ThinkPad: Difference between revisions
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== History == | == History == | ||
{{Image|IBM ThinkPad 710T.jpg|right|250px|The ThinkPad 710T, which closely resembled the ThinkPad 700T, also known as the prototype.}} | |||
<blockquote>I wanted to create a volume as simple as possible and as expressive as possible... and I thought the form of a cigar box, which at that time corresponded to the dimensions... more or less than a laptop computer had to have, would be an expression of what I wanted to do. I wanted to make an object that looks like a black cigar box and that shows on the outside nothing of being what it is... except for the logo of the producer. Then, when you open it, you see this is not a cigar box, but it is a computer, and you see all the complicated stuff inside. And that would create a surprise, and this is the basic concept of the ThinkPad.</blockquote> - Richard Sapper | <blockquote>I wanted to create a volume as simple as possible and as expressive as possible... and I thought the form of a cigar box, which at that time corresponded to the dimensions... more or less than a laptop computer had to have, would be an expression of what I wanted to do. I wanted to make an object that looks like a black cigar box and that shows on the outside nothing of being what it is... except for the logo of the producer. Then, when you open it, you see this is not a cigar box, but it is a computer, and you see all the complicated stuff inside. And that would create a surprise, and this is the basic concept of the ThinkPad.</blockquote> - Richard Sapper | ||
=== notes === | === notes === |
Revision as of 23:02, 4 August 2009
ThinkPad is a professional-oriented brand of laptop and tablet computers manufactured by Lenovo, which secured the rights to the ThinkPads through its acquisition of the IBM's PC division in 2005. The prototype ThinkPad was a dedicated tablet - ergo, the "Pad" - but the design was abandoned due to its small niche market. The first ThinkPads to reach the market were mainly notebooks in the form of a black rectangular case, featuring a red rubber cap at its keyboard's center as a pointing device.
History
I wanted to create a volume as simple as possible and as expressive as possible... and I thought the form of a cigar box, which at that time corresponded to the dimensions... more or less than a laptop computer had to have, would be an expression of what I wanted to do. I wanted to make an object that looks like a black cigar box and that shows on the outside nothing of being what it is... except for the logo of the producer. Then, when you open it, you see this is not a cigar box, but it is a computer, and you see all the complicated stuff inside. And that would create a surprise, and this is the basic concept of the ThinkPad.
- Richard Sapper