[Frank Adams] liked the keyboard on his Lenovo ThinkPad T61 so much that he decided to design an adapter so he could use it over USB with the Teensy microcontroller. He got the Trackpoint working ...
Even though TrackPoint might now seem like an endangered laptop feature, history tells us it might not go extinct because of ...
This is the story of one person’s desire to have the venerable trackpoint in their new keyboard. [Klapse] loves a Lenovo old-style non-chicklet keyboard, so, despite the cost, five were ordered.
Lenovo’s iconic crimson ... is the time it takes to shift from the keyboard to the mouse. Nowadays, trackpads are the norm on laptops. While TrackPoint technology still exists, there’s a ...
Lenovo’s chief design officer David Hill described the TrackPoint as a way for a user to access a pointing device without the need for the user’s hands to leave the keyboard’s home row.
Rest in peace, Trackpoint ... Lenovo is using an OLED display across both the 14-inch and 15-inch model, and both use a haptic touchpad along with the well-known (and loved) ThinkPad keyboard.
But what they don’t offer might be the most interesting thing about them: namely, Lenovo’s signature red TrackPoint. Instead, they use a haptic trackpad without the ThinkPad’s usual discrete ...
Leading Lenovo’s accessories showcase are the hybrid Lenovo AdaptX Mouse and a Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard. The company has also showcased a proof-of-concept AI Travel set and an AI Display.