 Weight matters a lot in laptops as manufacturers always strive to create lighter and lighter devices that are easy to move around. Lenovo's business thin-pad laptops have a special X1 sub-brand for their premium machines, of which we have the X1 Carbon Gen 10. It's one of the lightest 14-inch laptops while providing the latest hardware from Intel. The lid of the device is made of carbon fiber, while the rest is aluminum, weighing only 1.12 kg and having a profile of 15.36 mm. This combination of materials also gives it a bit of toughness as the laptop remains flex-free even after we tried twisting it. The lid is a bit bain-dee, but you'll be fine as no one bends their screen on purpose on a daily basis. Additionally, you can pay extra to have a carbon fiber-wrapped pattern on top of the lid. Regardless of how the lid looks, it opens with one hand, revealing the input devices, along with two speaker reels and the power button which doubles as a fingerprint reader. The Lenovo managed to extract as much key travel as possible from the Slim chassis, which when paired with the tactile feedback makes for pretty comfortable typing. The touchpad has a glass cover which is very smooth, but the clicking mechanism is a bit uncomfortable as the top portion can't be clicked. The thin-pad has decent IO coverage, with the left side housing two Thunderbolt 4 ports which can be used for charging, one full-sized 5GB USB port and an HDMI 2.0 port. On the right there is one more full-sized USB port, a SIM card tray and a 3.5 mm audio jack. On the front we have a 2.8K OLED panel which offers amazing colors and deep blacks. The screen covers 100% of the sRGB and DCI-P3 gamemodes while also showing high max brightness reaching 435 nits. It's excellent for productivity work, especially with our design and gaming profile which improves the color accuracy of the display to a delta E value of 1.4. You can purchase it using the link in the description. The 57Wh battery pack doesn't offer ideal battery life, less than for 7 hours and 45 minutes of web browsing or 6 hours and 20 minutes of video playback. These results were with a configuration featuring the Core i7-1270p, a 12-core 16 thread processor. It's not the best performer scoring lower in 3D rendering than it should, being outperformed by the Ryzen 7 5800U and the Ryzen 7 Pro 6850. A bunch of U-Series CPUs is also available. For a GPU you get the 96EU version of the Iris Xe Graphics G7 which is great for iGPU standards. Paired with the hardware and coating cores inside, you can use the ThinkPad for a fair bit of productivity work. We can quickly see why the CPU performs the way it does as we move into the stress test. The laptop is cooled by one heatpipe, two fans and some heat spreaders. Lenovo is pretty conservative with the thermal management, dropping its clock speed and the wattage to unreasonable levels, running it below 2GHz for the majority of the test. Lenovo probably wanted to give their consumers a more comfortable user experience, but the chassis still gets quite warm, reaching 48°C. On the other hand, it's very silent, so at least noise won't be an issue. This ThinkPad comes with a dull dirt memory, but at least you can configure it with up to 32GB of LPDGR5 RAM so you can spec the laptop well if you want. Storage-wise, there is only one M.2 slot that supports the Superfast Gen4 drives. We have a separate tiered-down video which shows how to take apart the ThinkPad X1 Carbon. We'll leave a link in the description in case you want to give it a watch. The ThinkPad X1 Carbon is a feature-packed device with an amazing OLED panel and great hardware selection. However, the same high-res display also staggers the battery life, while the performance isn't ideal, thanks to the small cooling setup and poor thermal management on the novice part. If you want to see more tests and details about the device, you can check out our in-depth review. The link is in the video description below.