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工作也一陣子了陪我四年的電腦居然掛了18.gif

以前都花爸媽的錢這一次終於可以自己買電腦
不管分期付款還是一次付清都好!還是想要找到CP值高的電腦


上網找CP值高的桌電或是筆記型電腦

現在還沒下決定是這台【ASUS福利品】VivoPC VM42 雙核 SSD Win10 超值迷你電腦(銀)好還是有別台推薦?

現在電腦實在太多了不知道要怎麼挑

當然有人推薦【ASUS福利品】VivoPC VM42 雙核 SSD Win10 超值迷你電腦(銀)



想了很多最後礙於金錢跟時間的考量我還是選擇買了【ASUS福利品】VivoPC VM42 雙核 SSD Win10 超值迷你電腦(銀)

價格合理送貨快速真的是一次好的購物體驗XD

而且因為是在網路上販售並沒有在實體店面所以 沒有那些人事費用價格就可以直接回饋價格給網民


而且很多 知名購物商城加入會員以後會不定時送電子折價券,所以其實買到的價格很多時候都比標價便宜很多

如果在購物商城買的話,除了有詳細的介紹以外,更有保障!!而且速度也很快~on09

↓↓↓限量折扣的優惠按鈕↓↓↓





本商品為拆封福利品,商品外觀會有些許瑕疵或刮傷,保固期限與全新品會有所不同,但產品功能皆為正常。

請務必確認此為您可接受的範圍,經考量後再行購買。


※詳細商品規格請參閱商品規格頁籤並依原廠公告為主。













平板電腦推薦2016






品牌名稱
Intel處理器
  • 其他
顯示卡
記憶體
  • 2G(DDR3)
作業系統
  • Win10
螢幕尺寸
螢幕功能
固態硬碟
  • 32G




















【ASUS福利品】VivoPC VM42 雙核 SSD Win10 超值迷你電腦(銀)

平板手機 討論,推薦,開箱,CP值,熱賣,團購,便宜,優惠,介紹,排行,精選,特價,周年慶,體驗,限時,品牌電腦推薦,電腦主機推薦,桌上型電腦推薦,筆記型電腦推薦,桌上型電腦價格,筆記型電腦價格,電腦推薦2017


↓↓↓現在馬上點擊購買↓↓↓



另外在推薦我平時會使用的平台可以比較價格找便宜~~

寶貝用品購物網推薦

Hotels.com

法貝兒嬰兒用品

專門賣寶寶天然的清潔用品~~

Agoda訂房網

MOTHER-K Taiwan

韓國首選婦幼產品,既時尚又實用

Agoda訂房網

MamiBuy媽咪拜

適合給新手爸媽的嬰兒購物網,一應俱全!

各大購物網快速連結

東森購物網 東森購物網 性質大多相同
建議每一家搜尋要購買的品項後
比對出能折價卷能扣最多的一家來消費
保養品、化妝品我比較常在momo購物網買,切記是"購物網"才有正品保障!!
森森購物網 森森購物網
udn買東西
MOMO購物網 MOMO購物網
MOMO購物網 瘋狂麥克 有時候新鮮貨我都在瘋狂麥克找,基本上想找的,瘋狂賣客都會賣~












China Headlines: China's economy steps into "new normal," no turning back

BEIJING, April 16 (Xinhua) -- While the growth rate for the first quarter of 2015 was the slowest since 2009, a closer look at the data shows that China is on track for a "new normal" in economic development, featuring slower but higher quality growth.

First quarter's growth declined to 7 percent from the previous quarter's 7.3 percent, the weakest performance since the global financial crisis, when growth fell to 6.1 percent in the first quarter of 2009.

Some doomsayers forget that much of the decline has been self-imposed as the country tries to steer the economy to more sustainable growth driven by domestic consumption, the service sector and, most importantly, innovation.

There used to be an "old normal" during the 35 years between 1978 and 2013, when annual growth of the Chinese economy averaged close to 10 percent. Between 2003 and 2007, it was over 11.5 percent.

However, the good old days cannot last forever. Growth decelerated to 7.7 percent in 2012 and 2013 and to 7.3 in 2014.

Even if the old normal could continue, it is not desirable, as three decades of almost uninterrupted double-digit growth came at the high price of air pollution and exploitation of natural resources.

The Chinese economy has embarked on a new track featuring a shift from high-speed growth to medium-high growth, a shift from quantity and speed to quality and efficiency, and a shift to an innovation-dri筆電2017 pttven growth model.

The first-quarter data is filled with signs that this transition is taking place and a new growth mode is coming into form.

Energy consumption per unit of GDP continued to fall, marking a drop of 5.6 percent in the first quarter after last year's 4.8-percent decline.

