💼 Work Smart, Play Hard with Avita Magus II!
The Avita Magus II is a versatile 10.1" HD tablet featuring a detachable keyboard, powered by an Intel Celeron N4000 processor, 4GB RAM, and 64GB storage. With a vibrant display and stylish design, it’s perfect for professionals on the go.
Standing screen display size | 10 Inches |
Screen Resolution | 1280 x 800 |
Max Screen Resolution | 1280 x 800 |
Processor | 1.1 GHz celeron |
RAM | 4 GB |
Hard Drive | 64 GB |
Graphics Coprocessor | Integrated Graphics |
Chipset Brand | Intel |
Card Description | Integrated |
Average Battery Life (in hours) | 6 Hours |
Brand | Avita |
Series | Touch |
Item model number | WT9M10 C44-BL |
Hardware Platform | Windows |
Operating System | Windows 10 |
Item Weight | 3.67 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 7 x 7 x 1 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 7 x 7 x 1 inches |
Color | Blue |
Processor Brand | Intel |
Flash Memory Size | 64 GB |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
G**T
Very Acceptable PC Performance In a Compact Package At A Low Cost.
The Avita Magus 10 inch 2-in-1 tablet PC is an excellent value. I've only used it for a day but have the following observations:- The overall fit and finish are very good. No imperfections of any sort that I can see.- The display is bright and clear with good viewing angles. The touch feature works well where ever I have used it. Not sure of the surface material. At this price point I doubt it is any sort or gorilla glass.- The tablet portion is about 1.5 pounds and is .5 inch thick at the bottom and tapering to .4 inches near the top.- The folio and keyboard portion is about 1 pound and adds about .5 inch to the overall thickness. When fully closed in the folio configuration the whole unit is 1 x 10 x 7 inches and 2.5 pounds.- As a reference point .. the new 10 inch iPad is 1/3 thinner, 1/3 lighter and twice as expensive.- The keyboard contains the normal keys that one would expect. As a ten inch tablet, the keys are fairly close together and is ok for routine usage. A bit small for heavy duty usage. The key action is ok in that there is enough key displacement that you know when the key registers. There is no power button, USB ports or LED indicators of any sort on the keyboard.- When just using the tablet without the keyboard .. an on screen keyboard pops up and is very usable for text or numeric entry.- The tablet has stereo speakers at the bottom with good volume. The tablet does not have any volume buttons. So loudness control must be via the normal on screen speaker icon or through the keyboards speaker volume keys.- The part that I am not to keen on is that this is a folio type of unit. This means that the bottom of the keyboard is covered with a thick plastic material that wraps around the back and the back is what the actual tablet rests on. There is a magnetic connector attached to this material at the back of the keyboard .. The tablet easily plugs and unplugs there. The connector for the tablet is only attached to this material and not to the keyboard. When in the laptop mode, a flap of this folio material is hinged to form a stand to support the tablet in a laptop manner and works well. But this arrangement will not allow you to pick up the pair like a laptop .. The folio material does not provide enough support. So using the pair is best used on a firm surface .. Not a lap! And moving it is best done by closing the tablet over the keyboard in the folio mode. Or by unplugging the tablet portion and then relocating the two parts.- The dual band WIFI works well. I've not tried BlueTooth- The combination of the Celeron N4000 CPU, with 4 GB ram and 64 GB eMMC storage (not ssd) provides a very fine processing power for Windows 10 for any use except the more demanding computer uses like heavy duty video or photo editing, etc. This has worked very well for me.- The tablet gets just warm on the left side with routine use. For more CPU intensive uses it gets warmer, but not hot. Battery life seems to be in the 4 to 6 hour range for routine usage. Shorter for more intensive usage like long video sessions.- The provided 12 volt charger cable is long enough to use the tablet while charging if the 120 VAC power outlet is close by. Note the tablet does not have a USB-C port and thus no power or charging via a USB-C port.- The provided Windows 10 S mode is easily changed to the normal non-S mode .. just Google to find out how.- So .. all-in-all ... this Avita Magus is an excellent buy in a 2-in-1 small tablet form.8/23/21 Update .. Additional comments1. The area where the screen joins the bezel is not smooth. Just a tiny space that may tend to accumulate a little dust and dirt. Not a big deal .. a brush or small vacuum tool will remove this.2. I have added a Lenovo Chromebook Duet to my PC collection. It is lighter and ok but the browser will lock up the whole system for maybe 6 to 8 minutes maybe once a day. All in all, I prefer this Avita PC over the Duet. For me Windows 10 is much preferred over the Chromebook 'Chrome' OS.3. The Avita is on 24x7 and used sporadically. So far no issues at all.1/16/22 This PC is working nicely after a year. I upgraded it to Windows 11 without any issues. It took maybe 2 hours to complete that move to Windows 11.
