It wonât just be another one of these, they claim. | Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
Laptops are a mature category, and foldable screens are arguably one of the last frontiers. Several companies have attempted to bite that pie this year â notorious chaos agent Asus put out a surprisingly decent foldable Zenbook in August, and rumors of an HP model continue to swirl. But itâs easy to forget (and perhaps the company would like us to) that Lenovo was actually the first to the punch on this form factor, with the 2020 ThinkPad X1 Fold that had, shall we say, a number of problems.
Lenovo is making its second attempt at an X1 Fold this year, with the second-gen model slated for release this quarter. And Brian Leonard, the companyâs VP of design, would like us all to know that our complaints have been heard and addressed.
âWe spent a lot of time with the users that actually utilized those devices,â Leonard says, referring to the first-gen model. âDirect feedback from them went into the development of this device.â
When I reviewed the X1 Fold in late 2020, I could absolutely see the benefit of a foldable form factor. Itâs much easier to carry a 13.3-inch screen around in a purse or a tote bag when itâs folded up in a book shape than when itâs fully laid out.
But most of what made the first-gen X1 Fold difficult to use stemmed from the fact that it was too small. For one, the keyboard needed to be small enough to fit inside the device when it was closed and to magnetically attach to the bottom half when it was folded at 90 degrees. But that meant that it couldnât be full size and a number of keys had to be combined. The apostrophe was positively infinitesimal. Some buttons had to accommodate as many as four different symbols, so you needed to hit three keys at once in order to make a question mark.
Thirteen inches, furthermore, was not large enough. A major benefit of the foldable screen is supposed to be that you can turn it vertically and then bend it into a laptop shape when you need a compact device for airplane use and such. With the original X1 Fold, however, the screen room was so tiny as to be useless â and the on-screen keyboard that would appear on the bottom half was doubly so.
Photo by Monica Chin / The Verge
Hereâs the upcoming X1 Fold when itâs fully unfurled.
These complaints, unsurprisingly, also came up in Lenovoâs market research. âThey wanted a better keyboard, and they wanted a keyboard that was full-sized,â says Leonard of the users the company surveyed. And to those users, âthe screen was never really big enough to be a primary device. It was a secondary device.â That was a particular issue because the X1 Fold was priced at well over $2,000 â not at all a reasonable price for a secondary device.
The new keyboard is much bigger, without the key-smooshing. Itâs backlit and has the ThinkPad trackpoint as well as a fingerprint sensor. Leonard assures me that he types on the on-screen keyboard himself all the time. âFor quick moments of doing things, answering a quick email or doing internet searches or whatever, if Iâm not spending a lot of time and Iâm not writing long things, Iâm okay on the screen,â he says.
The other big fix is that the screen is now 16 inches. âFor me, thereâs something quite magical with using it in bent mode and then scrolling through websites,â Leonard says. âIt feels very different than scrolling through on a standard notebook or even a tablet. It actually feels like itâs moving away from you or toward you.â The company even considered going full-on Surface Pro with a built-in kickstand (like the first X1 Fold had) but determined that the deviceâs ability to stand in both portrait and landscape orientations was more important. (Thereâs instead a separate kickstand, which you can magnetically attach and detach at will.)
Image: Monica Chin/The Verge
This is the 16-incher, folded horizontally into laptop mode.
Fans of the foldable form factor would probably love to see it become a staple of Lenovoâs lines in the way the convertible did for a number of years. There will certainly be eyes on this product, Leonardâs included, and its success may be a big factor in whether the company sees the category as viable. (Other companies already seem to have moved on â Samsung, for example, recently announced that the âfoldable is gone,â and that the future is slidable.)
âEventually, I would love to see this become part of the standard ThinkPad line,â Leonard says. âBut thatâs really up to…how the market bears on this stuff.â Might they soon be available at a more accessible price point? That also depends on how this one does. âMy hope is that weâll see that curve and that price point come down over time and the volumes increase,â he says. âAnd then I think weâll really start to see more data coming back from users and more data about how theyâre using it.â
But, he reiterated, this one fixed the problems. âWe learned from those things,â he says, âand made massive adjustments and improvements to bring out this device.â