Atom-based Windows 8 slates continue to flood the market from every corner, but who would have thought the biggest budget option would be a ThinkPad?
At a base price of $729, the ThinkPad Tablet 2 is the cheapest 10-inch, Atom-based slate I've reviewed to date, and while the few shortcuts taken to reach that price create some challenges, they aren't deal-breakers.
This is one streamlined and super-compact tablet. At just 11 mm thick and 1.2 pounds, it's the lightest Windows 8 tablet I've encountered to date (and nearly a full half-pound lighter than Dell's Latitude 10). You might think this comes at the expense of specs, but with a 1.8GHz Atom CPU, 2GB of RAM, and a 64GB SSD, it's got an identical configuration to the rest of the Atomlets on the market. You might also assume the screen suffers in some way versus the competition, but the 1366 x 768-pixel resolution is also the same as the rest of the market, and the brightness, while on the dim side, isn't horrible. The chassis comprises a magnesium frame covered with polycarbonate – sturdy, but not entirely ironclad.
The battery is the usual area where manufacturers cut corners in order to trim weight, but the ThinkPad Tablet 2 shines here, too, offering more than ten straight hours of full-screen video playback. That's the top spot for Atom tablets and more than double the longevity of the much heavier HP Envy x2.
Performance benchmarks are in line with other Atom tablets. I did encounter some initial hiccups with the device (Windows Updates wouldn't install) but after updating drivers through Lenovo's System Update app, everything began working smoothly. I even managed to get S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat to run on the device... at 1.3 frames per second.

