An hour later, Elias sat in a dimly lit coffee shop. He clicked the extended battery into place with a satisfying snap . He hit the power button, the ThinkPad logo flickered to life, and the backlit keyboard glowed a soft white.

Elias thought about the modern laptops he’d seen—glued shut, impossible to repair, with ports that required a dozen adapters. The T470 felt like a rebellion. It had USB-C, sure, but it also had full-sized Ethernet, an SD card slot, and HDMI. It was built for someone who actually had work to do. He pulled the cash from his pocket.

"Is the external battery hot-swappable?" Elias asked, testing the man.

"Good choice," the shop owner said, appearing from behind a stack of monitors. "Bridge battery system, dual-core i5, and a keyboard that actually feels like typing, not tapping on glass."

Elias ran a finger over the lid. The texture was slightly rubberized, grippy and professional. He opened it, and there it was—the iconic red TrackPoint nub sitting like a jewel in the center of the keys. He pressed a few keys; they had a deep, tactile "thwack" that promised hours of comfortable coding.

He walked past the flashy, thin ultrabooks and the neon-lit gaming rigs. He wasn't looking for a Ferrari; he was looking for a tank.

The fluorescent lights of the used tech shop hummed, a low-frequency buzz that matched the static in Elias’s brain. He had exactly $250 in his pocket and a deadline that didn't care about his broken laptop.

The owner grinned. "You bet. You can pull the back battery out without even turning the machine off. It’s got 16GB of RAM tucked inside, too. Cleaned the fans myself."

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