The Cheapest Laptop - Worth Anything? Lenovo G50 Reviewed
Thursday, March 26. 2015
I've been a hacker pretty much all my life. It has been an exciting ride so far, as computers have improved so much ever since I got my first one. If setting my first computer as a reference point, the processors are almost infinetly more powerful (not infinetly, but a lot!), there is million million times more storage and the most important thing: all computers are capable of connecting to a network. I wouldn't mind having my first computer with it's processing power and store, but with an Internet-connection. Lastly, they cost a fraction of that. As I typically have top-shelf computer at my use, I was happy to see what's bottom shelf material made of.
A Lenovo G50 is your average supermarket "now on sale" -computer. It's target audience is definitely not me, but people who don't want to spend much on a computer, but as everybody, they need one.
After the price point (paid 249,- €), the sales pitch is pretty much this:
You get an 1" thick laptop with easy recovery option, a keyboard and USB 3.0 and Dolby Digital Plus Advanced Audio. Obvious marketing talk, as the parts I do understand are 1" thick machine with USB 3.0. Rest is more or less nonsense. Anyway, it looks like this:
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My measurement shows 26mm + change. But pretty good still. This is the cheapest you can buy.
Connectivity is pretty much what you'd expect:
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Analog VGA, HDMi, two USB 2.0s, one USB 3.0, RJ-45 for ethernet and an SD-card reader. All useful and necessary (I'm not so sure about the SD-card reader, who uses those anyway). With the power connector they went for the W700 rectangular one, it suits better with the slim models:
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The keyboard has a numpad built-in:
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And then there is the cool Dolby-logo:
With this price, I'd by anything with a Dolby-logo in it! 
 I truly don't know what the Dolby stands for here. My only guess is, that its simply a marketing gimmick.
When kicked into action, the computer looks like this:
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The operating system is Windows 8.1. One of the first things it needed was the Start-button. My choice has been Classic Shell. With that any Windows 8 -variant will be made useful again.
As you can see, there is lot of un-installing to do. One of the things I did un-install was the handy recovery tool mentioned in the advertisement. It didn't look convincing to me. While doing the un-installs, I saw something familiar in the list:
Oh, this model has the spyware Superfish installed. I went for the removal tool:
It was a PR-disaster for Lenovo. They were clueless what they bundled with people's computers.
The hardware in this laptop is what you'd expect. Cheap.
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The problem isn't CPU or GPU in this case. Even 8 GiB of RAM will never run out, when surfing the web. The problem is slow drive. There is a terabyte of space, but the drive is sooo slow. Pretty much everything I use has an SSD, so getting back to the cheapest spinning platter didn't do me any good.
As a conclusion:
Answer to the question "Is it worth anything?" Yes. Definitely it is.
This is not for serious computing needs, but absolutely worth every penny (cent) for not-so-serious computing needs. Also suitable as secondary equipment for more serious nerds.

