Design

Since most of the internals are shared with Chuwi’s other offerings, such as the LapBook 14.1, and the Hi13 tablet, what sets the LapBook 12.3 apart from those is the design. The small numbering difference between the LapBook 14.1 and the 12.3 could easily fool someone into thinking they were very similar in design, but that’s not the case at all. Whereas the 14.1 model is your typical, budget laptop, with a plastic chassis, the LapBook 12.3 punches way above its weight with a full aluminum chassis. The plastic on the 14.1 was fine, and would be a very durable product, but aluminium really adds a big dash of premium to this budget device.

The 3:2 display is also very welcome here. Microsoft’s Surface lineup has proven that 3:2 works very well on the PC, whether in a portrait touch mode, or the more traditional landscape laptop mode, and that carries on here with the 12.3-inch 3:2 panel. Chuwi hasn’t been able to shrink the display bezels as much as it did in the LapBook 14.1, but on a smaller laptop, it would be tough to fit in the keyboard, trackpad, and all of the internal components if the display bezels were much smaller than they are. The bezels are the same color as the rest of the laptop though, although the bezel is plastic. This coloring makes the bezels all the more obvious to see, but for the price, it’s not a huge issue. The only real solution would be to add a larger display, and there’s a lot less options for 3:2 panels on the market.

The keyboard is exactly the same as the LapBook 14.1, and it offers decent travel and a good feel, but there’s no backlighting available. That’s also something that is to be expected at this price point, but it has to be pointed out, since it would be missed. Chuwi has also kept the somewhat strange keyboard layout, with the power button where Delete should be, and other keys shuffled around. The keyboard size and feel is fine, but the layout could use some work, and it would be best if Power wasn’t so easily pressed by mistake. It’s fairly frustrating to accidentally shut off your computer when you meant to make an edit.

The trackpad is all plastic, and is easily the biggest let-down in the Chuwi lineup. Good trackpads are hard to come by on Windows laptops, but the Chuwi model offers some of its own quirks as well. The two-finger scroll direction is the opposite of almost every other PC available, and there’s no drivers to let you swap it around if you wanted to. The trackpad feel is poor as well, thanks to the not smooth plastic surface and poor response. The money saved on the laptop would be well spent on a good mouse to use with it.


Chuwi continues its other quirks as well, with the single USB 3.0 port on the left, and single USB 2.0 port on the right, both upside down compared to every other laptop. That’s not the end of the world, but certainly odd enough to cause you confusion a few times during the USB superposition games everyone must play trying to connect devices. There’s also a microSD slot, and mini HDMI connector as well.

Overall, the design is quite impressive for a laptop hovering just over the $300 mark. The aluminum construction offers a very premium feel to the laptop, and the build quality and hinge feel solid despite the price. The small size will likely scare away some buyers, but the keyboard feels just as good as its larger cousin, the LapBook 14.1.

Introduction System Performance
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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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