Lenovo is Chinese. Why aren't they sanctioned?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @realfangplays
    @realfangplays Год назад +4968

    I admit I didn't realize Lenovo was a chinese company.

    • @respectmathias
      @respectmathias Год назад +263

      I thought it was Japanese like Epson. Even my laptop is an ideapad

    • @hachiko2692
      @hachiko2692 Год назад +549

      I literally own a Lenovo laptop and I did not even *think* it was a Chinese brand.
      I've owned Realme and Xiaomi phones, and handled Huawei laptops, and I can assure you, no matter how subtle it is, Chinese products have their own "style" of designing their UI, whether through design choices or the custom software they add.
      Lenovo really feels like it was designed in the US or something.

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 Год назад +124

      That is disappointing to hear 😒 shocking that none of you knew

    • @giltyakhtar
      @giltyakhtar Год назад +1

      @@nehcooahnait7827 who gives a fuck. As TechAltar said,it's better people don't know they are Chinese cause then people might be more apprehensive in buying their products

    • @Zephyrion__
      @Zephyrion__ Год назад +35

      It’s headquarters is in Hong Kong

  • @vtsien
    @vtsien Год назад +1292

    I worked for IBM where only ThinkPad was used for our daily work. I asked management why not other brands; I was told IBM owned 45% of Lenovo when ThinkPad merged and became Lenovo

    • @MrSaggy96
      @MrSaggy96 Год назад +129

      Used to own...IBM divested completely in 2011

    • @kennwin
      @kennwin Год назад +55

      ThinkPads are still made in the US. Thinkbooks are Chinese made. That rule is slowly fading after pandemic tho unfortunately

    • @johnroberts2905
      @johnroberts2905 Год назад +91

      @@kennwin Hmm, not sure on that one. EMEA ThinkPads have been manufactured in China since at least 2005!

    • @kennwin
      @kennwin Год назад +24

      @@johnroberts2905 ooh i believe you’re right but they switched in 2012 apparently. This is what it says on newegg.
      “Lenovo also assembles ThinkPad and ThinkCentre computers at a Whitsett, North Carolina manufacturing plant. The Chinese company opened this facility in 2012 for faster shipping to its US consumer base.”

    • @nikobellic707
      @nikobellic707 Год назад +11

      He said legend is largest shareholder at 35% so IBM can't be 45% obviously

  • @wngimageanddesign9546
    @wngimageanddesign9546 11 месяцев назад +84

    Lenovo wasn't so small a player, nor lacking experience in the PC industry. They were the OEM for IBM's ThinkPad. Even by the mid 90s. Just as Foxconn has been Apple's OEM for decades. Foxconn was just a small OEM offering motherboards and daughterboards back then. Now a major manufacturing force.

    • @terryjones9784
      @terryjones9784 4 месяца назад +2

      So then Lenovo ThinkPad is equivalent to a Foxconn iPhone

    • @Smellsinhere
      @Smellsinhere 4 месяца назад

      Trash. You just make the simple components and assemble. Chips are not made in China. The actual capable components

    • @anonymousme927
      @anonymousme927 3 месяца назад +1

      IBM sold its hardware business to the Chinese after the GFC. Earlier it used to be IBM Thinkpad.

    • @farmers740
      @farmers740 3 месяца назад

      ​@@terryjones9784As far as I know, Lenovo's laptops in China are OEMed by Taiwan's Compal.

  • @joseph.cotter
    @joseph.cotter 11 месяцев назад +469

    There is some excellent information presented. What this fails to mention is that Lenovo was _the_ manufacturer for the IBM Thinkpad since it's inception. Basically, they were selling the product line to the contractor who manufactured it. This had some advantages, such as a much simplified handover. It's not like they just randomly sold it to Lenovo.

    • @joseph.cotter
      @joseph.cotter 11 месяцев назад

      Also of note, the mention of them being a "systems integrator" rather than manufacturer was directly inherited from IBM. This was IBM's whole strategy for their desktop and notebook computers from the beginning, to buy products off the market and simply 'assemble' them rather than manufacturing _any part_ of their systems. It's how Microsoft (and by extension, Bill Gates) ended up creating something as core as their OS.

    • @zomgneedaname
      @zomgneedaname 6 месяцев назад +10

      Wow that is new info...would have never have guessed

    • @zeeninetynine
      @zeeninetynine 5 месяцев назад +2

      Really? Source?

    • @joseph.cotter
      @joseph.cotter 5 месяцев назад +17

      @@zeeninetynine sorry, I’ve been in this business for 30 years and this is very old news. I’m not going to look it up now. You can do your own research or choose to believe which you want. I’m simply stating facts.

    • @joseph.cotter
      @joseph.cotter 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@zeeninetynine by the way, I did a quick search of who originally manufactured the IBM ThinkPad. There were dozens of links the fact that you couldn’t even bother to do such a simple search before resorting to asking me. My source shows me a laziness on your part that isn’t even worth addressing beyond this statement, I would actually make one other comment. Consider learning to do a little bit of basic research rather than just being argumentative.

  • @foobarbazkarabas
    @foobarbazkarabas Год назад +941

    Blackrock has 5.1% share. This alone might be the reason why Lenovo is not under any US pressure still

    • @yakub3601
      @yakub3601 Год назад +62

      Learn about what passive manegment is

    • @zimbu_
      @zimbu_ Год назад +179

      They own a few percent of ZTE as well, and ZTE is not in a great position with sanctions. For BlackRock and Vanguard a singular company going up or down isn't really a focus.

    • @AndRei-yc3ti
      @AndRei-yc3ti Год назад +7

      It's only a matter of time I think

    • @abdiganiaden
      @abdiganiaden Год назад +30

      As if 5% is really that important. That’s nothing.

    • @sergesSA
      @sergesSA Год назад +118

      ​@@abdiganiaden 5% in hardware business is excellent. Those are real asset, product and sure revenue. It is not some social media with inflated value.

  • @ifyouwantmoneythengivemeev8094
    @ifyouwantmoneythengivemeev8094 Год назад +690

    Ah, good ol'美帝良心想. Good to see someone covering their story.
    For those of you who didn’t get the reference, the name 美帝良心想 (roughly translates to Lenovo, America’s Conscience) was jokingly given to them by Chinese netizens in the 2010s as they consistently sold their stuff for significantly less aboard compared to within the Chinese mainland. For example, the same speced ThinkPad X280 sold for $1299 in the US, but ¥13999 (roughly $2,025) in China. This was seen by Chinese consumers as Lenovo pandering to the west, earning them the derogatory name. In recent years, Lenovo is trying smooth things over with Chinese consumers, and prices have more or less equalized across the coasts, but the nickname has stuck. It’ll be interesting to see if Lenovo ever gets its reputation restored in the Chinese mainland.

    • @katrinabryce
      @katrinabryce Год назад +54

      What is the sales tax rate for computers in China? Remember that US prices don't include sales tax, prices in just about every other country in the world do.

    • @ifyouwantmoneythengivemeev8094
      @ifyouwantmoneythengivemeev8094 Год назад +50

      @@katrinabryce If I remember correctly, computers and most other electronics have a tax rate of 10% in china, which is included in the price.

    • @aczbdk
      @aczbdk Год назад

      Lenovo shouldn't care about how they do in PRC, because Communazi PRC has no future.

