Advertised: Pentium Silver N5000 CPU with Intel UHD 605 graphics and 4GB LPDDR4-2400 RAM with 14 inch 1366 x 768 display Received: Celeron N4030 CPU with Intel UHD 600 graphics and 4GB LPDDR4 -1866 RAM on a 14-inch, 1920 x 1080 display All other advertised components remain the same. Essentially a dual-core variant of the quad-core Pentium it was intended to ship with, the Celeron halves its potential. In practice, most things you use a Chromebook for won't make good use of a multi-core processor, so the difference in performance isn't all that noticeable. This doesn't justify the performance hit from the advertised specs, but it does make the cost difference more subjective as we're trading that performance for a better screen. I might end up preferring the model that was sent to me. However, be aware that the specs are not checked very carefully and you may end up with something very different than what you ordered, hence the low score.
HP Pavilion Gaming Desktop Computer, Ryzen 5 3500 Processor, NVIDIA GTX 1650 4 GB, 8 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, Windows 10 Home (TG01-0030, Black)
11 Review
27" Apple iMac All-in-One (Retina 5K, Mid 2020) MXWT2RU/A, 5120x2880, Intel Core i5 3.1GHz, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, AMD Radeon Pro 5300, MacOS, Silver
13 Review
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 4750G AM4, 8 x 3600 MHz, OEM
11 Review
14" ASUS Vivobook Pro 14X OLED N7400PC-KM059 2880x1800, Intel Core i5 11300H 3.1GHz, RAM 16GB, DDR4, SSD 512GB, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050, no OS, 90NB0U44-M01450, silver
26 Review