 21 minutes 22 hours, 39 minutes N/A
    HP Omnibook X
    (Snapdragon X Elite X1E-78-100)
    13 hours, 37 minutes 22 hours, 4 minutes 1 hour, 52 minutes
    Apple MacBook Air
    (Apple M4 10/8)
    16 hours, 30 minutes 20 hours, 31 minutes 3 hours, 47 minutes

    Display and audio

    Lenovo ThinkPad X9-14 front view showing display.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    There are two display options with the ThinkPad X9-14, both 14-inch panels at a 16:10 aspect ratio. One is a 2.8K (2880 x 1800) OLED panel running at 60Hz, the other is an FHD+ (1920 x 1200) IPS panel with a variable 120Hz refresh rate. That’s a mixed bag, with the sharper display offering up brighter colors and OLED’s usual inky blacks and the IPS panel offering a smoother user interface and better battery life.

    I tested the OLED display, and my colorimeter found it a little different than most other OLED panels I’ve tested. It was very at 511 nits, brighter than most OLED displays and well above our older 300-nit threshold. My colorimeter couldn’t measure the contrast ratio, something I haven’t seen from an OLED display for a while, but blacks were perfect. Coloers weren’t quite as wide at 100% sRGB, 93% AdobeRGB (most are 97% or higher), and 100% DCI-P3, and accuracy wasn’t nearly as good as usual at a DeltaE of 1.62. Almost every OLED panel is below the cutoff for excellent displays of 1.0.

    The display is still great for every user, and its support for Dolby Vision bodes well for media consumption. The IPS panel is for anyone who doesn’t care as much about colors and blacks and wants better battery life than I saw in my testing.

    A business laptop with more than just business appeal

    There’s a lot to like about the ThinkPad X9-14, and not just for ThinkPad fans. In fact, anyone who came here looking for a traditional ThinkPad design will be disappointed. The ThinkPad X9-14 is much more like other thin-and-light laptops today than that iconic brand, and that’s not actually a bad thing.

    While the thin design is a bit of a gimmick, because you still need to contend with an Engine Hub that makes it a more typical thickness, it’s still light enough and well-built enough to be comfortably portable. It’s fast enough for productivity users and has a very good OLED display option — although that has an outsized impact on battery life. Business users will like it a lot, but consumers should consider it as well.

  • Nvidia announces DGX desktop “personal AI supercomputers”

    During Tuesday’s Nvidia GTX keynote, CEO Jensen Huang unveiled two “personal AI supercomputers” called DGX Spark and DGX Station, both powered by the Grace Blackwell platform. In a way, they are a new type of AI PC architecture specifically built for running neural networks, and five major PC manufacturers will build the supercomputers.

    These desktop systems, first previewed as “Project DIGITS” in January, aim to bring AI capabilities to developers, researchers, and data scientists who need to prototype, fine-tune, and run large AI models locally. DGX systems can serve as standalone desktop AI labs or “bridge systems” that allow AI developers to move their models from desktops to DGX Cloud or any AI cloud infrastructure with few code changes.

    Huang explained the rationale behind these new products in a news release, saying, “AI has transformed every layer of the computing stack. It stands to reason a new class of computers would emerge—designed for AI-native developers and to run AI-native applications.”

    Read full article

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