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Lenovo Broadens Ultrabook Line With New U310, U410 'Book Of Do'

By Kristin Bent
June 04, 2012    12:00 AM ET

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Lenovo, in what it considers to be one of its largest and most significant product launches to date, unveiled Monday its new IdeaPad U310 and U410 Ultrabooks.

The PC maker also kicked off an accompanying multi-million dollar marketing campaign, dubbed the "Book of Do," to pique consumer interest and highlight the unique journal-like form factor introduced with the devices.

Both of the new Ultrabooks, which are part of Lenovo’s larger U Series, run on Intel’s third-generation Ivy Bridge processors and tout the industry-standard lineup of Ultrabook features, including faster boot-up times and instant-on capabilities. The lower-end 13.3-inch U310 measures 0.7 inches thick and weighs in at 3.74 pounds, while the 14-inch U410 is slightly larger, measuring 0.83 inches thick and weighing 4.18 pounds.

[Related: Lenovo Announces IdeaTab S2109 Tablet]

The new Ultrabooks deliver up to 1 TB of storage and run Nvidia GeForce GPUs. Users can expect up to seven hours of battery life with the U310 and up to nine hours with the U410, Lenovo said.

The "Book of Do" campaign, which is launching this week in seven countries, hones in primarily on the new Ultrabooks’ design, explained Nick Reynolds, director of marketing and strategy at Lenovo. The U310 and U410 are intended to resemble an actual journal rather than a laptop -- a design characteristic Lenovo hopes will set them apart from the slew of competing Ultrabooks on the market today.

"The product itself, if we just look at the product, it is different from the competition. And the reason that it’s different is that it doesn’t look like everyone else’s Ultrabook," Reynolds told CRN. "In fact, if you line up all the competition, it’s very hard to tell the difference. They largely all look the same."

In Lenovo’s "Book of Do" TV advertisements, users are shown sliding the Ultrabooks under doors, onto already-packed bookshelves, and into crowded backpacks.

"The machine itself does all the things you’d expect it to, but it’s unique in its design," Reynolds continued.

NEXT: Lenovo, Its Channel Move Toward Ultrabook Era

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