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o'Lofer - Cheap tablets from Poland

Lately, we can meet the names of new manufacturers in the tablet market almost every month. Much of these products come from Poland, as do the interestingly named o’Lofer tablets.

oLofer-JustTab-C1041-IPS-2

O'Lofer is still a new manufacturer, which is perhaps why its products are available at fairly depressed prices. The company is currently trying to enter the European market with three different tablets.

The smallest, the o'Lofer C744 has fairly modest capabilities. It has a 7-inch diagonal and can only manage 512 MB of RAM. At the same time, it is a welcome fact that in addition to the weak battery, it has a low-cost LED backlight and its processor is more powerful than similarly priced devices, as it is powered by a single-core but 1,2 GHz ARM Cortex 9 central unit.

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The middle machine in the line is the o'Lofer C7041HD. It also got a 7-inch display, but we already have a Mali-400 MP quad-core 3D accelerator. The RAM is 1 GB and the storage is 8 GB. These capabilities already rank the device in the top third of the lower category, but fortunately only in terms of capabilities, price is still better than most of the competition.

C7041 HD_3D

The strongest member of the range is the o'Lofer C1041IPS. As the name suggests, it has already got an IPS display, plus the diagonal is already 10,1 inches. The 16:10 aspect ratio display has a resolution of 1280 × 800 pixels. This is the category that everyone would love to take home already. It features a dual-core 1,5 GHz processor, 3D acceleration, 1 GB of RAM and 8 GB of storage.

oLofer-JustTab-C1041-IPS

As you may have read at the beginning of the news, these devices can be purchased at a fairly depressed price at home. The lowest price costs just over 15, the middle 23, while the most powerful machine costs a little over 43 thousand forints.

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.