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Review on 15.6" Laptop Lenovo Legion 5 15ACH6H 1920x1080, AMD Ryzen 7 5800H 3.2GHz, RAM 16GB, SSD 1TB, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060, Windows 10 Home, 82JU005HRU, Phantom Blue by Micha Borkowski ᠌

Revainrating 5 out of 5

The ratio of price and quality is very pleasing, I will repeat the purchase.

IMPORTANT: This review has been mysteriously erased, along with comments referencing the revolting keyboard backlight. You can't trust Market's impartiality, and I have no idea if this is because the review breaks the rules or is a purge of "uncomfortable" comments. Although I had to smoke several manuals on Ubuntu drivers for this hardware, the laptop is well worth the price (spoiler - there are no stably working ones). I would definitely sign up for it if given the opportunity. Black LENOVO Legion 5 15IMH05H laptop with 15.6-inch screen, 2.6GHz Intel Core i7 processor, 16GB RAM, 512GB solid-state drive, 6144MB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 Ti graphics, 81Y6008LRU model number. After extensive research, I settled on a new laptop to replace my aging HP Pavilion dv7. A more or less strict design (read: not "gaming"), without backlighting, the presence of two hard drives, only intel and nvidia, the ability to expand up to 32 ram, and, probably one of the most important - normal reviews and community, ease of maintenance, disassembly, the possibility of further upgrades, a simple and understandable procedure for loading the OS from any of the inserted hard drives, and the possibility of further upgrades were all required. The original price was $110,000, but I only paid $100,000 after a discount. I was led to believe from reading the product description, reviews, and other user-generated content that this model would accommodate a 2.5-inch drive, but upon closer inspection I discovered that it had a massive battery that takes up the entire bottom of the chassis (all sorts of m2 nvme to usb type c and others). Everything is smooth and quick, touch typing is fine (though I'd prefer a smaller key stroke), the last one started up immediately (with the touchpad and all of its features), the keys for development and support are good, and the battery life is quite long and pleasant. That might be too bulky for the ladies, but the guys can carry it off all by themselves.

Pros
  • The first-rate plastic and innovative screen hinges Second, it's simple to take apart and clean. Third, Ensure High-Quality Construction Superb, astute, M2, solid, ram 5. Quiet 6. The larger size makes the battery better (see below) 7. A Wide Array of Inputs 8 - Cover the camera lens (paranoid mod ON) Standard numeric keypad with page up/down and home/end keys No light bulbs, rgb lights, or other clutter can be found inside despite its setup. Do not feel bad about bringing this to the meeting. Stable, healthy. 11 A good source of power
Cons
  • 1. It doesn't have a thunderbolt port. It's an odd economy to have in place. I have never tried it, but hearing about the money you can save is disheartening. Secondly, while the display is above average (100 rgb, 144Hz), it is inferior to that of msi. Highlights on black, a barely perceptible flicker if you look attentively. It seems that msi will be a step forward. BUT! Simultaneously, there is no discomfort in the eyes. While my eyes get "out" towards the end of the workday, here they are normal, not red, simply fatigued because I always wear glasses while I'm at the computer. Third, a unified AUX. Weird choice. It's not that I'd have any trouble doing so, and in fact it's quite convenient that I can use my preferred headset, but once again, cost-cutting measures. After that, only nuance and particularity remain. There is room for improvement in the key travel. 5. Weird touchpad. Strange behavior, no clearly labeled buttons (a drawback in my book), and a slight shift to the left mean that I sometimes miss with a "blind," quick press. 6. penguin ON: Linux refused to boot with the old kernel, and all functionality was lost. Ubuntu 16, for instance, is unlikely to function with a non-up-to-date kernel. The new one has blazing fast speeds and a touchpad, but that's about it. The only issue is that I haven't been able to resolve using the terminal to adjust the brightness using the keys. I wanted to iron the body at first since it was so soft, but number seven: it shows dirt like a magnet. Picks up fingerprints horribly. 8 - The backlight. There are two playable modes, and at first glance it doesn't look too bad, but the execution is poor. From behind the keyboard, a bright light will shine if the node is in the distance. The 110k+ node shouldn't radiate too harshly, at least. There is a glimmer of hope even in the most conservative budgets. This, in my view, is the most significant drawback.