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The Linx tablets |
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#1 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,921
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The Linx tablets
Just out of curiosity I was looking at tablets on eBay running Windows and came across the Linx at a very good price. (I don't actually want one as I have both an iPad Air and an iPad Mini.) Usual cheap shit, I thought, as they are going for between £49 and £70, but looked up reviews, and bugger me they are thought not to be at all bad. I've never heard of them before, but has anyone here any eperience of them. Here's a link to one review.
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#2 |
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Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Linx tablets are very good. However, the Linx 7 is a rather small screen, and I would strongly recommend paying a little more for the Linx 8 or even Linx 10.
They are full fledged pcs and I am using mine right now . I hardly ever use my android tablet at 4x cost. Obviously will not be a good for power game but for netflix, youtube etc are perfect. I have upgraded to Windows 10, but they are now on sale with windows 10 installed. There is a great support forum if you get problems. http://www.linxtablet.co.uk/index.php |
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#3 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 272
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Hi i have a linx 8 inch windows tablet,
its a good little tablet in all fairness, i think the only issues as with so many tablets is battery - you would get about 3-4 hours continued use before recharge which is on par with laptops more or less included office 365 for 1 year + 1 extra device so that worth about 59 quid you can use the device while charging but it can get quite hot, but not caused issue it does take quite a while to charge up overall its fairly good for the money even with the 1g of ram it ok for normal standard video playback, with little issue its not a game machine but you can do most basic tasks plus a little more it has been upgraded to windows 10 - although there was some minor issues they where soon fixed by windows some people prefer the 10 inch model, but i seen one and it does not have the same build quality - stay clear of the 7 inch as with windows 10 there is no desktop support now, you could do at lot worse for the money - argos do a similar device, least u have a store to go back to for issues cheers |
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#4 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: London
Posts: 10,446
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Just commented about my Linx 10 in another thread. A £150 ten inch tablet that runs full Windows 8.1. I love it and use it at work and at home. It runs any Windows programs, so I've installed Chrome as browser, Word, Excel, a specialist writing program and so on. Of course it isn't a power PC so you're not going to be doing 4k video editing but for everyday use it's great. If you choose to use a microsoft account you can synch your settings and documents with your home PC. I was surprised when I changed the wallpaper on my PC and the next time I used the Linx it had the new wallpaper.
I did the free upgrade to Windows 10 but then went back to 8.1. I love 10 on my PC but on a tablet I think 8.1 works far better, with all the swipe gestures. It's great for playing video or watching iPlayer. It has micro SD card slot for more memory and a micro USB, which is a slight drawback as a full size USB would be more convenient, but they supply an adaptor. The speakers aren't the most powerful and they're close together on the back so they're not fantastic but they do the job. Quality wise it actually feels very solid and well made, it has a slight rubbery matt finish compared to the Surface which is shiny metal. You can get keyboard/case accessory on ebay for £10 but I haven't tried one so can't really comment. Linx do their own keyboard for about £20. One feature I love is that you have the full Windows Control Panel, Windows Explorer, file system etc in the desktop. With my Android phone, which I love, I always found it a pain to manage files, move things, find things and so on. With this it's Windows, so it's exactly the same as your home PC. |
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#5 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Quote:
Just commented about my Linx 10 in another thread. A £150 ten inch tablet that runs full Windows 8.1. I love it and use it at work and at home. It runs any Windows programs, so I've installed Chrome as browser, Word, Excel, a specialist writing program and so on. Of course it isn't a power PC so you're not going to be doing 4k video editing but for everyday use it's great. If you choose to use a microsoft account you can synch your settings and documents with your home PC. I was surprised when I changed the wallpaper on my PC and the next time I used the Linx it had the new wallpaper.
