Unleash Your Potential with CHUWI! 🚀
The CHUWI Herobook Pro 14.1 is a powerful laptop featuring an Intel Celeron N4020 processor, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB SSD storage, expandable to 512GB. With a stunning 1920x1080 IPS display and a long-lasting battery, this laptop is designed for professionals on the go, ensuring productivity and performance in a sleek, lightweight design.
Brand | CHUWI |
Product Dimensions | 20.32 x 2.03 x 33.02 cm; 1.39 kg |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
Item model number | Herobook Pro 2022 |
Manufacturer | CHUWI |
Series | Herobook Pro 2022 |
Color | Silver |
Form Factor | Netbook |
Standing screen display size | 14.1 Inches |
Screen Resolution | 1920 x 1080 pixels |
Resolution | 1920 x 1080 Pixels |
Processor Brand | Intel |
Processor Type | Celeron |
Processor Speed | 1.1, 2.8 GHz |
Processor Count | 4 |
RAM Size | 8 GB |
Memory Technology | DDR4 |
Computer Memory Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
Maximum Memory Supported | 8 GB |
Memory Clock Speed | 2.8 GHz |
Hard Drive Size | 128 GB |
Hard Disk Description | SSD(M.2) |
Hard Drive Interface | USB 3.0 |
Hard Disk Rotational Speed | 6000 RPM |
Audio Details | Headphones |
Graphics Coprocessor | Intel UHD Graphics 600 |
Graphics Chipset Brand | Intel |
Graphics Card Description | Integrated |
Graphics RAM Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
Graphics Card Ram Size | 128 GB |
Graphics Card Interface | Integrated |
Connectivity Type | Bluetooth |
Wireless Type | 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, 5 GHz Radio Frequency, Bluetooth |
Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
Number of HDMI Ports | 1 |
Voltage | 240 Volts |
Wattage | 5000 milliamp_hours |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Hardware Platform | PC |
Operating System | Windows 11 |
Average Battery Life (in hours) | 9 Hours |
Are Batteries Included | Yes |
Lithium Battery Energy Content | 38 Milliamp Hours (mAh) |
Lithium Battery Packaging | Batteries contained in equipment |
Lithium Battery Weight | 1 Milligrams |
Number Of Lithium Ion Cells | 1 |
Item Weight | 1.39 Kilograms |
N**S
very Good 👍 working
This is very good low price laptop. am already use .This laptop bettry time is too much good 👍 over all good 👍
D**D
Perfect Remote Desktop
For the 8GB RAM(star of the show), sleek design, mid range to high quality display-- you cannot find a better or cheaper REMOTE DESKTOP. That's right. Other laptops in this price range do not offer this amount of RAM, with this lightweight of a device, and looking this pretty. You might be able to find one that satisfies 1 or 2 of those criteria, but not one that satisfies all 3. The Chuwi Lapbook Pro does, and this is exactly why I bought it. The camera is awful the couple times I've used zoom meetings on it, but you plug it in to your charger, you load up Chrome Remote Desktop and connect it to your Ryzen 9 desktop tower with 16GB RAM, and you're in business.You are not going to be gaming in 4k on this. This is not what it was meant to do. I've seen other reviews(I believe the international ones) saying it caught fire or something crazy-- and they were probably trying to overclock it. Although, the battery cooling is poor and it does get noticeably hot-- never had an issue with that and I don't force it to do things it isn't capable of doing. Imagine that!Battery is ok, but then again, I'm constantly using Remote Desktop, with the screen brightness on max-- if I cranked the brightness down and tried to write a research paper, I'm sure I could get the 6-8hrs Chuwi claims. But keep your laptops plugged in regardless. You're a bad purchaser if you let your battery die repeatedly, and you'll have a dead battery sooner or later on any laptop.Now for what I actually use it for:I use Chrome Remote Desktop. The 8GB ram is a must for this and I have 400mbps internet. I tried using my iPad Pro, and Google could care less about supporting that device. I've tried using laptops with 4-6GB RAM with diminishing returns. Basically unusable. I had a nice 16GB RAM Thinkpad, but it was old and massive, so I decided to look for something small and light but with a massive screen with minimal beveling on the edges of the screen. That's impossible right? WRONG! Chuwi did it with this. You're getting the form factor of a 2016-18 MacBook Pro here, for a fraction of a MacBooks price.I use Unreal Engine 4 on my main desktop in my office. I use the Chuwi downstairs or in bed because it's as light as a feather, and Remote Desktop runs absolutely flawlessly on it. I literally design video games set on max graphics on the Lapbook Pro-- thanks to Remote Desktop. You can do incredible things