Those who are looking for an affordable laptop for the office will invariably encounter Lenovo's L series. We are testing the 15.6-inch L580 that is able to convince particularly with its good input devices.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-ThinkPad-L580-Laptop-Review-Reliable-office-notebook-with-a-good-keyboard.437001.0.html
competition:
237,252,251,230,226 nits
worst segment in a laptop market?
from my personal expirience:
<220 for dark room only(home use only)
230-280 limited usage, no direct light from the lamp or window
290-350 can be recognized from ok to good, you can start with this number when planning a purchase.
360+ 1 point in "pros", still no direct sunlight outdoors, every high-end, top-tier, crapload of money, etc laptop should have a value no lower than this. otherwise-waste of money.
500+ future no problem screen, 2 points in "pros"
Quote from: william blake on October 07, 2019, 20:04:09worst segment in a laptop market?
Probably yes. Business laptops in gernal often have worse screens than their consumer counterparts and these budget business laptops have the worst possible screens. In this segment, you often only get the choice between 1366 x 768 TN with like 220 nits (THE worst) and 1920 x 1080 IPS (250 nits, 45 % NTSC), which are barely OK.