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frontpageDr.W posted Yesterday 02:49 AM
frontpageDr.W posted Yesterday 02:49 AM

Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 4 Laptop: Ryzen AI 7 PRO 350, 16" UHD+ OLED, 64GB, 1TB

+ Free Shipping

$1,429

$2,559

44% off
Lenovo
18 Comments 4,039 Views
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Deal Details
Lenovo has Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 4 Laptop (21QR001SUS) for $1429. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member Dr.W for finding this deal.

Specs
  • AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 350 Processor (2.00 GHz up to 5.00 GHz)
  • 16" 3840x2400 400 nits OLED 60Hz Touchscreen Display w/ Dolby Vision
  • 64GB (2x32GB) DDR5-5600MT/s Memory
  • 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen4 Performance TLC Opal SSD
  • Integrated AMD Radeon 860M Graphics
  • MediaTek Wi-Fi 7 MT7925 2x2 BE & Bluetooth 5.4
  • Backlit Keyboard + Fingerprint Reader
  • 4 Cell Li-Polymer 86 Wh Battery
  • Windows 11 Pro
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB-C (Thunderbolt 4, USB 40Gbps) with power delivery 3.0 & DisplayPort 1.4
    • 2x USB-A (USB 5Gbps, 1 always on)
    • 1x HDMI 2.1
    • 1x Ethernet (RJ45)

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Lenovo has Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 4 Laptop (21QR001SUS) for $1429. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member Dr.W for finding this deal.

Specs
  • AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 350 Processor (2.00 GHz up to 5.00 GHz)
  • 16" 3840x2400 400 nits OLED 60Hz Touchscreen Display w/ Dolby Vision
  • 64GB (2x32GB) DDR5-5600MT/s Memory
  • 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen4 Performance TLC Opal SSD
  • Integrated AMD Radeon 860M Graphics
  • MediaTek Wi-Fi 7 MT7925 2x2 BE & Bluetooth 5.4
  • Backlit Keyboard + Fingerprint Reader
  • 4 Cell Li-Polymer 86 Wh Battery
  • Windows 11 Pro
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB-C (Thunderbolt 4, USB 40Gbps) with power delivery 3.0 & DisplayPort 1.4
    • 2x USB-A (USB 5Gbps, 1 always on)
    • 1x HDMI 2.1
    • 1x Ethernet (RJ45)

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W

Community Voting

Deal Score
+14
Good Deal
Get Deal at Lenovo

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17 Comments

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Yesterday 07:27 AM
1 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
l1o2lYesterday 07:27 AM
1 Posts
How's the battery life? Heard OLED models don't have the greatest battery life.
2
Yesterday 07:34 AM
114 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
Darknight007Yesterday 07:34 AM
114 Posts
I'm torn between the Costco Ideapad pro 5i and this (maybe the Ryzen 9 version with 1200p screen for similar price)
Yesterday 09:12 AM
49 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
NearlyFriendYesterday 09:12 AM
49 Posts
400nit??? Isn't that like really not bright at all?
4
Yesterday 01:05 PM
579 Posts
Joined Feb 2011
coreyyokYesterday 01:05 PM
579 Posts
Quote from NearlyFriend :
400nit??? Isn't that like really not bright at all?
400nit old with anti-reflective/anti-glare is going to be a very viewable screen. Glossy screens will need more nit to battle reflections. Also more nit = more power consumption. Really depends on your use case, but this configuration would be the sweet spot, imo.
Yesterday 03:12 PM
45 Posts
Joined Aug 2022

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Yesterday 03:57 PM
411 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
solariis1Yesterday 03:57 PM
411 Posts
Finally they put a decent battery on a 4k oled screen model. That being said, does anyone have any experience with this model and real life battery performance? Wondering if this will last a full work day on average at least. I hear the Ryzen cpus are pretty good for battery life on other reviews, just not sure when combined with the oled screen.
Yesterday 07:07 PM
66 Posts
Joined Feb 2019
SlickClub9184Yesterday 07:07 PM
66 Posts
Quote from SplendidFuel6542 :
don't even bother, just buy Mac
Appreciate your sense of humor ☺️

