should i buy this acer laptop

Omar_94

Prominent
Aug 1, 2017
6
0
510
Acer Aspire A715-71G, Gaming Laptop, 15.6", Intel Core i7-7700HQ, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 TI (4 GB), VR Enabled, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD
its for only 933 dollars the cheapest plus highest specs in my country should i go for it
 
Solution
Quality is, in my mind, always a matter of concern with most products these days.

Especially "discounted" or "on sale" stuff. Just do some additional research on the seller to be sure there are no recent problems.

Good companies go bad: bought by another company, owners get greedy, company grows too fast and cannot manage itself efficiently.... Or just has some bad luck.

As for screen types, you should do some research on the trade-offs involved and your requirements for the laptop. E.g., Clear sharp screen but faster battery power consumption perhaps.

And be careful about the terminology. Some manufacturer's create their own terminology (aka "marketing speak") that often stretches or blurs the real specifications.

Fine...

Ralston18

Titan
Moderator
New, used, reconditioned?

Any warranties?

Do you know or trust the seller?

Does the laptop meet your requirements? Look at hardware specs for the games you play and make sure that the laptop meets or exceeds those specifications.

Go online and look for professional or verified purchaser reviews.

Look at the seller's website for concerns and/or complaints. However, a bad vendor/seller will just delete negative comments.

Search for other online sources reviewing the seller.

What
 

Omar_94

Prominent
Aug 1, 2017
6
0
510
well yes its sold at a trust worthy seller in my country and it comes with a 2 years warrenty from acer but it doesnt come from the seller itself the warrenty its perfect for me but i am worried but build material plus screen quality is an fhd-lcd a good screen type?
 

Ralston18

Titan
Moderator
Quality is, in my mind, always a matter of concern with most products these days.

Especially "discounted" or "on sale" stuff. Just do some additional research on the seller to be sure there are no recent problems.

Good companies go bad: bought by another company, owners get greedy, company grows too fast and cannot manage itself efficiently.... Or just has some bad luck.

As for screen types, you should do some research on the trade-offs involved and your requirements for the laptop. E.g., Clear sharp screen but faster battery power consumption perhaps.

And be careful about the terminology. Some manufacturer's create their own terminology (aka "marketing speak") that often stretches or blurs the real specifications.

Fine print may reveal that the feature is actually only available on a much more expensive model.

Know what resolution you require per the intended device and software. Be sure the product will meet your requirements.



 
Solution