The service sector, which grew much faster than the industrial sector and the economy as a whole, accounted for 51.6 percent of GDP in Q1, up from 48.2 percent in 2014 and 46.9 percent in 2013.

Thanks to efforts to cut red tape, simplify administrative procedures and cultivate new growth engines, newly registered companies mushroomed and high-tech industries blossomed.

The number of newly registered companies surged 38.4 percent from January to March, while new energy automobiles and robotics saw industrial output gain more than 50 percent during the same period.

Fan Jianping, chief economist at the State Information Center, pointed to the changes in the industrial sector as evidence for the transformation in the Chinese economy.

While industrial output grew 6.4 percent year on year in the January-March period, down from 8.7-percent growth a year ago, the industrial structure continued to improve.

The industrial value added of the high-tech sector and equipment manufacturing jumped by 11.4 percent and 7.7 percent respectively in the first quarter, outpacing overall growth.

In 2014, the country's spending on research and development (R D) accounted for 2.1 percent of GDP, a record high. The proportion in some regions such as Shanghai reached up to 3.6 percent.

A focus on innovation has made some Chinese companies, such as telecommunications giant Huawei, climb up the value chain.

The Shenzhen-based company, which was on a shoestring budget at the time of its founding in 1987, reported a 32.7-percent increase in profits in 2014 to 27.9 billion yuan. Its revenue grew to 288 billion yuan, up 20.6 percent.

A close look at the company's track record reveals its main driver of growth is its attention to innovation and R D. In 2014, 40.8 billion yuan went toward R D, 29.4 percent more than in 2013 and 14 percent of the company's revenue.

In the past decade, Huawei has spent more than 190 billion yuan on R D. Of its 150,000 employees, more than 45 percent are in innovation, research and development positions.

There is still a lot more potential and room for China's manufacturing sector and companies to upgrade themselves, and this will be where the future of the Chinese economy lies, J.P. Morgan China chief economist Zhu Haibin told Xinhua in an interview.

While overcapacity is cut in energy-intensive sectors such as steel and cement, the output of which slumped 3.6 percent and 20.5 percent respectively, growth of emerging sectors will accelerate and play a key role in the long-term development of the economy, Zhu said.

In addition to innovation, the "Internet Plus" action plan unveiled by Premier Li Keqiang during the parliamentary sessions in March will serve as another new engine for future sustainable growth, Zhu added.

The plan aims to integrate mobile Internet, cloud computing, big data and the Internet of Things with modern manufacturing. It will also encourage the healthy development of e-commerce, industrial networks, and Internet banking and help Internet companies increase their international presence.

In addition to Internet giants such as Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent, many traditional companies are also looking to the Internet as a tool to transform themselves.

Despite a cooling consumer market, Haier, China's leading home appliance maker and one of its first firms to have established a global presence, recorded 19.6-percent net profit growth in 2014, thanks to its "determined shift" to an Internet-based factory-to-consumer business model.

In a few short years, Haier Group has been quietly building Internet-based smart factories, where factory-based production of customized products has replaced traditional large-scale manufacturing.

Li Pan, vice president of Haier's home appliance industry, told Xinhua that many of the company's products are designed to cater to special user needs.

The growth model and potential of companies such as Huawei and Haier will be the new normal of the Chinese economy, and there is no turning back to the old development path, Fan at the State Information Center said.

Related:

China Headlines: Slower growth, healthier economy

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Analysts say China's first quarter (Q1) economic data, released Wednesday, highlights areas of concern but should not fuel market pessimism.

The slowdown of the world's second-largest economy deepened in 2015 Q1, prompting calls for further policy easing. However, there were signs that the economy is gradually becoming better balanced. Full story

China Voice: China has reasons to remain optimistic

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Despite weakening economic data such as lower housing sales volume and shrinking profits for large industrial firms, China still has ample policy buffers for pro-growth moves and long-term restructuring.

After delving into the details of China's most recent release of economic data, investors will find reasons to remain optimistic about the country's future economy. Full story


BEIJING, April 16 (Xinhua) -- While the growth rate for the first quarter of 2015 was the slowest since 2009, a closer look at the data shows that China is on track for a "new normal" in economic development, featuring slower but higher quality growth.

First quarter's growth declined to 7 percent from the previous quarter's 7.3 percent, the weakest performance since the global financial crisis, when growth fell to 6.1 percent in the first quarter of 2009.

Some doomsayers forget that much of the decline has been self-imposed as the country tries to steer the economy to more sustainable growth driven by domestic consumption, the service sector and, most importantly, innovation.

There used to be an "old normal" during the 35 years between 1978 and 2013, when annual growth of the Chinese economy averaged close to 10 percent. Between 2003 and 2007, it was over 11.5 percent.

