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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
25 Comments 5,563 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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Top Comments

coreyyok
579 Posts
114 Reputation
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.
CrimsonCable738
85 Posts
26 Reputation
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.

24 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
116 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
Darknight007Yesterday 07:34 AM
116 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?
5
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 ☺️
1

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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.
3
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
6,013 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
Slick_Drone
Pro
Today 01:47 AM
6,013 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.
1
Today 01:50 AM
85 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
CrimsonCable738Today 01:50 AM
85 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank CrimsonCable738

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.
1
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
3,603 Posts
Joined Sep 2019
LavenderPickle7682Today 07:35 AM
3,603 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?
1
Today 07:41 AM
3,604 Posts
Joined Sep 2019

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Today 07:44 AM
85 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
CrimsonCable738Today 07:44 AM
85 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank CrimsonCable738

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.
1

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