Final Words

This is one of the shortest reviews we’ve ever done of a laptop, mostly because it is almost a complete replica of the larger Chuwi LapBook 14.1 we reviewed earlier this year. With the same internals, the performance is practically the same, and it would be very easy to write the smaller version off as a smaller version of the larger notebook. In fact, this isn’t actually the case at all.

Honestly, Chuwi needs to work on its branding more than almost anything. They’ve fallen into calling their devices names that are very similar to other products from other manufacturers. This is probably with the attempt to leverage some of that existing brand recognition, but it is to Chuwi’s detriment to do this. Their products can stand on their own, and be judged on their own. They aren’t all home runs; Chuwi sent the Hi-13 2-in-1 tablet a while back for us to check out, and although we’ve not had a chance to do a full review on it, the Hi-13 is a bit too heavy and awkward as a tablet, and the 2-in-1 nature means that it’s even heavier when used as a laptop, but the LapBook’s we’ve checked out are a different story. Both the LapBook 14.1 and LapBook 12.3 are great devices for the money.

Their naming is confusing though, since they offer several models in the LapBook range, and the only thing different is the screen size tacked on the end, but the LapBook 14.1 and 12.3 are very different devices. The plastic 14.1 is a fine machine for $270, with a good 1920x1080 IPS display that you normally don’t see in a laptop that price, but the LapBook 12.3 is a step ahead of the larger 14.1 in several categories. What makes the LapBook branding even more confusing is that they also offer a LapBook 15.6 which is an older Atom X5 platform, with a 1920x1080 TN display. That means there are three LapBook models, and all of them are significantly different than the others. The company needs to do a better job differentiating its products.

The LapBook 12.3 does jump ahead of the 14.1 in several areas. The display is one of the standout features. The 12.3-inch panel offers great pixel density, for very sharp images and text, and the 3:2 aspect ratio makes it great for productivity tasks. The bezels are larger than many other laptops, including the LapBook 14.1’s 7mm bezels, but is a fact of life when Chuwi can’t afford to get their own custom panels made. They wanted to go with the 3:2 panel, and it was a good choice, despite the bezels.

The all-aluminum build on the LapBook 12.3 puts it into a much higher category of laptop for look and feel. The plastic on the 14.1 was fine, and durable, but this design has that sleek, cool feel of aluminum that you just can’t replicate. It doesn’t change the way you use the device, but it really makes it feel like it’s something you paid a lot more for.

Overall, the Apollo Lake platform is speedy enough for light tasks, and the generous 6 GB of RAM is far more than you see on most budget devices. The 64 GB of eMMC is adequate, but you can pretty easily add more storage via microSD or M.2 if you need it. Even the WiFi is an Intel solution, meaning it’s going to be a stable connection, at least in our experience.

The LapBook 12.3 takes everything that made the 14.1 great, and steps it up a notch. But the amazing thing is that it does this, and doesn’t take the price and put this laptop into another category. The Chuwi LapBook 12.3 isn’t going to be able to compete with Ultrabooks on many fronts, but it does offer a lot of an Ultrabook’s appeal in its thin, light, and sleek design, but with a much, much lower price point. Not very long ago, buying a laptop for under $500 meant it was going to offer several severe compromises, but Chuwi has proven, again, that a low-cost computer doesn’t need to be that way. If you’re ok with the smaller display on the LapBook 12.3, you end up with an amazing laptop for the price.

Wireless, Audio, and Software
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  • serendip - Friday, September 8, 2017 - link

    The Cherry Trail Atom chips are surprisingly powerful. I run Linux server VMs on my tablet, along with Grass/QGIS and image stitching programs. I haven't run SPSS but R works fine, albeit slowly. This thing will never compete against an i7 Surface Pro but at $200, I'm not complaining.
  • thetuna - Friday, September 8, 2017 - link

    Something amusing not mentioned in this article:
    The power port uses a 3.5mm barrel plug.
    It is exactly the diameter of the 3.5mm headphone port, and indeed, the power plug fits nicely into the headphone port :)
    Unfortunately, it does not charge that way (but it also doesn't light on fire, so that's good).
  • max347 - Saturday, September 9, 2017 - link

    If only it charged through a usb c port. Now that my phone uses one, the next laptop I buy definitely will have the same port for convenience.
  • Narg - Friday, September 15, 2017 - link

    I bought a Chuwi once. Was riddled with viruses from the factory. No thanks.
  • lmcd - Sunday, September 17, 2017 - link

    Adorable, you almost started reading the review.
  • hybrid2d4x4 - Friday, September 15, 2017 - link

    Brett, can you comment on the functionality of the M.2 slot? With the eMMC being complete garbage (as it always is), what kind of throughput can we expect if we put in a SSD? Is this some gimped solution where it runs at much lower speeds than expected?

    Does the microSD run at (at least) USB2.0 speeds? I've got an Asus netbook, the T100, that advertises expanding storage via uSD, but fails to mention it maxes out at 13MB/s continuous read...
  • lmcd - Sunday, September 17, 2017 - link

    This. What's it keyed? NVM support or SATA only? Bootable?
  • Brett Howse - Friday, September 22, 2017 - link

    It's a SATA 2242 slot. Looks like it can be set as the boot drive as well.
  • lmcd - Sunday, September 17, 2017 - link

    If you could fix the movie playback graphs that'd be cool, the "tesseract" makes no sense. 2 min of video playback != over 30% of a viable test movie.
  • chrkv - Thursday, September 19, 2019 - link

    Does anyone know the dimensions of power adapter's connector? I've lost mine and looking for a substitute :(

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