Lenovo 3000 J100 8253 (Pentium 4 640 3.2GHz, 512MB RAM, 80GB HDD, XP Pro)
Lenovo's new 3000 small-business desktops mix low prices, a variety of different configurations, and sleek stylingFeaturing low-end Intel- and AMD-based configs, Lenovo isn't billing its new 3000-series PCs as Photoshop-blasting, 3D-modeling dynamosInstead, it's aiming these systems at those who need a basic work computer and don't want to spend a lot of money and effort to acquire and maintain one
The Lenovo 3000 J100 and J105 systems are the first Lenovo-branded systems to hit the United States, a move made easier after the company's purchase of IBM's computer business last yearThe Intel-based J100 models start at $499 and use the SiS 661 chipset, which gives you the flexibility to use a Celeron D, a Pentium 4, or a Pentium 4 with Hyper-Threading CPUThe J105 models start at $349 and feature AMD Sempron and Athlon 64 chips
Upside: At first glance, it appears that Lenovo is following the eMachines model of offering low-end, fixed-configuration systems that boast an attractive design and affordable prices(eMachines pioneered this model for selling budget home PCs via retail channels; Lenovo would seem to have adopted it for selling direct via its Web site to small businesses.) Lenovo is able to hit extremely low price points by offering fixed configurations that feature single-core, budget-level CPUs; it offers only the lower-end models from Intel's and AMD's lineupsLenovo also keeps the hard drive and memory sizes low, providing only 512MB of SDRAM and 80GB Serial ATA drivesIf you know all you need is an e-mail client and the occasional productivity app, there's no real reason to ask for more
That's not to say that these are totally stripped-down configurationsSome come with DVD/CD-RW drives, and Lenovo expects to expand the range to include 1GB of memory and double-layer DVD burners soonCertain businesses may also appreciate the Lenovo Cares tools, a pared-down version of Lenovo's ThinkPad ThinkVantage support that includes a system recovery tool, an autoupdater, and other business maintenance and service features
We like the design of the tower case (you'll eventually be able to get the Lenovo 3000 in a horizontal desktop case)Its clean lines look crisply professional, but the orange/yellow buttons help it avoid the stuffed-shirt appearance that plagues most corporate desktopsLenovo visually links the 3000-series systems to its more full-featured ThinkCentre desktops, maintaining the distinctive design in which the upper portion of the front bezel extends slightly past the top of the case
Downside: We wish Lenovo could share more about the rollout of the higher-end componentsAs it stands now, eMachines' models provide much better bang for the buckFor instance, the $599 eMachines T6420 features an Athlon 64 3400+, 1GB of SDRAM, a 200GB hard drive, a 16X double-layer DVD drive, an 8-in-1 media card reader, and the Windows XP Media Center OS on a PCI Express-capable motherboardFor the same price from Lenovo, you get a J100 with only a Pentium 4 530 with 512MB, an 80GB hard drive, and a DVD/CD-RW combo drive with Windows XP Home and an AGP-only mainboardTrue, eMachines is aimed at a different type of user and offers no comparative Lenovo Care package, but a few apps that you may or may not use don't make up for such a large difference in computing powerThat's a major discrepancy, especially considering that SOHO computers often double as home PCs, making Lenovo's stripped-down approach feel too cheap
Outlook: We imagine that some customers might not mind the gap in value between the Lenovo 3000 systems and the eMachinesIf you're not computer savvy the Lenovo Cares package especially might sway youStill, for our money, value is the most important consideration for systems below $1,000Compared to eMachines, Lenovo's 3000 series looks like it has some catching up to doWe'll have the full story once we're able to review one of Lenovo's new PCs.