    • @alaya1472
      @alaya1472 Год назад

      ​@@tazdingo5297
      if US government keep zero-sum game in its mind.
      and try to use Taiwan as a tool to bargain with China.
      then sadly YES.
      what US not understand is that Taiwan problem is not only about land and economic interests
      it is about the legitimacy of the government who rules China.
      it is one of the sign of the past century of humiliation
      no matter whitch party is in charge of China.
      it won't dare to lose it, or it will face the fury of it's ppl.

    • @EgnachHelton
      @EgnachHelton Год назад

      @Tazdingo Well average Chinese has little to no political powers, whereas Chinese elites including Xi himself has families and capitals all over the West. As long as the West commit to protect Taiwan, China is nothing but a "paper tiger".

  • @user-ss3fj8kk8v
    @user-ss3fj8kk8v 9 месяцев назад +93

    I am Chinese and have been using Lenovo computers for many years. In fact, when Chinese people mention Lenovo nowadays, the emotions are quite complex. In the previous era, when I was young, Lenovo represented a Chinese technology brand and was a source of pride for the Chinese people. But in recent years, it has been leaning more towards the United States. The same model of computer is much more expensive in China compared to the United States, and there are often news reports in the online media about Lenovo's top management transferring technology and assets to the United States. Lenovo's image among the Chinese public is not good now, and it has a nickname called "美帝良心想" , which means that it is a conscience-driven company of American imperialism. In other words, it has become a traitor to China.

    • @Pajune
      @Pajune 9 месяцев назад +7

      Thanks for the info, very interesting. I hope our governments don't trick the people into worse situation! Peace is what the greatest majority of us want.

    • @accountdeleted0x0
      @accountdeleted0x0 8 месяцев назад +2

      lol great info

    • @tomchen513
      @tomchen513 8 месяцев назад +3

      I got a p50 from the US. It was cheaper. But it is shitty. Actually, I have three different Thinkpads. I am going to dump the brand.

    • @soupdrinker72
      @soupdrinker72 8 месяцев назад

      @@tomchen513wdym thinkpads are great laptops. way better than any other manufacturer.

    • @sungjane
      @sungjane 8 месяцев назад +1

      "Chinese software has backdoors."

  • @oggilein1
    @oggilein1 11 месяцев назад +311

    Slight correction: lenovo didn't take over IBMs server division but rather only their x86 server division, this is quite an important distinction as it means IBM powerPC servers are still manufactured, sold and supported entirely by IBM with no involvement of lenovo, and it's why many banks will go with IBM power for their servers

    • @anonemoose7777
      @anonemoose7777 9 месяцев назад +17

      That’s actually what he says at 8:02
      No worries tho

    • @dongshengdi773
      @dongshengdi773 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@anonemoose7777Lenovo is NOT Chinese, 联想。
      It's actually IBM computers that a Chinese company bought

    • @karthur3421
      @karthur3421 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@dongshengdi773In the end it's owned by chinese company. With all the sinophobia goin on, the question is why so many chinese companies' products selling normally in the US and not Huawei. Because Huawei holds 5G patents that the US wants badly, Trump made no secret he wants to acquire Huawei pre-pandemic. From then on, when Huawei didn't bite, things escalated to how it is today lol, from arresting the CEO of Huawei via Canada to today's trade wars.

    • @lagrangewei
      @lagrangewei 8 месяцев назад

      what you said is not really true about bank but ok.

    • @superbin6021
      @superbin6021 8 месяцев назад

      I have used asus products, from mobile, gaming laptop, gaming headphones, monitor. The only thing that can be accepted is monitor. Gaming laptop and mobile have so much problems. Headphones dead after 1 year.
      I bought them because of low price.
      Next time, I won't buy anything from Asus for sure

  • @arttig.3377
    @arttig.3377 Год назад +1256

    I work in Europe for a very big American tech company and I was so surprised, when I found out that the only Windows laptop choice for employees was Chinese Lenovo ThinkPad.
    I would expect HP/Dell/Acer/ASUS, but no.

    • @Dotcando
      @Dotcando Год назад +315

      Well hp is often overpriced, all my friends that uses dell and asus seems to always have problems, and acer is... acer.

    • @Harlock2day
      @Harlock2day Год назад +181

      well you said it, you work in Europe, they do not serve every US interest out there, pcs can be chinese, korean or from wherever.

    • @thisathema
      @thisathema Год назад +52

      And remember what reputation have thinkpads here.

    • @mubarizsalim
      @mubarizsalim Год назад

      HP Inc extinction! Hopefully! HP is worst! HP Inc deserve extinction!

    • @orabi3091
      @orabi3091 Год назад +259

      I work in IT at a medium size company ~1000 employees, and I can tell you that we love dealing with Lenovo here. Their customer service is superb, any problems that we might encounter in any of their products will be either fixed rapidly or the product will be replaced without them asking a lot of questions. My experience dealing with their customer service is very different from dealing with companies like HP, Toshiba or Dell... That's why if to choose a company to deal with, it will always be Lenovo and that's one of the main reasons that they're so successful

  • @cheezus4772
    @cheezus4772 Год назад +299

    My PC is Lenovo, my Mobile is Motorola. Bought value mid-range products and they work so well I've not had to update for most of a decade. Very solid products.

    • @B21_raider
      @B21_raider Год назад +8

      Lenovo pcs are 💩💩💩 worst quality

    • @KhizarKhan2001
      @KhizarKhan2001 Год назад

      ​@@B21_raider dell, hp, lenovo all pre built pc are shit

    • @fanban2926
      @fanban2926 Год назад +126

      @@B21_raider no

    • @JR-vc4gm
      @JR-vc4gm Год назад +62

      ​@@B21_raider wait for HP plastic case

    • @jonatan_leandoer96
      @jonatan_leandoer96 Год назад +43

      ​@@B21_raider have you not used thinkpad before

  • @hh0686
    @hh0686 10 месяцев назад +3

    Lenovo has been in business for 30+ years. You people have been living under a rock.

  • @Velocity_AU
    @Velocity_AU 10 месяцев назад +12

    I didn't know about Lenovo being Chinese. I volunteer at a ewaste recycling place, and I fix a lot of stuff that comes in so we can resell it for super cheap, and I get a lot of lenovo stuff from different businesses and that, and what I can say about Lenovo is that their products really can be some of my favourites, because they have full guides on disassembly and repair of things like their all in one PCs, the lenovo products I have seen really feel like they support right of repair, when compared to other products I've seen that are downright almost impossible to open without almost destructive means. Apart from the weirdness of their chargers, which I will say are pretty much universal with all their products, unlike other companies that have 50 different chargers for each style of laptop, lenovo is a company that just really has nice products which I enjoy working with.

  • @minhnham3606
    @minhnham3606 Год назад +61

    Lenovo is exactly the Chinese company that Americans want from China. Do all the low-level assembly, use all American-made components and don't invent or enhance. As you said, they are a "system integrator", that's no different from when IBM had it. All the US anti-china hate will go away if China would give up on AI, electric cars, and space exploration, and go back to being the cheap factory of the world. Essentially do what Japan did. That's why Lenovo can survive in today's geopolitics.

    • @whatsgoingon92
      @whatsgoingon92 Год назад +3

      Good Assessment.

    • @TehKaiser
      @TehKaiser 11 месяцев назад

      China is a threat bud.

    • @sierra1513
      @sierra1513 10 месяцев назад

      What a load of horse shit, US sinophobia exists because US capital interests are threatened by Chinese success, it doesn't matter what their product is, what matters is the the US corporate elite don't have control over it

    • @allenyin3540
      @allenyin3540 3 месяца назад +2

      bingo

    • @supergaga
      @supergaga 2 месяца назад +2

      This is the correct answer for Lenovo not blacklisted by the U.S.

