I was looking for a cheap laptop for about a month until I came across the BMAX brand. As it turned out, this is a company that specializes in budget laptops and PCs, so I was very interested in what they had to offer. After reviewing their choices and comparing devices to other models, I settled on the BMAX X15, which offered an i7 Intel Celeron processor, 8GB of DDR4 RAM, and a 128GB SSD. I am happy to report that I received my device within a few days of placing the order. When it arrived I unpacked it and was impressed with the care and attention that went into the packaging. It is packed in a kind of book box, which in turn is packed in a briefcase, which is in a larger box and is padded with air cushions. After taking the X15 out of the boxes, I found it in a protective case and covered with several layers of protective plastic. The package includes the X15 model itself, warranty information and instructions, and a power cord with three different types of adapters. Usage dependent on the region where the person lives. I chose the AC adapter, plugged it into the AC adapter, and plugged it into an outlet. After I activated X15, it took 10-15 minutes to set up before it prompted us to generate our credentials. After that we were ready to go. The Intel Celeron processor handles day-to-day tasks like word processing and web searches fairly well, and it did pretty much everything I wanted it to do very quickly thanks to the 8GB of DDR4 RAM. Well that's all good but I'm a gamer at heart and wanted to see if BMAX could play too. There is no additional GPU, so the graphics resolution comes from the CPU itself. I installed Steam and downloaded seven or eight lower level games which I think would provide a good test of his gaming skills and his performance in this area was so-so (Age of Empires, Andromeda, Chess Extra, Fortnite, Object N, Wizards and Zardy's Labyrinth). This device won't run any of your new AAA games at max graphics settings, but it can run emulators and lower-end games without too much fuss. While the 1920x1080 screen displayed game colors without major issues, it did show some issues with one of our newer games, Age of Empires (dropped resolution, slow response) and it also struggled when I tried to capture screens in a few games, but otherwise it worked great with emulators and games like Chess Extra and Andromeda: Rebirth of Humanity. The 128GB SSD leaves a lot to be desired in terms of space, but I doubt it will be students or people planning to use it as a "study/work first" laptop. Battery life is good, averaging around two to three hours, and about half of that when gaming. Although it runs games I don't intend to use it for that. It will most likely be a portable device that I'll use for my work duties and so an SSD should be fine with that consideration. Applications, the BMAX X15 could be the perfect candidate for you. Add in the ability to run programs like Photoshop and Vegas and you have a model that will definitely handle the workload. As long as you're not aiming for top-notch gaming, the X15 will be able to handle whatever you ask of it without going broke.
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