with this device, if you've already ponied up the money elsewhere for things that let you do incredible things. You wanna design a 4k video game on your couch and keep an eye out while your kids play Vacation Simulator in front of you? Lapbook Pro helps you achieve this. You can do it with other uglier, heavy, and bulky laptops-- but it's all about comfort and quality of life.So Remote Desktop, and a beast desktop are a must if you want to do things it was not made for. It can become your best friend if you use it like that.For gaming, I've tried mostly remote related things. PS Now, or lighter games on Xbox Game Pass. The Lapbook Pro performs as you'd expect. It's a low priced, mid-tier laptop. It's better than a notebook, it is not an ultrabook.I've already finished my History degree, but man I wish I had this when I was typing up the 16pg research papers a week before they were due. Would've made life easier.Would definitely recommend this to students. You're not gonna be cool without a MacBook, but it's as sleek as a MacBook, displays as well as a MacBook. Just runs windows instead. Also doesn't have any branding on the outer shell, so throw an apple sticker on there and fake it till you make it.
R**G
Honestly, not bad. Recommended with a few caveats.
Update 9/16/20 - Now the bad news. After setting the system up and using it for three days, the excitement and patience has worn thin, now to off. I have three things installed on the system, and all have become unusable due to the wait for the apps to load or to load content. Those three things are Mircosoft Edge/Firefox (I put them down as one, as I only use one or the other), Adobe Acrobat, and Microsoft Office. Moving from page to page in Edge/Firefox can take 5-20 seconds. Acrobat is unusable. 90% of my productivity comes from Word, Excel and Outlook or Mail. This morning when I picked up the laptop a slight sense of dread sat in, this from knowing I was going to return to 1995 and slow internet efficiencies. When I launched my Office to get to Word it took 11 second for Word to load, it took another 22 seconds for my entire doc to launch. This really breaks my heart because the machine is thin, fast to start up, quiet (no fan) and generally very cool to operate. Since I am being hindered and not enhanced by the machine, it has to go back, and if I am charged a restocking fee at this point I will gladly pay it.I'm going to list off first impressions from opening the shipping box, to start up.1. Opened the Amazon box to find a very basic Chuwi plain box.2. You can only open the Chuwi box from one end, where the power cord and charging brick are in another box, protecting the laptop with another flap.3. Pull out the laptop and you will be surprised as to how thin and light it is. (covered in a simple plastic sleeve with a keyboard/screen protector)4. The charging brick is CHEAP. I don't expect it to last, which is really bad and I'll explain later.5. Plug it in, turn it on, and the standard Windows configuration awaits.6. IT DOES NOT ASK FOR A NETWORK DURING THE SETUP. You can do this easy after the configuration, but for someone new, it will add some difficulty after its all done.7. You set it up with a username and password.8. After you're all done, then you type Update in the dialogue box and start the 10 updates, largely because this ships with a pretty aged build of Windows 10.9. When that's all done run Update again to pick up the three that won't install until the basic upgrades are complete (select Restart).10. Then run Update again to get the most recent security update.11. If you're an Office user you'll also have to run the Mail and Calendar update (in my case it took three tries, but it finally downloaded).12. After all is said and done, you'll download the basics (Adobe Reader, your favorite Office Suite, your favorite VPN and browser, GIMP/Photo Scape - photo editor, unzipper, an anti-virus software, etc). I also suggest something like Revo Uninstaller. I do not have any affiliation to them, but the standard uninstall built into Windows never completely removes a program, which is nice if you ever decide to reinstall an uninstalled program, but if you want it gone they leave breadcrumbs all throughout the Registry.I suspect all of the Windows updates is because Chuwi purchased an older OEM license for Windows to keep the costs down. For me that's OK, because I customize the configuration and fiddle enough that it gives me the option to opt out of more items than if it was a current default Windows build.Now to the experience. I'm going to say it once for effect, anytime I state a negative remember, this laptop is $350 has a 90% display that is pretty darn good, 8 Gb of RAM and a 256Gb SSD. The RAM