I did the free upgrade to Windows 10 but then went back to 8.1. I love 10 on my PC but on a tablet I think 8.1 works far better, with all the swipe gestures. It's great for playing video or watching iPlayer. It has micro SD card slot for more memory and a micro USB, which is a slight drawback as a full size USB would be more convenient, but they supply an adaptor. The speakers aren't the most powerful and they're close together on the back so they're not fantastic but they do the job. Quality wise it actually feels very solid and well made, it has a slight rubbery matt finish compared to the Surface which is shiny metal. You can get keyboard/case accessory on ebay for £10 but I haven't tried one so can't really comment. Linx do their own keyboard for about £20. One feature I love is that you have the full Windows Control Panel, Windows Explorer, file system etc in the desktop. With my Android phone, which I love, I always found it a pain to manage files, move things, find things and so on. With this it's Windows, so it's exactly the same as your home PC. A secondary advantage is that it uses the standard Windows 10 iso, so it is easy to reinstall (with the 8.1+Bing, yo need to ensure you have a recovery drive, as the OS is not standard and is not available to public - although you can get images from Linx forum) Also, the next official release of windows 10 is (according to the famous Windows 10 leaker WOZR who is rarely wrong) will allow installation of apps to an sd card which is a MAJOR improvement, as biggest limits on these small 32GB tablets is the amount of programs you can install. The Linx oficiallyonly supports a 32GB SD card, but many have put in 64/128 and even 356 GB cards with no issue. Obviously backing up card is recommended as SD cards are not the most reliable beasties in the world. Finally, the experience of all these tablets (imo) is much enhanced by installation of a great (free) program called touchmousepointer where you can use the full screen as a giant mouse touchpad (like normally found on a laptop). This enables precision control over fiddly menus - so much that I rarely use tablet mode, and stick to the more flexible desktop mode. Another cool thing you can do is installed Teamviewer (or use RDP or similar) and take full remote control of the tablet from a PC even from other side of the world. Great when configuring it. Imagine your other half having problems when you are away, and you just take over control and sort it. I do it all the time as my wife's technical abilities are limited (her opinion is that is what I am for). Actually, you can take remote control of android phones/tablets if rooted, and some non-rooted tables (Samsung especially), but the time lag is very noticeable eg. 2-3 seconds, whereas on windows tablets response is almost instantaneous. Another feature I love about the Linx (and any windows tablet in fact) is that I can set it up as as a wifi hoptspot, so when in a hotel, you can connect a chromecast device to it and stream video over hotel internet to hotel TV. Try doing that with any other tablet! The only thing you need to be careful is to check if the new Linx 8 (Linx810 with 10 preinstalled) will work in desktop mode and run desktop apps. Old ones upgraded can, but MS said new tablets with less than 9" screens would not have desktop mode. I do not know if this is the actual case now as I upgraded. You can still buy the original Linx 8 and upgrade at least at the moment? |
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#6 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 3,474
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I have the linx 8. Superb bit of kit. Bung it on a case with a keyboard and its pretty much a netbook. Runs windows 10 brilliantly
£70 using the "very" deal. Worth every penny ! I use it way more than my android tablets now. |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 3,474
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I have windows 10 able to run desktop mode by the way ..... It defaults to tablet mode but its a button click to swap back.
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#8 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Sussex
Posts: 2,340
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The Linx 10 is a great little tab, only let down by
poor resolution |
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#9 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Quote:
I have windows 10 able to run desktop mode by the way ..... It defaults to tablet mode but its a button click to swap back.
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#10 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: London
Posts: 10,446
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Quote:
The Linx 10 is a great little tab, only let down by
poor resolution |
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#11 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 25,199
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With higher resolution picture looks crispier, but it's at the expense of battery life. And you won't get it for the price these tablets cost.
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#12 |
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: West Yorks
Posts: 6,180
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Quote:
With higher resolution picture looks crispier, but it's at the expense of battery life. And you won't get it for the price these tablets cost.
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#13 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,921
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I bought a Linx 7
Well, I went ahead and bought a Linx 7 (just for the craic and they are cheap) and I must say for the price it is excellent. Not at all slow or anything like that. However, Windows 8 isn’t really that good for a 7in tablet, though not at all impossible to use, and I should think it makes more sense on a bigger screen. More troublesome is that sheer lack of apps - it is a problem for Microsoft. Apple and Google have pretty much got the market sown up, and MS find themselves in a horrible bind: few people will bother developing apps until the market is better, but with so few apps the market will really take some time to grow.
Overall, the Linx 7 isn’t half bad and for a price less than I spend on filling the car with petrol for my weekly commute from Cornwall to London. It is small enough to slip into a jacket or coat and I intend to use it on the move to watch TV in the pub, that sort of thing. |
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#14 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: London
Posts: 10,446
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Quote:
Well, I went ahead and bought a Linx 7 (just for the craic and they are cheap) and I must say for the price it is excellent. Not at all slow or anything like that. However, Windows 8 isn’t really that good for a 7in tablet, though not at all impossible to use, and I should think it makes more sense on a bigger screen. More troublesome is that sheer lack of apps - it is a problem for Microsoft. Apple and Google have pretty much got the market sown up, and MS find themselves in a horrible bind: few people will bother developing apps until the market is better, but with so few apps the market will really take some time to grow.
