The first one is an Amazon Prime day deal and is apparently 50% off at £249.99, (and would require me to buy Prime), the second one is £249.99 and that’s just its regular price. They seem to be an identical product to me, or is there something different?
The only difference i can see is that the one that was £499 is rated 4.5 stars
and the other is rated 3.4 !!
They have exactly the same spec and model number.
I’m sure there’s something illegal in the marketing but i don’t know what.
They look the same and it looks like a bit of an oopsie that you can see them both at the same time. What I feel sure the seller intended was that the one priced £249.99 would be on sale normally, then would be hidden away today, to be replaced by a different listing for the same item, which had previously been hidden and priced £499.99, but is now an amazing bargain reduction at £299.99 because something something Prime Day.
Clicking through to their store, there are a lot of ‘currently unavailable’ items. Yeah, pretty sure this is just dishonest marketing.
I actually needed a new laptop for work stuff and took a chance on the lightning deal for jumper 16 inch, FHD 1200p.
Unfortunately my impression right out of the gate is not great. The proprietary connector and charger are very flimsy. I’ve kind of gotten used to power connections being a USB-C style connection
It’s charging now so once I turn it on I’m hoping my opinion improves.
Amazon sells stuff itself and also has different suppliers that sell stuff with Amazon taking care of ordering and shipping. Possibly they are from two different companies. And I’ll second the idea perhaps one is refurbished. Normally they tell you that in the description, but… Of course, with Amazon “refurbished” could be anyhting from “it failed to turn on at all” to cosmetic issues or the customer changed their mind and sent it back. Theoretically(!) refurbished means they got it into proper running condition, fixed anything like broken case, etc.
Considering tight profit margins, if it wasn’ a quick and simple process to refurbish, they likely would have thrown it aaway instead. For £249.00 there’s not a lot of profit in an hour or two of diagnosis or any repairs that require serious disassembly…
Well, I’m moderately satisfied. The construction and feel is quite cheap as expected. The screen is rather nice looking. It’s plenty fast for the office suite stuff I need it for.
I was pleasantly surprised to find little or no bloatware. (Just the typical Microsoft variety).
Really, if the power connection was more robust, I’d be quite pleased.
Both of these offerings appear to be from the same seller on Amazon. I’m fairly sure this is just a clumsy attempt at making a product look like it has a huge price slash when it’s still the same price as it always was.