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May 15, 2019 at 12:00 pm #151802
Thanks. And what about Chuwi Hi8 Pro? Banggood offers this one for €80
May 13, 2019 at 6:11 pm #151775Thanks for the suggestion, but it’s only use will be for pictue-frame. So camera nor audio do really matter.
It’s all about screen this time 🙂
March 8, 2018 at 1:53 pm #140396Thanks for this info Chris 🙂
March 8, 2018 at 8:05 am #140375I’m afraid I’ve to agree with you that people don’t treat their rental as if their own :S.
And it’s indeed way more ease to return an Asus to the computer store around the corner than to ship a Chuwi machine all the way back to China.And I know the Dell/HP/Lenovo ‘big and boring plastic business machines’ are more reliable and robust as a magnesium cased Teclast, but that comparison isn’t fair to make. Above, I believe students don’t want those big plasic beasts, but prefere smaller and more ‘sexy’ designs.
But can a, let’s say, Teclast F6 compete with a Lenovo Yoga 520 in terms of reliability and building quality?And from the different ‘new Chinese brands’, is it possible to scale them in terms of reliability/building quality?
I’m curious about your opinion!
March 7, 2018 at 7:04 pm #140363Hey guys,
I’m triggered by this tread – I’m planning to set up a laptop rental program for students, so I’ll need a lot good looking and reliaable/solid laptops. They don’t need to be super fast – as long as apps like Netflix/Internet/Spotify and Word work very vast and stable.
I’m already in contact with ‘normal’ hardware suppliers like Asus, HP and Lenovo, but I started to wonder if they’re really that much better/more durable/solid than these less-know brands. And since most of the ‘normal’ hardware suppliers build in Asia as well, I wonder if there’s any difference at all…
What’s your opinion? And from these ‘less-know brands’, what would you guys recommend in terms for durability? Chuwi? Teclast? Cube? something else?
I’m really looking forward your opinion!
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