I ordered it on 15th December, and Lenovo only just managed to get it to me.
Product Name: ThinkPad T440s
The most difficult thing about installing Kubuntu was backing up Windows before completely removing it...
Not even Ubiquity could mess things up, although I didn't attempt anything particularly challenging.
5GHz WiFi worked out of the box, which was a nice surprise. I'm using an Intel 7260ac chip, which is the same as what's in Intel's NUC. Someone else linked a story about it which suggested the driver was dodgy at the time of writing the article, but the free driver works very well now, no tinkering required.
Something else I wasn't expecting to work is the backlit keyboard controls (Fn + space to toggle). Works like a charm without any customisation.
The touchpad is a funny one, they've removed the discrete buttons at the top for trackpoint users and made the lot into one big slab. Personally, I'm not a trackpoint user so I'm unaffected by the removal of the top buttons, but I read a thread on Ubuntu forums where someone seemed to be struggling to configure clicking with the top. As far as normal use is concerned, the integrated buttons work fine, but i don't actually use them: I never actually click with the touchpad, but use one- and two-finger taps for left and right clicks. For my personal use, the big touch pad is great, although I'm not sure it's for everyone.
The only oddity I have discovered so far is that the screen brightness keys don't work. The default settings map them correctly, and I've tried re-mapping them, but pressing them has no effect.
Power management works really well, even with the two batteries (one integrated and one hot-swappable).
Feathers
Product Name: ThinkPad T440s
- 4th Gen Intel Core i5-4300U Processor (3MB Cache, up to 2.90GHz)
- T440s 14.0 FHD WWAN
- Intel HD Graphics 4400
- 12G 4G Base + 8G (1 SoDIMM)
- Keyboard Backlit - UK English
- No FPR w/NFC
- 720p HD Camera
- 256 GB Solid State Drive, Serial ATA3 eDrive Capable
- ThinkPad Battery 3 cell Li-Polymer (23.2Whr)
- ThinkPad Battery 3 cell Li-Polymer (23.2Whr)
- 65W Slim AC Adapter - UK
- Intel Dual Band Wireless 7260AC with Bluetooth 4.0
The most difficult thing about installing Kubuntu was backing up Windows before completely removing it...
Not even Ubiquity could mess things up, although I didn't attempt anything particularly challenging.
5GHz WiFi worked out of the box, which was a nice surprise. I'm using an Intel 7260ac chip, which is the same as what's in Intel's NUC. Someone else linked a story about it which suggested the driver was dodgy at the time of writing the article, but the free driver works very well now, no tinkering required.
Something else I wasn't expecting to work is the backlit keyboard controls (Fn + space to toggle). Works like a charm without any customisation.
The touchpad is a funny one, they've removed the discrete buttons at the top for trackpoint users and made the lot into one big slab. Personally, I'm not a trackpoint user so I'm unaffected by the removal of the top buttons, but I read a thread on Ubuntu forums where someone seemed to be struggling to configure clicking with the top. As far as normal use is concerned, the integrated buttons work fine, but i don't actually use them: I never actually click with the touchpad, but use one- and two-finger taps for left and right clicks. For my personal use, the big touch pad is great, although I'm not sure it's for everyone.
The only oddity I have discovered so far is that the screen brightness keys don't work. The default settings map them correctly, and I've tried re-mapping them, but pressing them has no effect.
Power management works really well, even with the two batteries (one integrated and one hot-swappable).
Feathers
Comment