Lenovo Ushers in a New Era of Mobile Workstation Power and Performance with Lenovo ThinkPad P50 and P70
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And for us, this wasn't even an isolated incident. If you remember, people were upset that I was mentioning legal action against them before we caught them doing this, which was months before they had enough pressure that they had to admit what they were doing. So as far as I am concerned, they had the beginnings of a track record of some pretty devious behaviour. It feels like they have a corporate mentality of "do whatever you can get away with."
Like any vendor, they have fanboys who will help to cover for anything that they do wrong. And they have deep pockets to pay off the marketing firms and media firms to make people mentioning what they have done wrong seem silly.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Though, do you believe that they can never be trusted again?
Without a doubt, I could never trust them again. There are accidents, there are mistakes and there is this. I cannot fathom the rationale of anyone willing to do business with them after this. This isn't a bad business move, this was completely criminal. It would be liking hiring an employee that you just caught breaking into your house to rob you.
But when I say shit like this, everyone assumes I'm off the effing deep end crazy / paranoid / whatever. Lenovo now occupies the same "deserves to be kicked down a bunch of stairs" space where I put politicians...
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@RojoLoco said:
But when I say shit like this, everyone assumes I'm off the effing deep end crazy / paranoid / whatever. Lenovo now occupies the same "deserves to be kicked down a bunch of stairs" space where I put politicians...
I got called crazy when I was complaining about them not delivering the tablet and then when we discovered the network shim. Months later it becomes public that they are totally dishonest and not to be trusted.
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Can someone "explain it like i'm 5" why you need this kind of power in a mobile workstation? It seems like complete overkill for me.
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@s.hackleman said:
Can someone "explain it like i'm 5" why you need this kind of power in a mobile workstation? It seems like complete overkill for me.
No one can because no one does, really.
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I agree, someone somewhere must need crazy power in a mobile device but it is very, very rare. Mostly it is just people with too much money to spend or businesses that don't look into this stuff carefully enough and people convince their managers to get these things for them as a badge of pride that they could get something so expensive.
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Wow. Just.... wow. That anyone is willing to do business with them anymore is mind boggling to me. What would entice someone to let their salesman in the door? The lengths that they will go to are unthinkable.
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i like my lenovo laptop....
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From that link:
"That turns out to be a method Microsoft introduced with Windows 8 to allow the BIOS to execute code on boot up (!?!) called "Windows Platform Binary Table (WPBT)""Isn't that the whole reason UEFI exists, so we can't have that happen?
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@hubtechagain I have a Lenovo that I got for free, however it has Linux on it so I think I'm ok?
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@johnhooks said:
Isn't that the whole reason UEFI exists, so we can't have that happen?
No, UEFI exists to promote Windows lock in.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@johnhooks said:
Isn't that the whole reason UEFI exists, so we can't have that happen?
No, UEFI exists to promote Windows lock in.
I guess I should rephrase that, wasn't that the proposed reason, so only verified code could run?
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@johnhooks said:
@hubtechagain I have a Lenovo that I got for free, however it has Linux on it so I think I'm ok?
We got one for free, I'm not impressed with it at all. I'm surprised that they decided to give something away that would not be impressive. So as a Lenovo owner I'm like "even for free, we aren't happy". Nothing is less impressive than only being marginally useful for free.
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@johnhooks said:
I guess I should rephrase that, wasn't that the proposed reason, so only verified code could run?
Yes, Microsoft verified code, not code for you. It's basically designed to promote malware that someone has paid the vendors to approve.
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@scottalanmiller Oh ok, I guess that makes sense. I never realized it had to be verified by them, but now that I think of it, who else could verify it?
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So how can we load Linux on through UEFI? They just allow it for now?
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@johnhooks said:
@scottalanmiller Oh ok, I guess that makes sense. I never realized it had to be verified by them, but now that I think of it, who else could verify it?
"Verified" is one of those tricky marketing words that sounds great and you can get people to say "of course we want that" when, in fact, it is generally a potentially very bad thing.
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@johnhooks said:
So how can we load Linux on through UEFI? They just allow it for now?
Linux itself isn't a thing. Some OSes are verified, some are not. UEFI can be made to be controlled by the user, sometimes not.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@johnhooks said:
So how can we load Linux on through UEFI? They just allow it for now?
Linux itself isn't a thing. Some OSes are verified, some are not. UEFI can be made to be controlled by the user, sometimes not.
Oh ok.