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Lenovo IdeaPad Z575 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £399
inc VAT

A decent entry level laptop, but there's better available at this price

Lenovo laptops usually cater for business users more than the home, but its IdeaPad range is a great middle ground between the two different markets. The Z575 is an excellent example, having a sleek yet restrained design that won’t look out of place in the living room or office.

Lenovo IdeadPad Z575

It uses an AMD Llano A6 processor, which, despite only running at 1.4GHz, includes four physical CPU cores for increased performance in multi-threaded applications. AMD’s Turbo Core technology can also increase this to 2.4GHz when the processor’s within a certain thermal range. This helped during our multimedia benchmarks, allowing the Z575 to score 39 overall. This is noticeably slower than a desktop PC, but it’s fast enough to run all your everyday applications.

Its graphical performance is surprisingly impressive for such an entry-level machine, with the integrated Radeon 6520G managing an almost smooth 26fps in our demanding Dirt 3 test. If you drop the anti-aliasing you should be able to play most games at 720p, although newer titles will force the frame rate into the low teens.

The X575 performs well when plugged in to the mains, but we were also impressed by its performance away from it too. It lasted a few minutes under six hours in our light-use test, so you should be able to keep working for most of the day before having to reach for a power adaptor, as long as you stick to light tasks such as word processing.

In everyday use, the Z575 performed well thanks to a comfortable and responsive keyboard. The Chiclet-style keys are spaced far enough apart that our hands never felt cramped, but still close enough together for touch typists. There’s also a numeric keypad for quicker data entry.

Lenovo IdeadPad Z575

We weren’t as impressed with the single touchpad rocker button, which has a noticeable dead zone in its centre that caused some missed clicks. It only happened occasionally, but it was still annoying when our clicks didn’t register. The touchpad itself is an improvement, being large enough to span the Windows desktop in a single movement and made of a smooth plastic that prevents friction. It supports multi-touch gestures, although vertical scrolling is resigned to the far right of the pad.

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Basic Specifications

Rating***
ProcessorAMD A6-3420M
Processor clock speed1.4GHz
Memory6.00GB
Memory slots2
Memory slots free0
Maximum memory8GB
Size36x376x250mm
Weight2.7kg
SoundRealtek HD Audio
Pointing devicetouchpad

Display

Viewable size15.6 in
Native resolution1,366×768
Graphics ProcessorAMD Radeon HD 6520G
Graphics/video portsVGA, HDMI
Graphics Memory3,072MB

Storage

Total storage capacity500GB
Optical drive typeDVD+/-RW +/-DL

Ports and Expansion

USB ports3
Bluetoothno
Wired network ports1x 10/100/1000
Wireless networking support802.11n
PC Card slotsnone
Supported memory cardsSDHC, MMC, Memory Stick Pro
Other portsminijack audio output, minijack microphone input

Miscellaneous

Carrying caseNo
Operating systemWindows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
Operating system restore optionrestore partition
Software includedMicrosoft Office 2010 Starter Edition
Optional extrasnone

Buying Information

Warrantyone year RTB
Price£399
Detailswww.lenovo.co.uk
Supplierhttp://www.currys.co.uk

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