| ▲ | nickjj 21 hours ago | |||||||
Sure but if people want a device for only casual browsing and are ok with 256 GB of storage and 8 GB of memory they can get a Chromebook for half the price of the Neo. Not all of them are bad, there's tons in the $300 range with good enough specs for casual usage. If you want to spend ~$600-700, the laptop I mentioned fits the bill for casual use, a development workstation, media editing and casual gaming at a directly comparable price to the Neo. I replied initially because you wrote nothing good exists in the $600-700 range. | ||||||||
| ▲ | kube-system 17 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Again, this device isn’t someone who’s buying based on specs. Nor is it for somebody who’s buying based on price. It’s for somebody who goes to the store, puts their hands on the keyboard, uses the touchpad, looks at the screen, and feels the chassis, and then makes their decision. This is how regular people purchase these commodity items. Most people have no clue what the difference between storage and memory is. They just want to know: will it run [software]? That’s all the specs they need to know. Maybe the battery life as well If you haven’t already go put your hands on one of these at the store. There’s no $600 laptop that feels like it. | ||||||||
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