Before someone asks – no, the processor is not on the official Windows 11 support list.
That doesn’t mean it can’t be made to work – someone even got W11 running of a Pentium 4 – but being unsupported, there’s no assurance of being functional.
(Note that I am not staff. I just volunteer to help out on the forums.)
This laptop is in the intersection of Cheap and Cheap (meaning it won’t be “Fast” OR “Good”).
Know what you’re getting yourself into? Buy away.
Looking for a laptop to “just work”? Look elsewhere.
Edit: I wasn’t going to mention the screen but a 768p screen on an 11in panel? That’s gonna suck.
But for people whose productivity needs are word oriented, and/or internet centric, this may be all they need. (Writers, students, etc.). Office 365 users might find this fairly attractive.
With only a 128GB SSD there won’t be much left to find this laptop any more useful.
Does this support windows… oh darn it Narfcake you got to me first
For better or worse, “Does it run Windows 11?” is the new “Does it work on a Mac?”.
Will Windows 11 run on my zero revolution devices?
Just because a phone is invisible, doesn’t mean that there’s no storage.
Still a better value than your Windows Phone.
So…Schrodinger’s phone?
I have one of those Windows phones. It wasn’t bad for its time. The problem was Microsoft curating of their store was beyond horrible. People who wanted to purchase software sometimes could not even get the store to load. On PC the store was far harder to use than Amazon or Apple equivalents. No excuse for a company that wanted to promote e-commerce.
It should have been the premier convergence device for people using MS Office at work. Strangely, Hawaii Five-O had better in show ads for Windows Mobile OS potential then any of Microsoft’s own ads.
- Should have had Online Office work best in their 1520 and 1320 phablets. Using a pocket keyboard to e.g., edit a presentation. Then launch with a hand gesture to a 60" screen in 1 sec as they did in the show.
- They could have emphasized that a Windows 8.1 block style start menu could be identical on phone with same functions and familiarity.
- They lacked a Steve Jobs marketing genius.
- Could have appealed to both Xbox users with cross platform games and BlackBerry corporate user market.
Instead, they didn’t know how to market and just let it die.
WP was rather late to the market in part due to the Ballmer not taking Apple seriously when the iPhone was released. By the time they had a device on the market, Android already had a sizable (and growing) market share. The app market was seriously deficient and it didn’t help that WP 7/7.5 was incompatible with WP 8/8.1, so developers had to recreate new apps again for the new version.
FWIW, a couple years ago, Amazon actually still gave a trade-in value for some Windows Phones.
They offered 47 cents for my Lumia 640.
With a screen that small, you’ll need a magnifying glass.
This is a Chromebook that accidentally had Windows installed on it.