Sumerset disse:
Convinha pores a marca ou o site do portátil para se ter alguma referência...
Já agora os portáteis que o Lidl vende são apenas e só os da Targa, tal como os desktop. Por sua vez os Targa são Arima por isso já sabem o que vem para cá a preços acessíveis...
Não percebi bem... Isso ficou claro, a marca é Targa (o link tá lá) e são fabricados pela Arima. Quanto à qualidade... vejam:
Do manufacturers build their own notebooks?
«If you have just purchased a notebook from Dell, Compaq, Apple, or even eMachines, you might be surprised to know that they didn't actually build your notebook. Most manufacturers, both large and small most often do not build their own notebooks. What they do is purchase them from ODM's (Original Design Manufacturers) and customize the notebooks as their own. There are in fact only a handful of ODM's who supply most of the major manufacturers with their barebone notebooks. Compal Electronics, Arima, Quanta Computer, and Inventec are a few of these ODM's. Don't be surprised to find that your Dell notebook looks very similar to another brand notebook. It is common to find very similar, if not identical, notebooks but with different manufacturer nameplates.»
http://www.dslreports.com/faq/note?text=1
Isto pasava-se em 2003, agora o ponto da situação em 2005:
Taiwan notebook makers are expected to discontinue their aggressive pricing strategy in order to grab orders and see their gross margins improve in 2005, while simultaneously extending their domination of the world’s notebook contract manufacturing market from about 80% in 2004 to 85-90% this year, according to sources at the makers. Global notebook shipments are expected to total 57 million units this year, Taiwan makers estimated.
Lenovo’s recent acquisition of IBM’s PC business and HP’s merging of its printer and PC units may help the global PC industry migrate to a new era of steady growth, said the sources.
The integration of its printer and PC divisions indicates that HP may have given up its goal of boosting its market share in the global PC market at the expense of its gross margins, the sources noted.
Sources at HP’s contract partners in Taiwan pointed out that HP seemed to have softened its previous policy of consistently pushing down the product prices of its suppliers to help maintain its competitive edge.
In line with the latest developments in the world’s PC market, one major Taiwan contract maker has recently given up its low-pricing tactics in order to shore up its profit level, the sources stated.
http://www.digitimes.com/NewsShow/MailHome.asp?datePublish=2005/1/19&pages=A7&seq=32
Pois é... muitas vezes o que parece, não é.