and SSD are slow, but it's $350.Opening the laptop - It is magnetic and cannot be opened with one hand. It takes a few tries to find out how to easily open it with two hands.The screen - Aside from a very small light leak in the bottom left corner that is noticeable during the CHUWI splash screen, it is pretty amazing. The bezels are about a 1/4" around the sides and top. The color accuracy is very good, but the refresh rate is slow. Slow refresh rates are a pain, but not at this price point. IT DOES NOT HAVE A TOUCH SCREEN - Nor does it advertise a touch screen.The Keyboard - It has a very positive response and nice travel. After only a day I have not noticed any reporting errors in dialogue boxes. The backlighting is a joke, largely because the cutouts for the keys are not uniform, and thick as the backlight does not really show through well. The keys themselves are very pronounced with the light exploding around them. This one item brings down my overall review, because the backlighted keyboard was a major selling point.Boot up - It is =/- 15 seconds to the date and time Windows log in screen.Programs - All except the Edge browser and Office apps seem to launch pretty quick. Once inside the app everything works pretty timely. But (remember my disclaimer), apps are not as quick as they are on a desktop, or a $700 plus laptop with faster RAM and SSD. The CPU is not fast, but faster RAM and SSD would help a lot. While RAM is soldered to the motherboard, the Gen 3 m.3 PCIE storage upgrade is easy with a port door on the bottom. I'm not going to upgrade the unit, and can't speak to the speed improvements in doing so.Browser experience with Edge - Slow between sites. Youtube runs fine once you're on the site, but going from video to video there is a delay. There are other browsers out there that might be faster, although I think the limitations are within the laptop, not external to the web, router speeds, or how much pipe you have to the word (the speed at which you connect - although going over phone lines will not help with speed issues).This laptop is a generic stop gap media consumption device for me while I wait for the Apple Silicone Macbook Pro's to come out. Nope, I'm not an Apple fanboy, but attempting to unify around my last year's iPhone 11 purchase has me focused on platform unification. I did the same thing when I had a Windows phone.A p.s. to the Chuwi laptop review. It is fully Linux compatible, and will dual boot.My recommendations and caveats - This is a very nice inexpensive laptop, best suited for lower demand Office apps, media consumption, and lower demand apps. Photo editing is about the highest reasonable use you'll get from it. If you want a gaming system you'll need a drastically different video solution, faster (by a lot) RAM, and SSD. If you're wanting to produce videos, this system will be the bane of your existence. If you're looking for a school system, a small office stop gap laptop for administration (call center, excel sheets, adobe docs) this will be a great solution.Right now Chromebooks are like Unicorns, Leprechauns, and the Boogieman (impossible to find). If you do find one, you won't find one with 8Gb of RAM, 256GB of SSD, or this screen resolution for under $500.I said I'd address the charging block and forgot. I've tried a couple other USB-C chargers and the only one that works (so far) is the one provided with the laptop.In short, this laptop is a fantastic buy.
W**M
For $199, a fine little laptop that unfortunately didn't work for me
I couldn't believe that for the price of a Chromebook I could get a Windows 11 computer with a handsome keyboard, and of course events proved my suspicions correct. I fired up this Chewy, as I began to think of it, and I was utterly foiled by the keyboard. I am a touch typist using WordStar editing commands that depend on the Control keys being within easy reach of my left and right little fingers, as they are on my Logitech ergonomic keyboard. And of course I need a mouse.Chewy of course has an irritating pad for controlling the mouse cursor, and it's so large that it's impossible to touch-type without regularly hitting the pad. That's doable; I have a notebook computer on which I have disabled the pad by taping a bit of light cardboard over it, and I use a wireless mouse instead. But those misplaced Control keys are impossible for me to reach. I can't write on Chewy, and writing is what I do! So with great regret I boxed it up and sent it back to Amazon.My son-in-law is a fine two-finger typist, using his left and right index fingers. He would have no trouble with Chewy. If you are like him, don't hesitate to buy this laptop. I just have to knock off one star because it didn't work for me.
