Comment by winter_blue

16 hours ago

Used laptops are such a good deal that you could something high quality in excellent condition for so little that I almost can't justify buying something like this. Like used Dell XPS laptops are ridiculously cheap and they're amazing for the used price.

Or really buy any laptop rated highly by Dave2D or other reviewers that's 4 to 5 years old.

This laptop has a 10” screen, weighs 900 grams and runs an efficient N100 cpu.

Different category to a 15” 2kg cheap 5 year old dell.

  • As someone who always favors the smaller laptops that don't require me to gear up an entire backpack just to do a bit of work on the go, I'd argue that the difference between a 10" and 13" screen is not nearly as much as it sounds. I've found the Dell XPS 13's to be an excellent choice for stowing in my service bag so I have a small-but-functional machine on a job site. That and the Dell XPS 13 just has better hardware all around, when stood up against the Chuwi.

    15", sure, that's a bit big, but smaller models are available.

    • The thing about a diagonal measurement is it doesn't tell you if it's going to fit on a shitty airline tray table or not. Some laptops with a larger diagonal measurement are not too deep. Others are way too deep.

  • A used x1 carbon is a better deal, faster, and weighs about the same with a bigger screen.

    • "Bigger screen" (i.e. being bigger on the length/width dimension) is a bad thing in this discussion. Some people want a programming/writing laptop that fits in a handbag, so that they don't have to decide to bring it, but can just leave it in their bag the way many people do with an iPad.

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    • Agreed here, with prices for used x1s its a no brainer. Although I get the appeal of super small and lightweight devices and even had eee pc way back, but started having insane headaches after working with small screens, so guess its just not for me.

    • The whole point is people want to pay extra for superior portability. There is no x1 carbon with this weight and form factor.

    • My x1 carbon gave me nothing but trouble from the beginning. I couldn't even move it too fast lest I risked it locking up. Additionally, my wrist strain got considerably better after ditching it for a comparably priced M2 that blows it out of the water in every conceivable category.

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  • Surface laptop go/surface go match perfectly. Same size screen, with decent build quality and no software quirk afaik.

Absolutely. Any 2-3 gen old ThinkPad or Elitebook will outlast this and perform lot better.

I bought a tablet from this brand few years back. Screen edges were non responsive to touch within months.

  • my chuwi tablet had the eMMC suddenly die, it disappeared from the point of view of any software, kernel or uefi.

    the brand is trash.

    • If it was running Windows - no wonder, Windows is horrible at constantly writing … something to disk, and eMMC's are not high endurance devices. The flash itself had nothing to do with Chuwi and was most likely manufactured by either SanDisk or Kingston, it would have failed likewise in ASUS/Lenovo/whoever else made those crap Intel Atom + 4 GB RAM + 64 GB eMMC devices.

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Battery can be an issue though. In particular, replacement batteries can be a PITA to get if the model gets discontinued or parts are only available through corporate channels.

What decent secondhand thing can you find at $350.

It is being thrown away in the first place for a reason.

  • I'm starting to see 2020 M1 MacBooks CA$350 on Facebook Marketplace. That's the device I'm using to type this out. It still lasts all day, and it's still the only computer I use.

    • My daily driver is a refurbished Lenovo Thinkpad T14 gen2 with R5/16/512 GB. 360e last year from a trusted retailer with a 1y warranty. I expect I'll be happy with it for some years, as my previous T450s is still running as a homelab.

      I also just acquired a 2014 MacBook Air for two packs of coffee to use as a distraction free tty writerdeck and toy around with, as it's my first piece of Apple hardware.

  • HP EliteBook 840 G10

    13th Gen Intel, 14” screen, 16GB/512GB at about $350.

    Lenovo and Dell both make similar business laptop models at around the same age and price point.

    Businesses sell off perfectly functional laptops in bulk because they are on regular refresh cycles for employees, not because there’s anything wrong with them.

    On the Mac side, MacBook Air M1.