The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable arrived at our studio today, and honestly, I didn’t expect to see this technology shipping so soon. When I first encountered this device at MWC 2025, it felt like another ambitious concept piece that would take years to materialize. proved that assumption wrong.
Designer: Lenovo
The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable represents a fundamental shift in how we think about portable workspace design. While the industry has been obsessing over foldable displays that crease and bend, Lenovo took a different approach – they went vertical with a motor-driven flexible POLED panel that expands from 14 inches to 16.7 inches seamlessly.
Design Philosophy: Engineering Becomes Everyday Use
Closed, the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable looks deceptively ordinary. At 1.7 kilograms (3.7 pounds) and 19.9mm (0.78 inches) thick, it’s chunkier than your typical ultrabook. That bulk makes perfect sense when you consider what’s hiding inside – precision motors, flexible display components, and all the engineering required to make this transformation work reliably.
Build quality feels solid despite the complex internals. The chassis maintains ThinkBook’s professional aesthetic while housing technology that would have seemed impossible a few years ago. Materials feel appropriate without being ostentatious – exactly what you’d expect from a device targeting mobile professionals who need serious computing power.
When you trigger the rolling mechanism (either through the dedicated key or gesture controls), the transformation is smooth and controlled. The motor operates with surprising quietness, extending the display in about three seconds. There’s no jarring mechanical noise or concerning vibrations – the engineered movement expands your workspace confidently.
The expanded display maintains visual consistency across both the standard and extended portions. You can see the curve line where the display rolls, particularly at certain viewing angles, but it doesn’t interfere with usability. The POLED panel delivers 100% DCI-P3 color accuracy and 400 nits brightness whether it’s compact or fully extended, which means your content looks consistent regardless of configuration.
Display Technology: Where Form Serves Function
The rollable display technology here addresses real workflow challenges that static screens can’t solve. Traditional laptops force you to choose between portability and screen real estate – you either carry a compact machine with limited workspace or haul around a larger device with more screen territory. The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable eliminates that compromise.
The 14-inch base configuration (2000×1600 resolution) provides standard laptop functionality for focused work, travel, and productivity tasks. When expanded to 16.7 inches (2000×2350 resolution), you get significantly more vertical workspace without carrying a larger machine. The aspect ratio shifts from 5:4 to 8:9, creating a more vertical workspace that benefits document editing, code development, and content creation workflows.
Lenovo’s ThinkBook Workspace software adapts intelligently to the changing screen real estate. Windows and applications reposition automatically as the display expands or contracts. You can have multiple applications visible simultaneously when expanded, then consolidate to focused single-app use when compact. This is about having adaptive workspace that responds to your immediate needs.
The 10-120Hz variable refresh rate and Dolby Vision support ensure that whether you’re editing video content or reading documents, the display adapts its refresh behavior to match the content type. Battery efficiency improves during static content display, while motion content gets the smooth refresh rate it needs for proper visualization.
The motor-driven mechanism requires the laptop to be positioned at 90 degrees or more for proper operation, which works fine since you naturally work at those angles anyway. The gesture controls work reliably once enabled in ThinkBook Workspace settings, though I found the dedicated key more intuitive for quick transformations.
What impressed me most is how the flexible POLED panel handles the repeated rolling motion. There’s no visible degradation or dead pixels after multiple expansion cycles. The display technology feels mature and production-ready rather than experimental, which gives confidence for long-term reliability in professional use scenarios.
Real-World Workflow Applications
As someone who juggles day trading, journalism, and content creation, the expanded display real estate changes how I approach different tasks. For trading scenarios, I can keep charts on the main screen while monitoring watchlists, news feeds, and order books on the extended portion – getting a dual-monitor setup without carrying multiple displays.
Journalism work benefits significantly from the vertical expansion. Research materials, interview transcripts, and source documents can occupy the extended screen while the main area stays focused on article writing. When editing images for Yanko Design articles, the extra workspace means seeing full editing palettes without constantly hiding and showing tool windows.
Content creation workflows see the most dramatic improvement. Video editing projects can display timelines, preview windows, and effect controls simultaneously without the cramped feeling typical of single-screen editing. The additional vertical space helps with longer timeline projects where you need to see more clips and transitions at once.
Audio and Input Experience
The Harman Kardon speakers deliver surprisingly robust audio considering the space constraints of housing a motor system. Dolby Atmos processing creates reasonable spatial audio for laptop speakers, though you’ll still want headphones for serious audio work. The dual-microphone array handles video calls well, with clear pickup even in moderately noisy environments.
The haptic touchpad represents another thoughtful design element. At 75 x 120mm, it provides generous tracking area while delivering precise tactile feedback that feels natural rather than artificial. The buttonless glass surface supports all standard Precision TouchPad gestures while maintaining the responsive feel that professional users expect.
The 5MP camera with ToF sensor and E-shutter keeps video calls looking professional. The infrared component enables Windows Hello face recognition, while the ToF sensor ensures accurate focus even in challenging lighting conditions. For a device targeting mobile professionals who spend significant time in video meetings, these camera capabilities feel appropriately specified.
Performance and Practical Considerations
The Intel Core Ultra 7 258V processor provides adequate performance for the target professional workflows while keeping thermal output manageable within the constrained chassis. With 115 TOPS of AI compute power through Copilot+ PC capabilities, AI-assisted tasks run locally without cloud dependencies – important for users handling sensitive business or creative content.
Battery life manages the motor system drain better than expected. While exact numbers require extended testing, initial use suggests the rolling mechanism doesn’t dramatically impact power consumption during typical expansion cycles. The 66Wh battery capacity feels appropriate for a device this size, though power users will likely want to stay near charging options during intensive work sessions.
The device ships with Windows 11 Pro and includes Lenovo AI Now for local AI processing of personal documents and content. The Smart Key (F9) provides quick access to AI features without requiring cloud connectivity – a practical consideration for users working with confidential materials.
The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable positions itself as proof that concept technology can transition to production reality. Rather than waiting for perfect cost optimization or mass market appeal, Lenovo chose to ship a working implementation that demonstrates rollable display viability for professional users willing to pay for workspace flexibility.
This device signals a broader industry shift toward adaptive form factors that respond to user needs rather than forcing users to adapt to fixed configurations. While foldable displays focus on creating tablet-like experiences, rollable technology addresses the specific challenge of variable workspace requirements in traditional laptop computing.
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