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CESComputingTech

The ThinkPad Rollable XD is a laptop concept where the display wraps and grows on demand

The ThinkPad Rollable XD feels less like a traditional laptop and more like a transforming gadget, complete with motors, pulleys, and a screen that physically reshapes itself.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 9, 2026, 4:37 AM EST
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Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept snapshot 00.23 [2026 01 09 03.30.11]
Image: Lenovo
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Lenovo’s ThinkPad Rollable XD is one of those CES concepts that makes you stop mid-scroll and replay the demo, not because it’s practical yet, but because it feels like a laptop that’s halfway to sci-fi. It looks like a regular ThinkPad at first glance, complete with the TrackPoint nub and businesslike black chassis, until the screen starts to move and you realize the display doesn’t just open – it actually climbs.​

Open, the Rollable XD starts out as a fairly normal 13.3‑inch notebook. Then you swipe your finger along the curved glass spine at the top of the lid and the OLED panel slowly extends upward, growing into a roughly 15.9‑inch, ultra‑tall canvas. The whole show happens in the lid: the screen wraps over the top edge in a tight U‑turn and slides down the back of the laptop, effectively parking a chunk of that flexible panel on the outside when you are in “normal” mode. Because the lid is partially transparent, you can literally watch the motors, pulleys, and tensioning system working as the panel rolls into place, like a tiny mechanical theatre for display nerds.​

Closed, the machine turns into something closer to a smart notebook than a traditional clamshell. The exposed section of the rollable OLED doubles as an external display, sitting behind Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus 2, so it can survive bags, desks, and overenthusiastic fidgeting. Lenovo uses that outer strip for touch‑friendly widgets and glanceable info: think calendar pings, notifications, maybe AI assistance prompts, all living on the lid instead of forcing you to crack the laptop open. There’s even a party trick for people who hate prying open thin lids: give the closed laptop a gentle knock and the mechanism extends the edge of the screen just enough to create a little overhang you can grab. It’s a small interaction detail, but it hints at how the company is trying to rethink the relationship between the screen, the shell, and the user, not just the panel specs.​

  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 01 Proteus Hero front facing not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 02 Proteus Hero front facing extended
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  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 07 Proteus Hero KB top of device
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 08 Proteus hero front facing right extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 09 Proteus hero front facing left extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 10 Proteus front facing extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 11 Proteus hero rear facing right not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 12 Proteus hero rear facing left not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 13 Proteus tilted shot partially closed not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 14 Proteus left profile laptop closed not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 15 Proteus hero front facing not extended
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept 16 Proteus hero front facing extended

In person, everyone who has handled it seems to come away with the same reaction: it is simply fun to play with. Expanding and contracting the display is less like adjusting a hinge and more like transforming a gadget, complete with the visual feedback of gears and cables shifting behind the patterned window in the lid. Reviewers describe pressing a control or swiping to trigger the roll, watching the lid ride up on rails as more display scrolls over the top and into view, the motion slow enough to appreciate but quick enough that it feels usable, not like waiting for a motorized car seat to inch into place. It’s the kind of device you end up demoing to whoever walks past your desk, even if all you’re doing with it is email and spreadsheets.​

Underneath that spectacle is a serious bit of engineering logic. Lenovo already shipped one rollable laptop, the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable, which hides the extra display material inside the base and pulls it upward out of the chassis when you extend it. That design is clever, but stuffing motors and a rolled‑up screen into the lower half of a laptop eats into space that could otherwise go to cooling, battery, or more conventional components. The Rollable XD flips that idea around, moving the entire mechanism into the lid so the keyboard deck can stay relatively “normal,” potentially freeing up room for better thermals or more flexible internal layouts. It also gives Lenovo a theoretical path to offering this as a panel option on a standard ThinkPad, the way one Lenovo rep described it: imagine checking a box for “rollable lid” the way you’d currently spec a higher‑resolution display.​

Then there’s the question of why you would want a laptop that gets taller instead of wider. The obvious pitch is productivity: a 16‑inch‑class display that grows upward is perfect for writing, coding, reading documents, or living in tools like Slack and Teams, all of which benefit more from vertical real estate than from a wider 16:9 view. A taller window lets you see more lines of text, more rows in a spreadsheet, or a longer timeline in your editor without zooming out to ant‑sized fonts. Because the footprint on your desk doesn’t actually grow when the screen extends, the XD sidesteps the usual trade‑off where “bigger screen” means “wider machine” that overhangs café tables and airline tray tables.​

But Lenovo is also clearly thinking about use cases beyond a single person hammering through a laptop day. By pushing the panel over the lid and exposing that rear section, the XD can act as a kind of single‑panel, dual‑facing display. Retail and signage are obvious targets: one side for the operator, the other for customers seeing promos or live content, with AI features like live translation or assistant overlays making the device more than just a PC on a counter. Lenovo’s own language leans heavily into this “platform” idea, talking about multimodal interactions, voice controls, and lid‑closed workflows as part of how a screen like this could change both how and where a laptop works.​

Of course, this is still a concept, which is Lenovo‑speak for “don’t hold your breath for a Buy Now button.” There are no firm specs, no processor details, and no battery figures; any numbers floating around other rollable devices give a rough idea of what is possible today, but not a guarantee of what the XD itself will ship with, if it ships at all. The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable that actually made it to market landed at around $3,300 to $3,500, depending on region, which is a clear reminder that early rollable hardware is priced for early adopters and showcase budgets, not mainstream buyers. It worked, and reviewers generally liked it for straight‑up productivity, but the price meant you were paying almost entirely for novelty and engineering rather than raw performance.​

Rollables also inherit all the usual foldable‑screen question marks. How many times can you extend and retract that panel before the tension system loosens or the OLED fatigues? What happens when dust inevitably finds its way into the tracks and under the lid’s glass? How do you service or replace a display that wraps 180 degrees over the top of a laptop? Even in hands‑on demos, some reporters noted that triggering the roll with a button or gesture could occasionally be finicky, which is mildly annoying in a booth and potentially infuriating if you just want your screen to move in a meeting. These are solvable problems, but they are the unglamorous side of futuristic form factors that engineers have to eat before the design is ready for regular users.​

What makes the ThinkPad Rollable XD feel different from a one‑off stunt is Lenovo’s track record of slowly turning weird ideas into shipping products. A few years ago, the company was showing off foldable screens and rotating portrait‑mode concepts like the ThinkBook VertiFlex that sounded like thought experiments; today, some of those ideas have filtered into real devices with actual SKUs, even if they remain niche. The Rollable XD sits on that same spectrum: it might never exist in exactly this see‑through, CES‑polished form, but the idea of putting more of the PC’s brains back into the base and letting the lid become this dynamic, semi‑transparent, dual‑use display feels like a direction rather than a dead‑end.​

If nothing else, this concept is a very public reminder that the laptop form factor is nowhere near “solved.” For decades, the screen and keyboard were locked into a static rectangle that only really changed thickness and bezel size. Now the industry is experimenting with laptops that fold, roll, swivel into portrait, or turn into dual‑purpose signage – and Lenovo is one of the few companies actually pushing those experiments past renders and into prototypes you can touch. The ThinkPad Rollable XD won’t replace your everyday clamshell anytime soon, but it does hint at a near future where watching your laptop physically reshape itself to match your work is just part of the daily routine.


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