  • @Lirrachus
    @Lirrachus Год назад +208

    Youre not exactly right about the superfish scandal and glazed over it a little too fast. Youre right in that it was a preinstalled piece of software, mainly attaching itself to web results, but the biggest problem was that it was injected into windows via the BIOS and would reinstall after a clean install of Windows.
    Now I dont think this was necessarily malicious as it was just selling software installation like a preloaded trial of MS Office or Norton, but what made it a huge security risk was the way Lenovo implemented it, making it a huge security risk for amyone with this revision of hardware.
    Lenovo arent the only ones to have done something like this but it deserves a little more explanation than a hand wave

    • @timfreeeed
      @timfreeeed Год назад +9

      this is still 100% relevant today, disguised as security tool with Absolute® for example

    • @pcislocked
      @pcislocked Год назад +26

      @@timfreeeed most hp laptops today expose a fake device to the windows, and windows update pulls drivers for that device, which turns out to be "analytics services".

    • @Madwonk
      @Madwonk Год назад +13

      Yes- the comment about superfish was wildly off-base. The fact they've developed such software which re-installs from the UEFI should be terrifying to any security expert.

    • @johnroberts2905
      @johnroberts2905 Год назад

      @@timfreeeed Nonsense. It's Anti-theft technology from an American company.

    • @absoleet
      @absoleet Год назад +4

      @@Madwonk Not only that Lenovo afterwards had at least 2 more similar security scandals with secretly installing rootkits.

  • @xCheddarB0b42x
    @xCheddarB0b42x 5 месяцев назад

    Very informative history dive. Thank you for providing this important perspective. Subbed.

  • @SylveonMujigaeOfficial
    @SylveonMujigaeOfficial Год назад +89

    Their products are popular around the world. They own ThinkPad, IdeaPad, ThinkCentre, and IdeaCentre, which were once IBM brands (before IBM sold its computer division in 2005).

    • @warmike
      @warmike 10 месяцев назад +7

      And the Legion lineup of gaming laptops (which was founded long after that acquisition, and so was IdeaPad apparently)

  • @mattahy8132
    @mattahy8132 Год назад +314

    It's ironic how you mention "you could just reinstall Windows" regarding SuperFish. You see, this malware was designed in a way that was integreted into BIOS/EUFI so even reinstalling Windows wouldn't help.
    From a zdnet article: "The engine, which resides in the computer's BIOS, replaces a core Windows system file with its own, allowing files to be downloaded once the device is connected to the internet."
    This piece of software was probably meant to be just some stupid adware, but due to the way it worked it basically destroyed encryption on your whole computer (It installed its own root certificate to MITM your web browser activity).

    • @oxide9717
      @oxide9717 Год назад +23

      Exactly this .then again it would be very dumb on their part to think no one will find out considering the fact it's a Chinese company they've got all eyes on them so if their doing something shady someone will find out and that would be the end

    • @nick3175
      @nick3175 Год назад +65

      This is technically true, but also very wrong. See the software of Superfish is a rootkit. And Windows Defender will remove it, as it is declared rootkit. The other thing - Superfish is not created by Lenovo, or China. It is US company, founded with capital from Israel. The software is adware. It is an attempt by Lenovo to make more money, like most companies do. It is not some spying operation. The failure made Lenovo use as clean installs as possible. So that Superfish affair actually made Lenovo computers better. They come with less bloatware than machines of other companies.

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +8

      Intel Management Unit doesn't care about operating system, only your IP address to take over your PC. 😢😢😢😢

    • @donkey1271
      @donkey1271 Год назад +4

      ​@@mrkitty777 IME is a computer within a computer system, it is required for the system to even operate. No different from BIOS

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +11

      @@donkey1271 LibreBoot disables Intel Management Unit, they consider Intel Management Unit an exploitable trojan.

  • @resket32
    @resket32 Год назад +839

    This was such a great episode. Had always wondered why there was no crackdown on Lenovo. Wouldn’t have cared to look for myself. Thank you for solving the mystery for us.

    • @agenthex
      @agenthex Год назад +116

      The answer is actually really simple, it's not targeted/banned YET, because it's not as explosively successful as Huawei (and therefore not as high on the hit list). If/when it does, this guy'll be making another video "why Lenovo is banned by the US".

    • @MrCrunch808
      @MrCrunch808 Год назад +51

      @@agenthex Hope they're never banned. They make the best computer mice and other peripherals.

    • @ssrae-2229
      @ssrae-2229 Год назад +51

      Lenovo aka IBM has US backdoors -- Huawei has been confirmed US cannot find a BACKDOOR in.....

    • @victorzhang6300
      @victorzhang6300 Год назад

      Lenovo is a sellout and clearly not a threat to the American hegemony so it's not banned. Who would even impose sanctions on an assembly factory with no technology?

    • @cc0767
      @cc0767 Год назад +2

      probably more likely they split of their chinese parts

  • @SilvioBritto
    @SilvioBritto Год назад

    Great video, I love your history videos. Funny to see this particular one in my recent bought Motorola Edge 30 Ultra here in Brazil. Nice work!

  • @Kenxstudios
    @Kenxstudios 10 месяцев назад +23

    Just fyi:
    The name "Lenovo" is derived from the words "Le-" which stands for "Legend" and "-novo" which is a Latin word meaning "new." The name reflects the company's aspiration to create innovative and groundbreaking products while honoring its origins as a successful Chinese computer company, originally known as "Legend."

    • @Pajune
      @Pajune 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well, they made themselves a legend in my books with the X1 carbon. Absolutely lovely machine!

  • @lindsay1971
    @lindsay1971 Год назад +426

    The video I was waiting for. As a system administrator it is really hard to go past Lenovo from an enterprise perspective, this was a very entertaining history lesson and analysis, thank you for covering it.

    • @michaelbauer4065
      @michaelbauer4065 Год назад +32

      I work in computer repair, we recommend Lenovo a lot due to it's reliability but I've always been a bit skeptical due to their Chinese ties. Still am, but this video did explain well why Lenovo isn't as much of a threat to privacy and the likes.

    • @lindsay1971
      @lindsay1971 Год назад +9

      @@michaelbauer4065 agreed, yeah I thought it did a great job of covering why it's public image in the tech sphere is so different to other prominent Chinese tech companies

    • @mubarizsalim
      @mubarizsalim Год назад +4

      HP Inc extinct! Hopefully

    • @omarsalim9562
      @omarsalim9562 Год назад

      ​@@michaelbauer4065 sy😢

    • @gold9994
      @gold9994 Год назад

      @@michaelbauer4065 How about the square charging port?

  • @cunxu2697
    @cunxu2697 Год назад +42

    I bought a Lenovo Legion laptop and I can absolutely see why they are a market leader

    • @triggerost9023
      @triggerost9023 11 месяцев назад +11

      I also bought a Legion 7i Pro this year and I absolutely love it. The building quality is more solid than other brands' products of this year. I switched over from the HP OMEN laptop by the way, and I have to say that it looks really flimsy and plastic compared to Legion.

