X260 ------ I have got a new laptop for my work: the Lenovo X260. It' isn't the fastest computer on the Earth but a very portable one: it has only a 12.5" screen. It run Windows 10 (in a few last years I am rather a manager than a scientist, so it's OK for most of my work). There are some nice thinks: - the device looks to be very conservative (like a real Thinkpad) - the battery is user-accessible and can be replaced - there is a trackpoint (the touchpad, too but it can be turned off) - acceptable keyboard layout - a normal, wired Ethernet (on an ultrabook!) - backlit keyboard (I would prefer the normal IBM-style lamp but I'm out of luck here) - a SSD drive - it's quiet and it makes the computer to feel faster - a SD slot It has also a dock connector, but I have no dock at the moment. There are not that nice things, too: - a rectangular power connector (I have several old-style ones for our X60/X61 but they are useless here) - the modern, wide, screen has too small height for normal use, and the whole device is too wide - the keyboard is of an average quality at maximum (the X60's keyboard is much better) - the 1920x1080 resolution makes some problems to the OS: there are various sizes of fonts in applications, it looks very inconsistent (I have thought that there is nothing worse than Ubuntu Touch - but I was mistaken - this is much worse) After all, it is probably the best small laptop that man can get today. But it seems to me that it's only real advantage over my old Thinkpad X61s is a higher processing speed (a better bus, the Core i5 against the Core2Duo, and a bigger RAM: 8GB vs 4GB). In the field of ergonomic the old machine wins: it has more practical dimensions of the screen, much better keyboard (and somewhat better trackpoint) and more USB ports. I would try to replace the HDD in the X61s by the SDD drive. But the X260 isn't 10 years old and thus it should be a bit more reliable. I installed here some useful thinks: the GNU Octave (4.2 with a GUI), the Vim and the Git to be able to do some computing here.