S**K
Excellent inexpensive Win10 tablet
I bought the Avita Magus II hoping it would work as a replacement for an aging laptop I use for BMW automotive software which connects to OBDII via USB, and I think it was the perfect choice and it also will have other uses around the house. It comes with Win10 Home running in S-mode (a lightweight variant), but in order to install the automotive software and other utilities I disabled S-mode since it only allows apps from the Microsoft Store to be used. That's an easy switch but is effectively one-way for most users, however the original install image can be restored too. So here's a review from someone who designs medical devices and wearable computers:Pros:- Good 10" IPS display @ 1280x800. About 80 degree off-axis useful viewing angles from all sides.- Quad core Celeron, fast enough for most users. Much faster than the old laptop I was using for car repair needs.- Really good battery life (more than 10 hours running some BMW software while powering a USB OBDII dongle), with the screen always on but at a low brightness setting.- It has all the essential interface connectors I need - USB3 and micro SD. It also has mini HDMI and a 3.5mm headphone jack.- WiFi speeds are great.- The quirky magnetic folio is an elegant solution albeit somewhat flimsy. Just remember that it's magnetic!Cons:- There's some warpage of the screen mask at the periphery of the tablet, but it's well outside the screen area and isn't a problem *unless* you have touchscreen registration issues which a screen calibration won't fix.- I haven't figured out how to reduce the touchpad sensitivity on the keyboard folio, and I'm not sure it can be changed.- The folio hinge looks like a potential early failure point, but we'll see. It's a laminate protecting a flex circuit connection to the keyboard/touchpad, which likely is just 4-conductor USB2. So no big deal if it fails....but it is flimsy and makes it a bit awkward to use the keyboard with the tablet propped in your lap or other uneven surface.- The cost savings appear to be in the mechanical durability of the screen, tablet housing, and the folio hinge. The construction is far less durable than more expensive tablets or even most smart phones. I'd advise handling the tablet from the periphery and to avoid picking it up by one hand and squeezing the screen.- This would be a great tablet for grade school purposes but most kids would break it in no time due to the flimsy construction.Workarounds:- The SSD is only 64GB so that's *just* enough for the Win10 install and Windows version updates but not much else. The automotive software I'm using has a 50+ GB install footprint but HAS to be installed to the C drive. So I made NTFS junctions from C to directories on the SD card (D drive). It worked perfectly with a 128GB micro SD card (the largest the Avita supports).
E**E
A good alternative to an Android tablet
I got this because it was cheaper than buying an Android 10 inch and a keyboard.The tablet uses an Intel Celeron N4000 processor, 2 cores,1.10 GHz with2.60 GHz burst frequency, 4mb of cache and Intel® UHD Graphics 600. it has one USB 2.0 slot, 1 mini hdmi slot, a headphone port and a micro sd slot (128gb max). 64 gb hard drive space, wifi and bluetooth. It uses a non USB 12 volt power supply, It also has a decent quality cameraThe keyboard is high quality with a large trackpad. The dock is standard and the case nice but too flimsy to sit on your lap, but its a tablet too so. The speakers aren't very loud but again it's a tablet so not surprised. Battery life is good, I've spent a few hours watching youtube videos and installing configuring things using only 40% of the battery.It comes in Windows S mode meaning you can only use Microsoft store apps but you can change it to full Windows for free by going to settings > Update and Security > Activation. It has Office preinstalled which is a plus. I installed Adobe Photoshop and it runs well. You could install something simple like Adobe Rush for video editing but the tablet is below the app requirements so don't expect zippy results. I'm sure there are other video editing apps that can get the job done.My only complaint is I wish it used a standard USB port for charging, none of my adaptors fit it. Other than that, I'm happy with it
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