    • @lionelmessithegoatLM10
      @lionelmessithegoatLM10 5 месяцев назад +1

      great purchase guys

  • @lmc333
    @lmc333 11 месяцев назад

    I have been wondering about this for a couple of years now, thank you for doing this video

  • @jebril
    @jebril 7 месяцев назад +4

    Lenovo is headquartered in North Carolina its about as Chinese as Telegram is Russian is a good example.
    Yes the people in charge are a different nationality but if theyre running the business from another country and don't agree with their govts its not the same thing. That's not including all the investors of Lenovo which are American.

  • @wellivea1
    @wellivea1 Год назад +37

    At 6:29 there is an error, it says "Riley, USA". I think it was supposed to be "Raleigh, USA", although it's really RTP (research triangle park) or more specifically a part of RTP that is in Morrisville, NC which is a suburb of Raleigh/Cary. That's a weird mistake to make.

  • @softstrokesstudios9401
    @softstrokesstudios9401 Год назад +213

    As a Chinese, I honestly thought Lenovo was an American company! Hahaha lol😅😂

    • @jikku.
      @jikku. Год назад +4

      😂😂😂

    • @user-df2lh6oi7m
      @user-df2lh6oi7m Год назад +18

      所以说是美帝良心😅

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Год назад +25

      I guess that is the way it SHOULD be. Business should not be nationalized. Keep politics out.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 11 месяцев назад

      @@noahway13 Yep. State and Corporation should NEVER mix.
      Twitter was a warning to the world about how dystopian the merger between state and corporation can get.
      Lenovo being mostly seperate from the chinese government is good news.
      I still wish they had third party audits of their products. I love thinkpads to death but if anything, id rather be spied on by the Netherlands, Britain, or America, than I would by China.
      Atleast the EU isnt stealing my genetic data to make race-based biological weapons, all while enacting litteral nazi-era policies.

    • @iamofadeadinsideoof1181
      @iamofadeadinsideoof1181 10 месяцев назад +3

      Politics always exists and always try to influence people around world, as long as there's 2 groups and more people that's had different goals and interests to others.

  • @jfitzpatrick6108
    @jfitzpatrick6108 Год назад

    I very much enjoy your well researched discussions & respect the vast amount of background experience you bring to your stories.
    I continue to wonder, however, if all the evaluations & discussions regarding Lenovo's decentralized laptop software & parts sourcing, manufacturing operations and management policies applied equally and in full measure to Lenovo's MOTO Android phones.
    Or are Lenovo Thinkpads, Chromebooks, and Android Tablets a different story from Lenovo MOTO Android phones?
    I have heard disparaging criticism from my carrier's rep and wonder if MOTO phone users have reason for concern that Uncle Xi might be vacuuming their data.

  • @mrgurulittle7000
    @mrgurulittle7000 3 месяца назад +2

    One thing I was surprised about Lenovo was that when they bought Arrows Phone from Fujitsu, I was sure they would move production of Arrows Phones to China. But instead, Arrows came out with the latest phone called the N series and it was Made in Japan! Respect to Lenovo for being an understanding and strategic international company.

  • @0xbenedikt
    @0xbenedikt Год назад +40

    12:33 No, you could not! The software was built into the BIOS and automatically installed when you installed Windows.

  • @TS6815
    @TS6815 Год назад +266

    Computerphile and Tom Scott did an excellent overview of superfish, the real issue there was that the software installed an insecure certificate authority in the root store of its Windows installs to insert ads by overcoming the SSL chain of trust
    I wouldnt call it "Chinese Spyware" as much as just "incompetent on its face / pure CVE"

    • @johnroberts2905
      @johnroberts2905 Год назад +19

      Plus Superfish was only ever on a handful of consumer laptops. Tney wouldn't dare stick it on Enterprise machines as any large enterprise would drop them immediately.

    • @GegoXaren
      @GegoXaren Год назад +4

      It would probobly not even run on enterprise, as that is 99% GNU/Linux now-a-days.

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 Год назад

      Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations.
      President Jimmy Carter - Speech on Relations with China
      ruclips.net/video/37azeXBjYJc/видео.html
      Don't be ignorant...🤔

    • @w300x
      @w300x Год назад +21

      Superfish was on the IdeaPad and YOGA lines (not the thinkpads) and would reinstall itself from the UEFI BIOS which means you can't simply reinstall the OS as the video seems to claim.

    • @absoleet
      @absoleet Год назад +5

      The thing is it opens up a big security hole for Chnese bad actors to exploit.

  • @TaylorMMontgomery
    @TaylorMMontgomery 6 месяцев назад

    Their marketing leaders are doing a great job. It feels like a young, vibrant company while still keeping to the old designs and ideas. I really like the red square logo.

  • @Anxiou5Panda
    @Anxiou5Panda 10 месяцев назад +31

    I will always love these types of videos. I hope there are more people who are curious about a company's history, business model, practices, shenanigans, etc.
    It's not to glorify and idolize them but to learn from them, even if you are not neccessarily building your own business.

    • @sungjane
      @sungjane 8 месяцев назад

      "Chinese software has backdoors."

    • @thedarkknight1971
      @thedarkknight1971 6 месяцев назад

      ISN'T IT TELLING... That at the time of the ban on Huawei, Huawei had JUST become NUMBER 1 in WORLDWIDE phone sales charts BEATING APPLE and SAMSUNG... But yet... The reasons given was "security concerns etc etc because they are linked to the CCP". HOWEVER... THERE WAS NO BAN on Oppo, OnePlus, Unihertz, Lenovo/Motorola, TCL, Doogee, Xiaomi (a MASSIVE company making ALL SORTS of electronic devices/gadgets etc), Poco, Vivo, ZTE, Infinix etc etc... WHO ARE ALL Chinese companies THAT HAVE TIES to the CCP (Chinese Govt) in various minor/modicum ways! EVERY COMPANY in China HAS A LINK in various forms to the CCP, it's just Chinas way of doing things!
      NOTE: Even companies like Temu, iWish and others like them!! Hence you can buy a £/$1 dollar item and get free shipping etc! (There ARE videos explaining this how the online retailers & delivery companies claim moneys back from the Govt etc (there's a link to the USPS too if memory serves) - Check out the 'Serpentza' - 'How the hell can China ship for free to your door??!?' video). So, the question is:-
      IF there were security concerns about the big company Huawei, then WHY NOT ALSO BAN THE OTHERS TOO (especially Lenovo/Motorola & Xiaomi as they REALLY ARE BIG companies)???? 'Sepentza' channel will show you A LOT of VERY REVEALING information on Chinas strange, deluded and often VILE practices (in general AND to their own peoples!) - like painting trees/crops/pigs, 'Spit fighting' and a whole lot more... 😒
      To me, I think it was ALL BULLSH!T !!
      Huawei were SERIOUSLY INNOVATIVE. Their Camera systems were LEADING the phone manufacturer market (P30 Pro/P40 pro etc etc), look how they are with their foldable tech now, showing Samsung a thing or two!!!
      Google REALLY WANTED to WORK WITH Huawei (and visa versa), there was BILLIONS lost in the closures/rearrangements in the chip/phone manufacturing/parts supply/delivery/etc processes (TMC and such LOST OUT BIG STYLE with cancelled contracts).
      And WE... THE CONSUMER... LOST OUT to some SERIOUSLY BRILLIANT INNOVATIVE and CREATIVE products that ALSO WOULD HAVE kept the likes of Apple AND Samsung on their toes, and maybe... Just maybe... MIGHT have kept silly prices from skyrocketing with a HEALTHY competition/possible price war....
      The D!CKHEADS in the U.S. Govts REEEEAAAALLLY SCREWED THE POOCH ON THIS ONE!!!! 😠😠😠😡😡😡
      😎🇬🇧

