Lenovo's
Thinkpad T series notebooks have long been the gold standard for
mainstream business systems because of their strong performance,
superior build quality, and best-in-class keyboards. With the 14-inch
ThinkPad T420, Lenovo has made a couple of changes, switching the screen
to the now-standard 16:9 aspect ratio and giving it the latest Intel
2nd Generation Core series CPU. Is the T420, $1,179 as configured, the
business notebook to beat?
Design
The ThinkPad T420
follows the classic ThinkPad aesthetic business users have come to know
and love over the years. The matte black, rubberized lid with its simple
silver logo and raven black sides, bottom, and interior are all
long-time ThinkPad staples, as is the tiny red TrackPoint pointing stick
that sits between the G and H keys. Like previous ThinkPad T Series
notebooks, the T420 is designed for durability. The rubberized ABS
plastic lid, carbon-reinforced bottom, and internal roll cage help
protect against shocks and drops.
At 13.4 x 10 x 1 inches and 5.2
pounds with the high-capacity nine-cell battery, the ThinkPad T420 is a
bit larger and heavier than the Toshiba Tecra R840 (13.4 x 9.4 x 1.1
inches, 4.6 pounds), but it's still lighter than the HP Elitebook 8460p (13 x 9.1 x 1.3 inches, 5.4 pounds) and the Dell Latitude E6420
(13.9 x 10.25 x 1.25 inches, 6.2 pounds) with its extended battery.
Using the standard six-cell battery cuts the T420's length to 9 inches
and its weight to 4.8 pounds. Lenovo's ThinkPad T420s, designed as a lighter alternative, weighs only 4 pounds and measures only 13.5 x 9.1 x 0.8-1 inches.

Keyboard, Pointing Stick, TouchPad
The
classic, spill-resistant keyboard on the ThinkPad T420 features 7 rows
with a full range of keys, even rarely used ones such as scroll lock and
pause. Enlarged Esc and Delete keys make it easy to perform these
frequent functions. The combination of strong tactile feedback and a
smile-shaped key surface allowed us to achieve an 86 word-per-minute
score with a 1-percent error rate on the Ten Thumbs Typing Tutor test,
well above our 80 wpm average. However, the typing experience on the
13-inch ThinkPad X1 remains the industry's best because of that notebook's soft-touch palm rest and even more responsive keys.
Like
other ThinkPads, the T420 has both a TrackPoint pointing stick and a
touchpad. We're huge fans of the TrackPoint because it provides the most
accurate way to navigate around the desktop short of using a mouse, and
it allows you to move the pointer without lifting your fingers off of
the home row. If you don't like pointing sticks, the 3 x 1.75-inch
textured touchpad provides accurate navigation around the desktop, and
its two discrete mouse buttons provide just the right amount of
feedback. However, multitouch gestures such as pinch-to-zoom are not
smooth at all.

Heat
The
ThinkPad T420 stayed pleasantly cool throughout our testing. After
streaming video for 15 minutes, the touchpad measured a frigid 82
degrees, the keyboard an icy 81 degrees, and the bottom a cool 87
degrees Fahrenheit. We consider temperatures below 95 degrees
comfortable.
Display and Audio
The 230-nit, 14.1-inch
matte display provided sharp images and plenty of desktop real estate
thanks to its optional 1600 x 900 panel. When we watched a 1080p
QuickTime trailer for the movie Point Blank, images were sharp
and motion smooth with viewing angles solid up to 45 degrees to the left
or right. However, when we streamed a 720p Flash episode of Fringe
from Fox.com, the edges of objects seemed a little pixelated, perhaps
because the screen had a higher resolution than the video. We highly
recommend the 1600 x 900 panel, a $50 option, because it shows a lot
more of your favorite web pages and documents without forcing you to
scroll.
While not as high fidelity as audio-focused consumer
notebooks such as the Dell XPS and the HP Envy series, the Lenovo
ThinkPad T420 provides surprisingly good music playback. Whether we were
playing Kool and the Gang's jazz-oriented "Summer Madness," the
bass-heavy "Between the Sheets" by the Isley Brothers, or Motley Crue's
guitar-laden "Looks that Kill," sound was accurate and loud enough to
fill a medium-sized room. We could even make out a solid separation of
sound between the speakers, which sit on either side of the keyboard.