Some important conflicting info in this listing… In the title and features tab it says 1TB SSD, but in the specs tab and the “style” option (there’s only one option) it says 512GB.
The title, features and specs tab all say 24GB of DDR4, but the “style” says 12GB.
For $250 it’s not a terrible deal either way, but it would be nice to have some certainty about what we’d be receiving.
Came here to say this. On top of that, it’s from an unknown manufacturer and the case design is one that is shared among a ton of no-name white box “manufacturers”, which means this is a generic model with SGIN’s branding slapped on it. Don’t expect a lick of support, warranty or otherwise, from SGIN. It does have Woot’s standard 90 day warranty and if it’s going to break it will likely be in the first couple of weeks.
Also it’s likely the RAM, storage, and even Wi-Fi card are soldered to the main board, that’s just how these kinds of laptops are made to cut corners everywhere they can. There is no upgrade path at all so if it really is a 12GB/512GB version, make sure that’s all you need before pulling the trigger.
it also makes no mention of operating system, if it comes with one loaded.
Ok, more info has been added. Take a look.
Thanks, that definitely puts it in a better light. At those specs it’s worth the cost for sure, especially with the 1080p screen. As for performance, it’s slightly faster than a 10th gen i3 laptop CPU, so not bad at all:
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/4777vs3573/Intel-Celeron-N5095A-vs-Intel-i3-10110U
You won’t be gaming on it but it’s a good cheap laptop for a kid or for a travel or second computer.
Much better, and yeah it does look like a pretty decent little beater laptop with these specs at this price. At least if you’re fairly PC-savvy. The probable lack of support could be a problem for the less tech-inclined.
The only other concern I might have is; 24GB of RAM… is that three 8GB modules then? Might not be getting the DDR part of that RAM if that’s the case.
Still a solid deal for a Bedflix machine though.
It’s a thing that started happening with DDR5 memory manufacturers to better leverage high core count CPUs. It’s probably 2x 12GB modules in this laptop.