  • @JackStavris
    @JackStavris Год назад +75

    My very first laptop was an IBM ThinkPad back in the mid-2000s and is to this day still one of the best things I've ever owned. I've never had any real issues with any of the ThinkPads I've owned, they've all been some of the best laptops I've ever used, the best one so far being the ThinkPad T420. ThinkPads have always been my goto for PC laptops for years now, used ones from ex-corporate fleets can be a great value over most other cheap laptops. My T420 was dirt cheap as an ex-corporate laptop I bought a couple of years after it was built. That laptop served me and my father well for many years and I still have it in storage. With some upgrades to a quad-core i7 and 16GB of RAM it could still be competent today.
    I also work as an IT admin for an international corp who has standardized on Lenovo hardware to replace older Dell and HP hardware that was acquired during a merger of two companies, and they're so much better to manage and deploy than the HPs and definetely the Dells (the HPs are okay, but the Dells are seriously awful). We don't even need to wipe out the preloaded Windows image, the ThinkPads are bloat-free so that we can just enroll them into Azure AD as-is and they're fine. They're not perfect, especially the USB-C equiped models used soldered on USB-C ports which break easily, but from both a corporate and a personal perspective, the ThinkPad is still miles above anything else.

    • @savagej4y241
      @savagej4y241 Год назад +3

      Having refurbished hundreds of computers with a team over 5 years, in my experience rolling out multiple Dell laptops simultaneously using SCCM was generally a fairly painless experience. They actually were the only ones with reliable templates, everything else you had to do on an individual basis.

    • @duran9664
      @duran9664 Год назад +1

      I was so disappointed in the recent years by ASUS, DELL & HP PCs. It is hard to admit that now Lenovo PCs perform better & look greater. Only Microsoft Surface line can competes with Lenovo PC line in quality & beauty but not the price. 😮‍💨

    • @fge00
      @fge00 Год назад +5

      Trust me that T420 still has some life left in it.

    • @frankchong5585
      @frankchong5585 Год назад +4

      Agreed. Working in Big Blue for 12 yrs, I've come across many of their Thinkpad series laptop. Now I'm in one of the biggest bank in US where they mainly using Dell, I can tell you, if is different. There's no robust feeling in Dell

  • @ilikedota5
    @ilikedota5 Год назад +22

    I'm impressed by your Chinese pronunciations lol. It surprised me hearing perfect Chinese in the middle of an English sentence.

  • @ZLYang
    @ZLYang 10 месяцев назад

    Nice video, but I have a question. At 4:26, have you taken inflation into consideration?

  • @luismadrigal-hidalgo
    @luismadrigal-hidalgo Год назад +4

    Thanks for the video, it was fascinating to learn about the background of this company.
    I needed a new laptop for university & work.
    I’ve had a Dell laptop for over a decade and it’s starting to show its age, despite its heavy use and maintenance.
    It’s interesting that the big name brands such as HP and Dell have been dethroned as the best by lesser known companies such as ASUS and Lenovo. In the end I got an ASUS, it has worked wonders.

    • @blitzrumble2956
      @blitzrumble2956 Год назад

      Lenovo is 'lesser known'? You must be too young to know any histroty of PC.

    • @Aaron-ui9tj
      @Aaron-ui9tj Год назад

      @@blitzrumble2956 Also Asus has not "dethroned" Dell or HP. Walk into any office, and tell me how many Asus laptops, or PCs you find.

    • @blitzrumble2956
      @blitzrumble2956 Год назад

      @@Aaron-ui9tj you are barking on the wrong tree.

    • @Aaron-ui9tj
      @Aaron-ui9tj Год назад

      @@blitzrumble2956 What ? lol

  • @grapy83
    @grapy83 Год назад +54

    Your content is so great for getting insight of inside-decision making in large firms! Love it.

  • @dave_r
    @dave_r Год назад +98

    I believe that the Superfish issue was in the BIOS and was not fixable by a reinstall of the OS. Further, my understanding is that Lenovo apologized when this was discovered and said that this would never happen again. Six months (?) later it was found again, and the US Fed Govt shut down use of Lenovo, and I believe depressed both sales and reputation in the US for at least a few years. I remember colleagues buying (for personal use) Lenovo workstation-class laptops because the value-for-money was very high (compared to HP and Dell) because of their reputation. While it would appear that Lenovo learned their lesson about the potential cost (US Fed Govt says "don't turn on any Lenovo computer again"), you brush over the Superfish issue as though it had been nothing.

    • @R.-.
      @R.-. Год назад +19

      Superfish exploited a feature of Windows that allowed platform specific software to be installed from a link stored in the BIOS.
      IIRC There was a workaround that involved creating a dummy file within /WIndows which made it think the software was already installed.
      They may have removed the Superfish link from later BIOS revisions.

    • @AKK5I
      @AKK5I Год назад

      Yeah it's quite obvious when he shills (whether he gets paid or not) for these mainland products (he literally worked for Oppo as a foreign marketer so its been his trade). I don't live in either country but not any trust worthy of the US government or Chinese government eitherway.

    • @downtomars6268
      @downtomars6268 Год назад +1

      Always thought Lenovo at the time got duped into adding the US-Israel program Superfish as a way for the CIA to get access.

    • @liam3284
      @liam3284 7 месяцев назад

      install software from a link? What were Microsoft thinking?

  • @archnof0
    @archnof0 9 месяцев назад

    Thx I was wondering about this issue and had even asked around about it

  • @user-wv4ig6uy5b
    @user-wv4ig6uy5b 9 месяцев назад +2

    Chinese people know Lenovo as an American company established in China

  • @someonespotatohmm9513
    @someonespotatohmm9513 Год назад +12

    Havent watched the video yet but there was a yearly rotation of the laptops that would be provided and it switched between Lenovo and dell or hp. After a few years that stopped as the thinkpad build quality and warranty support was just so much better. Everyone who did not get a Lenovo eventually ended up with one because their first laptop would break within 5 years. Mine is still going 9 years later. Sure some would break, but some not nearly all as with the other brands.

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
    @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Год назад +235

    That Army officer concerned about an encrypted chip in a Lenovo laptop must be on his first IT assignment. There's an encrypted chip in every new PC. On Apple it's called Secure Enclave, on other brands its called Trusted Platform Module and is required by Microsoft. TPM was derived from a co-processor originally developed by ARM, a British company owned largely by a Japanese company, no Chinese companies involved.

    • @bened22
      @bened22 Год назад +13

      An "encrypted" chip? Like ... what? That's nearly as wrong as "encrypted on the motherboard".

    • @FuntimeByzantium
      @FuntimeByzantium Год назад +17

      Enclave? ohh shit, here we go again

    • @chainedhex
      @chainedhex Год назад +33

      ​@@FuntimeByzantium YOU ARE OUT OF UNIFORM SOLDIER WHERE IS YOUR POWER ARMOR

    • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Год назад +20

      @@bened22 The chip has a processor and storage. The processor encrypts keys and stores them in the memory. If the hidden serial number of the motherboard and processor match what the chip expects it will also decrypt what is in the storage. All happens on the same chip.

    • @ybbhfdfgmail
      @ybbhfdfgmail Год назад +1

      They all should be banned Chinese know this for ages

  • @debasishraychawdhuri
    @debasishraychawdhuri Год назад +2

    Did not know all these things, but I bought a lot of Lenovo devices because of their cheap prices compared to their features. They are also very high quality devices that keep on working without failing.

