Premium performance, but it can’t escape all criticism.
No dedicated graphics card, no visual highlights but in turn, great performance, robustness and an OLED display. Even the P16s’ graphics performance needn’t shy away. So, good all around? Well, almost!
Mario Petzold (translated by Daisy Dickson), Published 01/27/2024 🇩🇪
A workstation doesn’t necessarily have to offer the best possible graphics performance—especially as this doesn’t always only result in advantages.
This laptop uses the extremely powerful and efficient AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 7840U. Its integrated graphics chip achieves similar performance to the Nvidia RTX 2050. In professional graphics applications, it easily outperforms the Nvidia T550.
In turn, it only features limited hardware with limited power requirements—but only limited spending is required. In addition, the ThinkPad P16s G2 is comparatively light and stays mostly quiet.
On top of this, Lenovo has given the work device, featuring a visually stripped-back and sober design, an OLED display. This, of course, makes a lot of sense if you are marketing the laptop toward people using it for graphically demanding media editing tasks.
Plus, detail-rich content with natural colors just looks amazing in general, anyway.
Not quite right in detail
You do get a lot—especially in terms of performance and nice-looking picture. On the other hand, the manufacturer has cut some costs when it comes to the device’s connectivity options. In total, the USB ports could have been a little faster.
And the CPU and iGPU’s outstanding efficiency has been eaten up to a certain extent by the laptop’s bright OLED display. Despite its large battery, its runtimes remain good and practical—but just not as good as they could have been.
In our detailed review of the ThinkPad P16s G2 AMD, you can see what else surprised us positively, what bugged us, as well as a detailed overview of all of our measurements.
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Lenovo ThinkPad P16s G2 21K9000CGE (ThinkPad P16s Series)
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I’ve been using computers since 1989 and an Intel 8086. I also remember the Internet before college and university networks were supplanted by corporate and social media. The fascination for the technical leaps and social effects never let me go. In particular, I am most interested in the classic PC – and hardly less so in the laptop, in which the components have to come to terms with little space and power. So it seems only logical that I have been writing technical guides and product presentations since 2015. My physics studies provide the necessary basic knowledge and understanding of contexts.
Translator: Daisy Dickson – Translator – 163 articles published on Notebookcheck since 2023
Originally from Scotland, I grew up and lived in Germany until I completed my high school qualifications before moving back to Scotland to complete my university studies. Growing up bilingual led me to form a close relationship with the English and German languages, often working in the fields of teaching and translation. Most of my childhood was shaped by playing around on new consoles, computers and gadgets and getting to grips with the new craze of the internet and smartphones. This interest has stayed with me well into adulthood. Nowadays, I live in Glasgow and work as a freelance translator and digital media coordinator. I have been translating for Notebookcheck since early 2023.
Mario Petzold, 2024-01-27 (Update: 2024-01-26)
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