Small to medium business owners generally want a something in a compact design, to lug it around to a business meeting to take essential notes, but ultimately can be managed from a central administration system across hundreds or thousands of employees. Catering for this market is Lenovo, and it has announced a pair of new models designed for its SMB customers. The Lenovo ThinkPad E14 and E15 series of notebooks have been improved in design and are now available with up to an including an AMD Ryzen 7 4700U APU. Also announced are AMD's ThinkPad T14, T14s, L14, L15, and smaller X13 models all featuring the latest AMD Ryzen 4000 PRO series processors with extra security features designed for professional and business users.

Adding to its portfolio, including its Intel 10th gen mobile refresh ThinkPad E14 and E15 series, SMB users looking now have an AMD Ryzen based option. Similar in design to the previous E14 and E15 series, the new Lenovo ThinkPad E series will be available with Ryzen 4000 Mobile. Lenovo has stated that it has an improved screen to body ratio of 85%, although it doesn't provide the metric which this is measured against.


Lenovo ThinkPad E15 with Ryzen 4000 Mobile

The Lenovo ThinkPad series is is available with an eight-core AMD Ryzen 7 4700U APU without SMT and has seven Radeon graphics cores to power the display. While Lenovo hasn't detailed the display or the other vital specifications at this time, it has added a touch fingerprint reader and an optional IR camera powered by Mirametrix. They are quoted as specialists in security and privacy with its gaze tracking technology. This combined with its Glance software which is integrated within adds an extra element of security which respond to a users presence and can automatically lock the laptop when users step away. The touch fingerprint reader is built into the power button and allows users the ability to turn the system on with one touch, which is more secure than conventional power buttons and is suited to business environments.


Lenovo ThinkPad X13 is the most portable from its range

Lenovo has also announced new ThinkPad T, X, and L series models powered by AMD Ryzen PRO 4000 series processors. The Lenovo ThinkPad 14 Gen 1 is advertised to include a projected 16-hour battery life and a thin lightweight frame of 17.9 mm and 1.46 Kg, with an even bigger 20-hour battery life on its uprated T14s model. The ThinkPad T14s has a slimmer profile at 16.1 mm thick, with a weight starting at 1.27 Kg. The smaller ThinkPad X13 model has a claimed battery life of up to 17.5 hours, with a thickness of 16.9 mm and a weight on an upward curve starting at just 1.28 Kg. This makes the ThinkPad X13 the lightest from its announced stack.


The Lenovo ThinkPad L15 powered by Ryzen 4000 PRO Mobile

Moving down the new Lenovo ThinkPad stack are the L14 and L15 models which are the largest in size with a thickness of 20.4 mm on the L14, whereas the L15 is slightly chunkier with a thickness of 21 mm. The ThinkPad L14 will have a weight starting at 1.61 Kg, while the L15 will weigh upwards of 1.98 Kg. Both include a projected battery life of up to 14-hours, which Lenovo claims it has used the MobileMark14 benchmark to get this data.

All the Lenovo ThinkPad T, X, and L series models will feature AMD's newest Ryzen 4000 PRO mobile series processors, with extra layers of built-in security features, and feature Lenovo's Self-Healing BIOS, and Lenovo ThinkShield. These new models will be available from June, with prices starting at $849 for the T14, $1029 for the T14s, and $849 for the X13 series. Also available from June will be the L14 and L15 series of ThinkPad models which will both start at $649.

As for the Lenovo ThinkPad E14 and E15 series, both will be available from June and come with a price tag starting at $639.

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Source: Lenovo

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  • The Hardcard - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    change in my comment: “both the LMVE” should be “both the L and the E”
  • zmatt - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    E series: budget line thinkpads, lacks many of the features that people associate with the brand.

    T series: your default thinkpad. High end mid size meant for business. Has nice QoL features like internal roll cage and liquid drain holes so spilling coffee on the keyboard wont ruin the laptop. Comes in 14 and 15 inch models. The ones with s at the end are ultrabook versions. Generally less expandable but thinner and lighter.

    X series: High end ultraportables. Usually offered with 12 and 13 inch screens.

    L series: lower end than a T series but higher end than an E, same general size class as both.
  • psychobriggsy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    E - Economy
    T - just get this one
    X - poseur level
    L - at least it's not an E
  • eastcoast_pete - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Nice! That pretty much covers it!
  • Valantar - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    The poseur level X is limited to the X1 and X1 Yoga, the X13 and X13 Yoga are successors to the old ultraportable workhorses in the X2xx series. Prices for those aren't as silly, and the featuresets are no worse than the T14s (which after all is something of a sibling, a T-series "workhorse" but "s(lim)" to improve portability).

    It would be very nice if this article didn't miss the series designation letters in 1/3rd of the paragraphs though. That would make this slightly easier to parse.
  • phoenix_rizzen - Monday, May 11, 2020 - link

    So, closer to:

    E: entry-level, bottom-of-the-barrel
    L: budget-friendly
    T: business laptop
    X: high-end business laptop

    (Helps to put them in order, instead of sticking the L at the end.) :)
  • Rookierookie - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    It's unfortunate that Lenovo seems to be trying to do away with the differentiation between X and T, which to me makes very little sense.
  • zmatt - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    They aren't really. The S model T series are ultrabooks. While they are thin and light they are not as small as X series which are true ultraportables. The non S model T series are much larger than the X. What makes it seem like they are blending is that modern laptops are much thinner and lighter than they were in the past. So a modern 14 inch ultrabook is smaller than an old ultraportable in every way except footprint.

    My work laptop is a T470s and its both thinner and lighter than my personal X230. But an X390 would be even more so.
  • lmcd - Saturday, May 9, 2020 - link

    Personal experience: E series AMD can't use AMD latest GPU drivers without losing DisplayPort Alt Mode over USB-C.

    It's possible higher tier ones have better implementations.
  • Valantar - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    This is great! I really hope the X13 comes configured to 25W and has LPDDR4X. And a FreeSync screen (they have had that on Picasso Thinkpads) would be a fantastic bonus.

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