  • @ZACKMAN2007
    @ZACKMAN2007 6 месяцев назад +3

    Lenovo ownes the professional pc market, and that is their main market,

  • @rubyjohn
    @rubyjohn Год назад +8

    Very informative and insightful video. Great work!

  • @idlikeabetternickname
    @idlikeabetternickname Год назад +57

    Very interesting episode. I just love thinkpads at work, and I work as production engineer. My thinpads hit the floor, oil and dirt, are carried from one place to another for the whole day and they just work. No issues. Used HP elite Z books and whatnot. They dont stand a chance.

    • @lixue2023
      @lixue2023 Год назад +1

      It is very good to use this series

  • @J4RDAAN
    @J4RDAAN 10 месяцев назад +30

    I've a Lenovo Thinkpad T430 and literally the best laptop I've ever had.
    Bought in 2013 and still keeping up to the task in 2023. Previously I had an HP and it died within 1 year of having it.

  • @THELASTWORKINGTOILETOFINDIA
    @THELASTWORKINGTOILETOFINDIA Год назад +3

    The Indians from India said that they are leading the world in terms of technology but I can't find any technological products from India that is even worth mentioning 😆

  • @g.r.2985
    @g.r.2985 Год назад +4

    This was honestly the most interesting thing I’ve watched in a while. Great job mate!

  • @XieRH1988
    @XieRH1988 Год назад +130

    So far i think the only other real enterprise/business laptops out there are the elitebook and latitude from HP and Dell but the Thinkpad is still in a league of its own. It's got things like its keyboard with more ergonomic keycaps that no one else in the market has. Getting the thinkpad from IBM has to be one of the best acquisitions Lenovo has ever made.

    • @Steamrick
      @Steamrick Год назад +16

      Fujitsu Lifebook is also still relevant. It's also one of the few that still has a proper docks that links through the laptop bottom instead of over usb-c.

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Год назад +4

      ​@Steamrick Never seen Fujitsu laptops 💻 in the UK, I wondered if the brand only sells in Japan

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Год назад +8

      @XieRH1988 one of the worse decisions IBM ever made to sell their consumer electronics division

    • @wnxdafriz
      @wnxdafriz Год назад +1

      @@cryptocsguy9282 in the US, they are worked with primarily businesses, schools, medical.... for the most part it has more to do about their docks and security than anything.. well school is more about colleges but i think that is some sort of kickback
      brother was frustrated his major made him buy a fujitsu laptop when his worked better

    • @TheComputec
      @TheComputec Год назад +1

      @@cryptocsguy9282 I sell laptops in the UK... Fujitsu is a second tier brand here but they have had models in every class for decades from budget to high performance workstation. There was also Toshiba who at one point were the absolute market leaders but they just fell off a cliff. I think the problem for mid-ranking major brands these days is that even the most basic laptop is "good enough" for consumers,so those built to a price will win market share on Price alone and those who need security, multimedia or other performance gains will still feel the need to buy Dell, HP and Mac lenovo have the brand recognition and they beat HP and Dell and Mac on price in their particular pricepoint

  • @gautamsinha5998
    @gautamsinha5998 10 месяцев назад

    This question had always perplexed me how beyond local manufacturing and generic components, how Lenovo never got on the wrong side..thanks

  • @pgdaszzz7399
    @pgdaszzz7399 4 месяца назад

    What chip? Through what channel? How much input power? How many bitrate? Where is the receiver for that chip?

  • @youandiryan
    @youandiryan Год назад +6

    Lenovo is trusted. They have proven their trust time and time again. They make good products. And they have been in the game for a long long time. And it's probably why they're still successful in North America.

  • @noytelinu
    @noytelinu Год назад +10

    The IBM merger is why many don't even realize they are Chinese. Their decentralization makes them not feel Chinese at all.

    • @My_Old_YT_Account
      @My_Old_YT_Account Год назад +4

      There's also that they're from Hong Kong, which was politically separate from China until very recently when China decided the majority of representatives are now unelected and chosen by the CCP

    • @quanghuyvo6112
      @quanghuyvo6112 Год назад

      ​@@My_Old_YT_Account they are never a democracy because they use the same system as the British left them

    • @user-ng2nt7dg3w
      @user-ng2nt7dg3w Год назад

      Because Lenovo is just a brand, they basically do not develop equipment programs, they only buy patented assembled computers and sell them under the brand, their business methods are well known in Chinese

    • @GWT1m0
      @GWT1m0 Год назад +3

      @@My_Old_YT_Account Did we watch the same video ? They're based in Beijing, China, and all of their founders were from a State backed institution, Chinese Academy of the Sciences. They were only ipo'd in Hongkong in order to get easier access to foreign capital.

    • @GWT1m0
      @GWT1m0 Год назад +3

      ​@@My_Old_YT_Account Also HK's leaders are not directly chosen (approving candidates is different) by the central government. Never have, probably never will as long as HK has a "border" with Shenzhen. Partial-democracy was only enacted 5 years before the 97 by the British (Out of spite I presume), who had been dictating the territory for a century, half-way around the world. Other than the recent massive reduction in freedom of speech and half of the legislature being voted in by business interests (A British policy), both of which I do not agree with, everything you said is false.

  • @thelawofme
    @thelawofme Год назад +1

    I keep recommending to my friends and acquaintances if they're buying a budget laptop with decent specs a refurbished Lenovo Laptop especially the T Series business lineup because of how durable their hardware, repairable to even consumers can disassemble and reassemble them with enough knowledge and their vast selection of spare part still available online.

  • @erikfinnegan
    @erikfinnegan Год назад

    Thank you for this very informative review.

  • @hiroshimanagasaki616
    @hiroshimanagasaki616 Год назад +77

    ThinkPads will forever be the best laptops I have ever used

    • @duran9664
      @duran9664 Год назад +7

      I was so disappointed in the recent years by ASUS, DELL & HP PCs. It is hard to admit that now Lenovo PCs perform better & look greater. Only Microsoft Surface line can competes with Lenovo PC line in quality & beauty but not the price. 😮‍💨

    • @duran9664
      @duran9664 Год назад +8

      ThinkPads were reliable but so so so so so so ugly 🤢🤢🤮

    • @PutsOnSneakers
      @PutsOnSneakers Год назад +10

      ​@@duran9664 really? My X1 extreme
      Is sexy AF! ❤

    • @akeshshi9137
      @akeshshi9137 Год назад +3

      Too bad theyre owned by CCP china. Was the best laptop to use as linux geeks an alternative to using a mac.

    • @gold9994
      @gold9994 Год назад +1

      @@duran9664 Lenovo just need to sort the square charging port. Absolute trash

  • @subodhpareek18
    @subodhpareek18 Год назад +53

    You consistently put out no fuss, insightful and interesting content. So many others add a lot of unecessary fluff

  • @stepanvolovecki8365
    @stepanvolovecki8365 Год назад

    Thank you for the very well put story! However I have one remark: reinstalling windows won't work with reming any dangerous software because you need to install drivers at some point otherwise camera or fingerprint scanner won't work and than you will install proprietary binaries. I assume you know this so it makes me think that you missed it deliberately.

  • @andrewlim9345
    @andrewlim9345 Год назад

    Thanks, Learnt a lot about Lenovo’s mixed ownership structure.

  • @charleschaimkohl
    @charleschaimkohl Год назад +11

    I'm an architect I use a think pads for all my CAD work, I was always wondering that they are chinese yet appear very American in their marketing etc.