Overall, the Linx 7 isn’t half bad and for a price less than I spend on filling the car with petrol for my weekly commute from Cornwall to London. It is small enough to slip into a jacket or coat and I intend to use it on the move to watch TV in the pub, that sort of thing. But being Windows 8 I have installed full programs like Chrome, but it's not optimised for touch so using it on a ten inch tablet is a bit fiddle so I'd imagine a seven inch would be unusable. |
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#15 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 25,199
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The desktop part of W8.1 must be a nightmare on such a small screen, but you can use Teamviewer or remote desktop to manage it from another computer. The touch Metro part is quite good though. One realises how good after one upgrades to W10 where touch interface means just tapping, no gestures at all. As for browsers, I find Metro IE good, no fiddly bits.
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#16 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Quote:
The desktop part of W8.1 must be a nightmare on such a small screen, but you can use Teamviewer or remote desktop to manage it from another computer. The touch Metro part is quite good though. One realises how good after one upgrades to W10 where touch interface means just tapping, no gestures at all. As for browsers, I find Metro IE good, no fiddly bits.
I never use tablet mode - just desktop mode on a Linx8. With the trackpad, I can hold tablet and and navigate one handledly, using my thumb to control 'mouse'. Ergonomically, it is more restful than touch mode which basically requires two hand a lot of the time. You can toggle the trackpad on and off with a single 'click'. Also, you can attach a usb mouse anyway and get best of worlds. |
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#17 |
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,921
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As some here seem quite interested, I thought I might add a bit more, both good and bad.
First of all, I am still surprised at how responsive and zippy this Linx7 is, especially for a tablet which I only paid £57 for. That is really astounding. As for drawbacks, well, I shall install Touchmouspointer and see what's what, but I'm having m doubts about Windows 8 being a tablet OS. But what is beginning to irritate me is continutally being informed I have 'connection problems' when there is nothing wrong with the connections (fibre optic broadband). Still can't work out why. Still, for £57 this tablet really is a steal, though the lack of apps really would be a drawback for some. |
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#18 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 272
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there are some new linx tablets out 10 inch ver, with or without keyboard, the spec looks improved and the keyboard is a bluetooth magnetic type which makes it a mini laptop,
visit lookagain website they have them their 180 and 199 with keyboard |
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#19 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,921
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Quote:
As some here seem quite interested, I thought I might add a bit more, both good and bad.
First of all, I am still surprised at how responsive and zippy this Linx7 is, especially for a tablet which I only paid £57 for. That is really astounding. As for drawbacks, well, I shall install Touchmouspointer and see what's what, but I'm having m doubts about Windows 8 being a tablet OS. But what is beginning to irritate me is continutally being informed I have 'connection problems' when there is nothing wrong with the connections (fibre optic broadband). Still can't work out why. Still, for £57 this tablet really is a steal, though the lack of apps really would be a drawback for some. |
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#20 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Sevenoaks
Posts: 3,930
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I had a Linx 10 and finished up giving it to my brother. Although much of what is said here is true, if you use it intensively like I did, even when it was connected to the charger permanently, the battery would discharge completely in about 7 hours, and then would take at least 3 hours charging before it was usable again.
The sound output quality on the headphone socket wasnt all that good either, and it did have issues with Wi fi. But it was fast and I found picture quality excellent. If youre not going to use it for intensive long term processing, its great. |
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#21 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: the wild world web
Posts: 28,132
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They are decent cheap tablets for non gaming, the only negatives being the need for a decent AV, not helping the 1GB Ram models.
But when you consider the price paid, that becomes of lesser relevance. |
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#22 |
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Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Quote:
They are decent cheap tablets for non gaming, the only negatives being the need for a decent AV, not helping the 1GB Ram models.
But when you consider the price paid, that becomes of lesser relevance. I run Norton 360 and it hardly uses any resources at all. I have used AVG and Avira, and no problems whatsoever. |
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#23 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 1,711
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This maybe a silly question, but just wondering about the Linx1010, it says the OS is Windows 10 Pro, is that still a 32 bit OS?
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#24 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3,850
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Quote:
This maybe a silly question, but just wondering about the Linx1010, it says the OS is Windows 10 Pro, is that still a 32 bit OS?
Official specs say Home http://www.cclonline.com/content/pdf...D2og-3d-3d.pdf re. 32bit afaik, it will be 32bit as all Linx tablets use a 32bit loader even though chip is 64bit unless this has been changed. I have heard nothing on the Linx forums to sughest a change. |
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#25 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 25,199
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I think they keep using 32bit OS also because the 64bit OS would take even more space on disk, so if you have 32GB tablet with 1 or 2GB of RAM it will very likely be 32bit OS.
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