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Nickname: Chickie
Review: In researching laptops I was suprised to see that Lenovo had such high marks. Something nobody has commented on, though, is that Lenovo was discovered to have implanted some models with phone-home chips to send information back to China. It is banned by the Dept of Defense. Does no one care about this?
Date reviewed: Jul 25, 2009 11:57 PM
Nickname: i.k
Review: I am using my Lenovo desktop to write down this comment. Before I bought our 24 Lenovo computers for employees, I compared Lenovo with HP and Dell. Finally I chose Lenovo. Lenovo wins with its intermediate price and best service among the three PC makers.
Date reviewed: Apr 21, 2006 3:57 AM
Nickname: Direct-from-Dell-to-Lenovo
Review: In response to ML M, I am in similar situation as yours. I have been in Dell for a quite few years and was recently contacted by a headhunter for a position at Lenovo. Also I heard that in China, some Dell sales teams migrated to Lenovo almost in whole. It seems that Lenovo has launched a HR/headhunt campaign against Dell, not limited to luring away Bill Amilio, Dell's former APJ president.
Date reviewed: Mar 25, 2006 3:55 PM
Nickname: Ojaguar
Review: My experience at Lenovo's SCM department makes me better understand its competitive advantage relying on the highly efficient operation and strong exection ability, which can help Lenovo clone the successful business process and models worldwide and achieve the leading low-cost advantage. Thus the machine Lenovo is going to build for the rest of the world would be even cheaper than Dell's. Let us just be patient.
Date reviewed: Feb 28, 2006 7:40 AM
Nickname: James
Review: If Lenovo will have to establish a low-end product line featured by a lower price, it will very much depend on its ability to create a low-cost structure to compete with Dell. Dell is not famous for its fancy design or superior quality. Anyone who buys a Dell know what he/she wants most: lower price.
Date reviewed: Feb 27, 2006 8:50 PM
Nickname: JuggerNaut
Review: Since Lenovo is just another Windows PC maker, the lack of product differentiation from the likes of Dell, Gateway, and HP will give them no advantages unless they have something special to offer after the sale!
Date reviewed: Feb 26, 2006 2:06 PM
Nickname: jousun
Review: I doubt Lenovo will ever get close to Dell. Dell built its business over the last 20 years and has $60 billion in sales. Lenovo's quarterly earnings were $47 million while Dell's were $1 billion. It is premature to compare these two. Hewlett Packard, on the other hand, has the best innovation and service in the industry at great prices.
Date reviewed: Feb 25, 2006 3:49 PM
Nickname: ChinaMan
Review: The bullishness will be continually revealed as over-enthusiastic. The Lenovo name is still Chinese, and as such will have a difficult time breaking away from its associated low-quality image.
Date reviewed: Feb 25, 2006 11:11 AM
Nickname: Debby
Review: To enter a new market, it is important to grasp market share at first. However, continuous development is based on superior quality of products, advanced technology, and good services, which Lenovo still needs improving. I really hope the internationalization of Lenovo, the leading brand in China, will be successful.
Date reviewed: Feb 25, 2006 5:53 AM
Nickname: VD
Review: Lenevo is poised to launch its own brand in the US market. But what is the USP of Lenovo? Can anybody please answer?
Date reviewed: Feb 24, 2006 12:12 PM
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