    • @jamesnguyen7069
      @jamesnguyen7069 Год назад +4

      because ibm thinkpad

    • @workshop1668
      @workshop1668 4 месяца назад

      They want to hide it. Just like harbor freight using “Pittsburg” and American industrial names. Its pathetic.

  • @oxide9717
    @oxide9717 Год назад +3

    I see techAltar I Click. Incredible video as always ❤

  • @armamentarmedarm1699
    @armamentarmedarm1699 10 месяцев назад

    Did Lenovo and Fujitsu have some kind of relationship before that purchase? Because I have a Fujitsu pen that I use for my Lenovo laptop...did they go in together on a deal with Wacom or something?

  • @jarekzawadzki
    @jarekzawadzki Год назад +3

    I moved to China in 2002 and stayed there till 2008 (in Shenzhen of all places) but never saw the 天禧 computer with the wheel-button to start the internet connection.

  • @AndyAksen
    @AndyAksen Год назад +3

    Sehr sehr cooles Video, da ich mir die Frage nach Lenovo schon immer gestellt habe. Gerade auch weil ich Thinkpads liebe :D

  • @JC_dk
    @JC_dk Год назад +10

    I think the reason Lenovo is so popular is that they bought and kept IBM's design, and they still have the best laptop keyboards. Nothing beats a ThinkPad T-series for office work purposes.
    Had Lenovo made their own design and brand, they would never have had a chance, no matter how good they were. I remember going from IBM ThinkPads to Lenovo ThinkPads.
    Another ting is that they bought IBM's desktop and laptop brands at a time when there wasn't the same distrust of China, I think that plays a big role too.

    • @jasonchan5504
      @jasonchan5504 10 месяцев назад +1

      I hate how most of their laptops have the fn key on the bottom rightmost corner instead of ctrl.

    • @JC_dk
      @JC_dk 10 месяцев назад

      @@jasonchan5504 mine hasn’t, it’s with the Ctrl outside the Fn key, I just compared mine with a HP and a Dell, and the Fn and Ctrl keys are placed the same on my Lenovo 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @ploplmao2655
      @ploplmao2655 10 месяцев назад

      The i m thinkpad was already produced in oem by lenovo back in the 90’s

  • @user-jb8mp8hr7m
    @user-jb8mp8hr7m 3 месяца назад +1

    We Chinese consider Lenovo is a US company.Back in days,Lenovo sold X1 laptop,China price tag 30,000rmb,but in US likely 20,000rmb

  • @cheapscotsman
    @cheapscotsman Год назад +39

    I remember when IBM sold their thinkcenter servers to lenovo. They lost a lot of clients due to their support problems. IBM had great support for desktops and X86 servers. IBM kept their non intel servers in house and still make lots of money.

    • @mowtow90
      @mowtow90 Год назад +3

      The support for Lenovo products goes true IBM. I know because thats what I do. Lenovo doesnt have its own support stucture (tehnically) for enterprise products , just deckstops. They have Primer and Product engineering but everything else goes true IBM.

    • @LegoTux
      @LegoTux Год назад +2

      I remember in the early 2000s when IBM sold their computer divisions to Lenovo.
      That was the day we traded our IBM Red Books, for Mao's Red Book.

    • @FinnorXTube
      @FinnorXTube 10 месяцев назад

      Here where I live, IBM owns the company that do the support for thinkpads and other brands too. Lenovo customer service is premium, at least the thinkpad division. Dell is a pain!

  • @treebush
    @treebush Год назад +12

    It's absurd how many people do not know Lenovo is a Chinese brand

    • @vitadude5004
      @vitadude5004 Год назад +1

      I know from the start , i am surprised too that people do that atleast they should google about it

    • @edenassos
      @edenassos Год назад +3

      Shows how much you can trust their opinions. You can't.

    • @joneyu655
      @joneyu655 Год назад

      😂In our eyes, Lenovo is not considered a high-tech enterprise, only DJI and Huawei can be counted, so the United States wants to ban them

  • @illiiilli24601
    @illiiilli24601 Год назад

    Thanks for this video, I've always wondered why Lenovo was exempt from all the sanctions

  • @PraneshSacher
    @PraneshSacher 10 месяцев назад +4

    Lenovo is number one for the open source operating platform Linux, with it's ThinkPad. These days you will have a problem to installing Linux on any PC because of driver incompatibility. ThinkPad is made for Linux and it runs great on it.

  • @hqiu6828
    @hqiu6828 Год назад +8

    Well, Lenovo bought the IBM PC business, it is basically a PC assembler, using parts and chips from the US. Same is XiaoMi. Unlike Huawei, who is ahead of US tech company in some area, like 5G chip and mobile chip design.

  • @timatwater8247
    @timatwater8247 Год назад +3

    Very well done, I remember the Lenovo/IBM deal and that Lenovo was basically Chinese but had no idea how broadly international they were. I'm still a little confused about Motorola Mobility vs. Motorola as a whole though..maybe you can do a Motorola history?

    • @gus473
      @gus473 10 месяцев назад +1

      😥 It's too sad.

    • @metalvideos1961
      @metalvideos1961 9 месяцев назад

      On 29th January 2014 , Google announced the sale of Motorola Mobility to Lenovo for $2.91 billion. motorala was a loss making company earlier and it had an ample amount off carried forward losses. Google used those by setting off the losses with its profit
      here you have your answer

  • @stepanvinnikov6024
    @stepanvinnikov6024 Год назад +6

    6 years ago I was in community college in wa state. One thing I have saw there where a lot Chinese students going for computer science, engineering, wide array of technical disciplines. Now I am not surprised at all. There building some nice stuff. Competition at its finest. America forgot one thing hard work makes a nation rich and powerful.

    • @backup2ramdisk
      @backup2ramdisk 4 месяца назад +1

      And that one thing? It’s called IP theft.

    • @mahzorimipod
      @mahzorimipod 4 месяца назад

      crying about fake shit like IP lmfao

  • @alvarez6487
    @alvarez6487 Год назад +1

    I love Lenovo. My university introduced the brand to me. I fell in love ever since.

  • @soulofahacker
    @soulofahacker 10 месяцев назад +13

    Fascinating analysis! A lot about Lenovo's inner workings that I didn't previously know.
    One correction: Superfish was nastier than you describe... if you wiped and reinstalled Windows fresh, it would still install itself using the Windows Platform Binary Table -- basically a backdoor in the BIOS that was *intended* to install stuff like drivers or enterprise management software. Lenovo eventually backed down, but it was sketchy af, and I never trusted them again.

    • @tvacc6174
      @tvacc6174 10 месяцев назад +1

      This video feels like something a Chinese agent would make. The way he handwavingly dismissed and try to downplay and discredit this and the other allegation by the high ranking military officer, is very, very suspicious.

    • @bored78612
      @bored78612 10 месяцев назад +6

      Dell had the same thing to be fair. And superfish is from an Israeli firm; America's ally. All PC companies include bloatware.

    • @CharlieCharlie88
      @CharlieCharlie88 5 месяцев назад

      @@tvacc6174if anything, this RUclipsr is hella anti china. Yet here you are saying that he’s suspicious

  • @wmrieker
    @wmrieker Год назад +20

    A security guy told me the Lenovos had CPUs with altered firmware and they were prohibited from using them. That was quite a few years ago, probably all companies doing that now.