However, the good old days cannot last forever. Growth decelerated to 7.7 percent in 2012 and 2013 and to 7.3 in 2014.

Even if the old normal could continue, it is not desirable, as three decades of almost uninterrupted double-digit growth came at the high price of air pollution and exploitation of natural resources.

The Chinese economy has embarked on a new track featuring a shift from high-speed growth to medium-high growth, a shift from quantity and speed to quality and efficiency, and a shift to an innovation-driven growth model.

The first-quarter data is filled with signs that this transition is taking place and a new growth mode is coming into form.

Energy consumption per unit of GDP continued to fall, marking a drop of 5.6 percent in the first quarter after last year's 4.8-percent decline.

The service sector, which grew much faster than the industrial sector and the economy as a whole, accounted for 51.6 percent of GDP in Q1, up from 48.2 percent in 2014 and 46.9 percent in 2013.

Thanks to efforts to cut red tape, simplify administrative procedures and cultivate new growth engines, newly registered companies mushroomed and high-tech industries blossomed.

The number of newly registered companies surged 38.4 percent from January to March, while new energy automobiles and robotics saw industrial output gain more than 50 percent during the same period.

Fan Jianping, chief economist at the State Information Center, pointed to the changes in the industrial sector as evidence for the transformation in the Chinese economy.

While industrial output grew 6.4 percent year on year in the January-March period, down from 8.7-percent growth a year ago, the industrial structure continued to improve.

The industrial value added of the high-tech sector and equipment manufacturing jumped by 11.4 percent and 7.7 percent respectively in the first quarter, outpacing overall growth.

In 2014, the country's spending on research and development (R D) accounted for 2.1 percent of GDP, a record high. The proportion in some regions such as Shanghai reached up to 3.6 percent.

A focus on innovation has made some Chinese companies, such as telecommunications giant Huawei, climb up the value chain.

The Shenzhen-based company, which was on a shoestring budget at the time of its founding in 1987, reported a 32.7-percent increase in profits in 2014 to 27.9 billion yuan. Its revenue grew to 288 billion yuan, up 20.6 percent.

A close look at the company's track record reveals its main driver of growth is its attention to innovation and R D. In 2014, 40.8 billion yuan went toward R D, 29.4 percent more than in 2013 and 14 percent of the company's revenue.

In the past decade, Huawei has spent more than 190 billion yuan on R D. Of its 150,000 employees, more than 45 percent are in innovation, research and development positions.

There is still a lot more potential and room for China's manufacturing sector and companies to upgrade themselves, and this will be where the future of the Chinese economy lies, J.P. Morgan China chief economist Zhu Haibin told Xinhua in an interview.

While overcapacity is cut in energy-intensive sectors such as steel and cement, the output of which slumped 3.6 percent and 20.5 percent respectively, growth of emerging sectors will accelerate and play a key role in the long-term development of the economy, Zhu said.

In addition to innovation, the "Internet Plus" action plan unveiled by Premier Li Keqiang during the parliamentary sessions in March will serve as another new engine for future sustainable growth, Zhu added.

The plan aims to integrate mobile Internet, cloud computing, big data and the Internet of Things with modern manufacturing. It will also encourage the healthy development of e-commerce, industrial networks, and Internet banking and help Internet companies increase their international presence.

In addition to Internet giants such as Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent, many traditional companies are also looking to the Internet as a tool to transform themselves.

Despite a cooling consumer market, Haier, China's leading home appliance maker and one of its first firms to have established a global presence, recorded 19.6-percent net profit growth in 2014, thanks to its "determined shift" to an Internet-based factory-to-consumer business model.

In a few short years, Haier Group has been quietly building Internet-based smart factories, where factory-based production of customized products has replaced traditional large-scale manufacturing.

Li Pan, vice president of Haier's home appliance industry, told Xinhua that many of the company's products are designed to cater to special user needs.

The growth model and potential of companies such as Huawei and Haier will be the new normal of the Chinese economy, and there is no turning back to the old development path, Fan at the State Information Center said.

Related:

China Headlines: Slower growth, healthier economy

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Analysts say China's first quarter (Q1) economic data, released Wednesday, highlights areas of concern but should not fuel market pessimism.

The slowdown of the world's second-largest economy deepened in 2015 Q1, prompting calls for further policy easing. However, there were signs that the economy is gradually becoming better balanced. Full story

China Voice: China has reasons to remain optimistic

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Despite weakening economic data such as lower housing sales volume and shrinking profits for large industrial firms, China still has ample policy buffers for pro-growth moves and long-term restructuring.

After delving into the details of China's most recent release of economic data, investors will find reasons to remain optimistic about the country's future economy. Full story















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