I found it to have too much friction against my fingers, which felt weird when I scrolled.
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The 3.9 x 2.2 touchpad was responsive when I navigated the web and performed gestures in Windows 10. On the typing test, I reached my average 110 words per minute, but my error rate hit 3 percent (my average is 2 percent). I found the keyboard to be very comfortable, but I wish there was a little more feedback when I pressed the keys down. There is a tiny bit of flex, but I didn't notice it when I was typing. It has 2.3 millimeters of travel and requires 57 grams of force to press. The ThinkPad L560's keyboard is surprisingly deep and makes for a desktop-class typing experience. On the security side, the L560 comes with TPM to protect sensitive data and an optional $10 fingerprint reader that's compatible with Windows Hello. It is MIL-STD-810G tested to prevent damage due to extreme temperatures, shocks and vibrations, which should be more than enough toughness for business travel. The ThinkPad L560 comes with durability and security features that should keep both your hardware and data safe. None of the L560's competitors met the average, either: The E5570 (242 nits), the T560 (237 nits) and the Tecra A40 (a horribly low 188 nits) were all darker than we'd like.
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The display isn't terribly bright, measuring 236 nits on our light meter the average is slightly higher at 259 nits.
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That's far better than the average of 4.19 (and the Tecra A40's horrendous score of 5.5), but the T560 (0.6) and the Latitude E5570 (0.7) have more accurate displays. The colors on this ThinkPad's screen aren't the most precise the L560's panel registered a Delta-E score of 1.22 (the closer to zero, the better). The Latitude E5570 produced an excellent 107 percent of the gamut, while the T560 and the Tecra A40 covered 71 percent and 72 percent, respectively. The display covers 60 percent of the sRGB color gamut, which is less than the mainstream category average of 88 percent.