    • @fanban2926
      @fanban2926 Год назад +8

      What altered firmware lol? Not in the CPU. Maybe the BIOS?

    • @savagej4y241
      @savagej4y241 Год назад +10

      @@fanban2926 Yep, its an issue with the BIOS firmware.

    • @perpetualcollapse
      @perpetualcollapse Год назад +1

      The only thing in a CPU I’d worry about is Intel Management Engine and AMDs equivalent.

    • @lixue2023
      @lixue2023 Год назад

      How do you know, is this thing a secret?

  • @unacomn
    @unacomn 9 месяцев назад

    The problem with Superfish was that it was on the BIOS. You could not remove it. It always came back.

  • @ibrahimali6657
    @ibrahimali6657 Год назад +1

    Thanks for your nice Informationen ❤

  • @studentaccount4354
    @studentaccount4354 Год назад +7

    I noticed in 2015 this ownership. Lenovo was a great value and reliable product. This is an excellent detail of the history. Thank you.

  • @ryanyc9619
    @ryanyc9619 Год назад +8

    Thanks for this video.
    Nice job researching and explaining such a difficult topic.
    I have been thinking of trying Nebula, but until today, the platform still doesn't have an AppGallery compliant app compatible with HMS Core.
    Sadly, I won't be coming anytime soon.
    😢

  • @user-zx4kj1zq4z
    @user-zx4kj1zq4z 4 месяца назад

    what was the specification for the Tianxi

  • @pje_
    @pje_ 4 месяца назад

    Watching on an old Lenovo tablet from 2010 with Android 6.0, having a Lenovo Z50-70 laptop

  • @jackstrawful
    @jackstrawful Год назад +22

    I’ve been using a Lenovo Legion laptop for almost 5 years and had no idea it was a Chinese company. I had a vague recollection of the IBM acquisition in ‘04, but apparently I had misunderstood that story from the beginning - I’d always thought that Lenovo was simply spun off from IBM at that time. I thought the Lenovo name was just a rebranding of IBM’s Thinkpad division.

    • @sungjane
      @sungjane 8 месяцев назад +1

      "Chinese software has backdoors."

  • @ZFanz
    @ZFanz Год назад +6

    My dad works for my country's military, and for their computer needs, they partnered with Lenovo. When I visit my dad's workplace, I noticed that they use Lenovo products ranging from PCs (ThinkCentre), keyboards, mouse, to laptops (ThinkPad & IdeaPad). It's quite surprising, to be honest.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 11 месяцев назад +2

      Im American and I noticed the same lol. Lenovo everything.
      IBM was braindead when it went thru with the whole sale.
      But in some way, letting their PC business branch off as essentially its own company, was a genius idea.

  • @atrothe
    @atrothe 11 месяцев назад

    Facinating story. Well done, I had no idea it was Chinese owned.

  • @Okole
    @Okole 4 месяца назад

    Crouching Tiger lady in the ad, cool!

  • @Bilal_1860
    @Bilal_1860 Год назад +6

    Lenovo's laptops are awesome.

  • @dragonflymedia5565
    @dragonflymedia5565 Год назад +4

    I really enjoy your videos but I disagree with the standpoint of saying that "if somehow [a spyware] would be installed you could just reinstall Windows", it seems like you're implying that it's nothing to worry about since you could fix it yourself by reinstalling the operating system.
    I would argue that the intent matters and that if you're going to buy systems from a company, especially in the context of system integrators and providers for state agencies, it has better come with a clean installation of the OS. Whether the source is correct as to the "Superfish" software or not, it is at the very least concerning when it comes to the trust that can be placed in the company. I know for certain that for procurement, some of us are on the lookout for these kind of concerns and we have stopped recommending these companies in tenders, simply put because whether they use standardised parts or not, totalitarian state stakes in private entities, especially in ICT, can only mean trouble in the long run. Chinese owned brands of phones, desktop software and mobile apps, hardware, services and cloud service providers have almost all shown that they cannot be trusted. For the few that can, how worth is the risk to you? The primacy of the parent's company interest is explicitly stated on their website, as showcased in the video; "the mission of serving the nation".
    All in all, just because you can reinstall the operating system to be stock and run on clean hardware doesn't mean it's right for it to have spyware installed and shipped to you in the first place. As far as I'm concerned, companies, wherever theyr are should steer clear of Chinese companies and their services and products.

  • @laughingvampire7555
    @laughingvampire7555 11 месяцев назад

    All I want is Lenovo making thinkpads like the IBM's with high quality and the 7 row layout like in a T60 of the early 2000s with last generation hardware. I wouldn't mind a 4:3 ratio option.

  • @mayank7848
    @mayank7848 Год назад

    Worked for Lenovo India Bangalore office. That too for Thinkpad products 😅 it's a tuff product.

  • @CityLifeinAmerica
    @CityLifeinAmerica Год назад +3

    Lenovo is an interesting ones even the US government is using them. They’re the only ones that’s a Chinese company where they will totally be ok with using them.

  • @brxan3096
    @brxan3096 Год назад +9

    Watching this on my Lenovo Legion laptop & learning some interesting facts. I always knew Lenovo was a Chinese brand but I had no idea Blackrock had such a significant stake in the company.

    • @verlax8956
      @verlax8956 11 месяцев назад +1

      same bro watching this on my legion laptop too

  • @adriancoanda9227
    @adriancoanda9227 6 месяцев назад

    Great info. Keep it up. That's how multinational companies work,

  • @shaivalnathwani3370
    @shaivalnathwani3370 Год назад +1

    What the name of intro song ?

  • @yuema2078
    @yuema2078 Год назад +20

    There is one crucial aspect that you left out. Lenovo, after buying IBM's Thinkpad line, has jacked up the selling price of its laptops, no matter the Thinkpad line or its original legend line products, in China domestic market. At the same time it dropped the Thinkpad price drastically in the market outside China. Folks in my age probably remember that Thinkpad from IBM used to be twice as expensive as Dell or HP. Lenovo was heavily criticized by industry leaders in China by making a large profit in China and using it to subsidize those outside of China. Its image in China is not a great one.

    • @Funktastico
      @Funktastico Год назад +3

      17% tax rebate from your government for exports sales.

  • @keybraker
    @keybraker Год назад +7

    I like how in the picture at 6:17 you made 10000 huge and 9000tiny while being almost equal lmao

  • @ApusApus
    @ApusApus 7 месяцев назад +2

    Yea, my last 2 laptops have been lenovos, less gamebreaking issues than HP (constant overheating and regular OS corruption), more weird ones (weird, unsupported parts), with better price to performance, but now I'll be saving up for a framework

  • @shiro214okane
    @shiro214okane 4 месяца назад

    really liked their thinkpad P (for workstation) and thinkpad X(portable) series, enterprise second hand stuffs.

  • @jasonswearingin1009
    @jasonswearingin1009 10 месяцев назад +5

    Lenovo was caught by multiple allied intel agencies back in 2011. Lenovo was knowingly and admittedly placing rootkits in their bios chips that would allow them to remote access the entire computer at any time they pleased. Security Software couldn't block this due to the rootkit having a legitimate DLS. A lot of companies and private companies in the US use Lenovo desktops and laptops. To say this is a huge national security threat would be a massive understatement.

    • @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050
      @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050 10 месяцев назад +2

      And you believe the story about spy balloons?

    • @jasonswearingin1009
      @jasonswearingin1009 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050 Never said anything about the recent balloon incident. Major competitive allies and advisories alike constantly conduct espionage on each other.