A**R
An adequate system at a great price. Until it died
[Edit] Well, now I can comment on durability -- it's horrible. After 5 months it refuses to charge. Amazon was no help; they gave me a link to Chuwi which is dead. Finally found a working link; the chatbot indicated they would get back to me within 2 days.Follow-up: they did reply in two days, but said I would have to ship the unit to Hong Kong for repair, but they didn't know when that would be possible because the repair center was closed due to COVID. This despite the fact that their Amazon store page claims that quality issues would receive replacement or full refund. I contacted Amazon, and they stepped up by allowing me to return the computer for a refund (minus a restocking fee). I don't mind the restocking fee, since I did get six months' use, so a big "thank you" to Amazon and a big raspberry to Chuwi.I just got this a couple of days ago, so I can't comment on any durability issues. From what I've experienced so far:It's not a "great" system by any means, but then I didn't expect it to be. For my use case (sitting on the kitchen counter for email, web, and writing) it's more than adequate:- nice bright screen- comfortable keyboard (yes, they're chiclet keys, but they have good spacing and reasonable travel and effort.- The Celeron processor and 8GB of RAM are good enough to load programs and web pages fast. I've had a dozen Chrom tabs open with no noticeable slowdown or hiccup.- Plain-vanilla installation of Windows with minimal "bloatware".It does have some flaws:- a limited number of USB ports (one USB-C and one USB3-A). I knew that going in so I also ordered a powered USB-C hub which is a necessity as far as I'm concerned. To be fair, it's similar to a MacBook in that regard.- the USB-A port doesn't provide enough power to run an external HDD (it doesn't even run the interface on an SSD) but it works fine with a thumb drive. Yet another reason for getting an external hub.- The magnets that hold the screen when it's folded down are too strong and/or the base is too light so that it's impossible to open the screen one-handed (in fact I virtually have to pry it open).- The charger is *huge* for what it is (2A @ 12V) but for my purposes that's really more a matter of aesthetics than of functionality.Other comments:- the touchpad is big and seems to have good palm rejection. I'm a mouse user so I can't say much else about the touchpad beyond 'it seems to work OK".- Some on-line reviews have dinged the system for running hot (yeah, fanless passive coolling), but I haven't seen a problem. After a couple of hours of downloading files from another computer while surfing the web the bottom was noticeably warm, but I actually measured with an IR thermometer and it was 37 - 38 deg C (right around body temperature).Bottom line: I certainly don't regret getting this: it meets my needs just fine and a 3.5 benjamins (including the external hub), it's a great deal
T**A
DO NOT BUY FROM CHUWI!
I really hate to leave negative reviews, but this laptop and its manufacturer has earned it. I bought this laptop in August, 2020 and by November, 2020 the battery will hold no charge, not even 30 seconds. We have 6 children and 3 of the them are being homeschooled because of COVID19. We really couldn’t afford to buy another computer, but it was an absolute necessity, so we managed to scrape the money together and I found this laptop. I had never heard of this manufacturer, but the reviews were really good, especially for the price, so I decided to go for it since we really had no choice. We got a laptop instead of a desktop computer because the kids have live lessons and it is necessary to move around so the other kids aren’t disturbed or distracted and so I can keep an eye on the really little ones that aren’t in school. All that to say, I really need the computer to be portable and having to have the laptop plugged in makes that impossible.I contacted the manufacturer and, at first, they said to handle it through Amazon, but of course it is past the return window, so that went nowhere. I contacted the manufacturer again and they told me to send them pictures of the receipt, the model number and what the problem is. So I did that and they wanted me to send the laptop to them in China for repair and of course I would get to pay for shipping, but that would take forever and the kids need it now. So their currently and I guess final solution is for me to take it to a repair shop, find out what is wrong, they will ship me any parts needed, but of course I will need to pay for the repair and the cost to ship whatever part is needed. Having to paying anything seems ridiculous as the laptop is 3 months old!Please beware when buying anything from Chuwi!!! They do not stand behind their products! Do not waste your money!
TrustPilot
1 个月前
1 个月前