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Yesterday 09:14 PM
45 Posts
Joined Aug 2022
SplendidFuel6542Yesterday 09:14 PM
45 Posts
Quote from SlickClub9184 :
Appreciate your sense of humor ☺️
yeah, sure 😅
M5 (its not even PRO) destroyed your x86 CPU.
Today 01:28 AM
216 Posts
Joined Sep 2017
talktotreyToday 01:28 AM
216 Posts
Quote from coreyyok :
400nit old with anti-reflective/anti-glare is going to be a very viewable screen. Glossy screens will need more nit to battle reflections. Also more nit = more power consumption. Really depends on your use case, but this configuration would be the sweet spot, imo.
Your response seems reasonable, but I still want a 500 nit screen. rather have it and turn down brightness than not have it and be stuck not working. Beyond that, how are you going to put out a $2500 machine and have under 500 nits!?! feels like profiteering to me.
Pro
Today 01:47 AM
6,012 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
Slick_Drone
Pro
Today 01:47 AM
6,012 Posts
Quote from SplendidFuel6542 :
don't even bother, just buy Mac
I absolutely hate using my MacBook m4. MacOS is not for everyone. Apple does a lot of quirky stuff.
Today 01:50 AM
85 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
CrimsonCable738Today 01:50 AM
85 Posts
Quote from SplendidFuel6542 :
yeah, sure 😅M5 (its not even PRO) destroyed your x86 CPU.
Macs are good when they can fit your use case, but good luck trying to run most specialized professional software on a Mac. Just unfortunately doesn't work out in that department. Apple does make good laptops, if anything.
Today 03:11 AM
8 Posts
Joined Sep 2025
GreyCable7526Today 03:11 AM
8 Posts
I love some of the specs that are coming out these days. I remember rocking a ThinkPad with an Intel Pentium processor and 64MB (Not GB) of RAM. It is insane to be able to have 64GB DDR5 with a 1TB SSD on a ThinkPad. Not a fan of Microsoft taking off the mask and now openly saying, "Hey we are OFFICIALLY Spyware now, enjoy 'Copilot'!" However, the specs are awesome
Today 07:35 AM
3,596 Posts
Joined Sep 2019
LavenderPickle7682Today 07:35 AM
3,596 Posts
Quote from Slick_Drone :
I absolutely hate using my MacBook m4. MacOS is not for everyone. Apple does a lot of quirky stuff.
And windows doesn't?
Today 07:41 AM
3,596 Posts
Joined Sep 2019
LavenderPickle7682Today 07:41 AM
3,596 Posts
Quote from CrimsonCable738 :
Macs are good when they can fit your use case, but good luck trying to run most specialized professional software on a Mac. Just unfortunately doesn't work out in that department. Apple does make good laptops, if anything.
Most "specialized professional" software that runs on Windows-only OSes....is usually cobbled together, painful to use, half-baked specialty applications for a particular fitness (such as a CNC controller) where the manufacturer can't be bothered to make a MacOS version. Or a Linux version.

Chances are that "specialty software" will break on random security patches, break on windows updates, and probably requires a specialized version of the OS and Java (lol). We have stuff that MUST run on Windows 7 with a extremely specific version of Java -- any deviation from that, and it breaks. Airgapped machines like this are painful, especially when auditing hardware.

That same software probably would break catastrophically if put onto a Windows ARM machine.

The only thing "professional" about it is the level of support needed to get it running. A majority of our most-used software is cross-platform.
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Today 07:44 AM
85 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
CrimsonCable738Today 07:44 AM
85 Posts
Quote from LavenderPickle7682 :
Most "specialized professional" software that runs on Windows-only OSes....is usually cobbled together, painful to use, half-baked specialty applications for a particular fitness (such as a CNC controller) where the manufacturer can't be bothered to make a MacOS version. Or a Linux version.Chances are that "specialty software" will break on random security patches, break on windows updates, and probably requires a specialized version of the OS and Java (lol). We have stuff that MUST run on Windows 7 with a extremely specific version of Java -- any deviation from that, and it breaks. Airgapped machines like this are painful, especially when auditing hardware. That same software probably would break catastrophically if put onto a Windows ARM machine.The only thing "professional" about it is the level of support needed to get it running. A majority of our most-used software is cross-platform.
I'm not disagreeing with you, but it's just not feasible for someone to pump out (physical) engineering work on a non-Windows machine. It's not great, but the choice really doesn't exist for most people looking to just get a laptop. And yes, I precisely mean manufacturing & machining. Welp...

The point is, for someone looking to buy a Windows machine in particular, "just buy a Mac" is not good, sensible, or helpful commentary. That is all.

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