OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One Desktop Computers, FHD Review

The OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One is a $231 Android panel with a CPU in the 3rd percentile. It's only for running a single kiosk app, not for actual computer work.

CPU Rockchip RK3288
RAM 4 GB
Storage 64 GB
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080
OS Android 12
Stylus No
Cellular No
OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One Desktop Computers, FHD tablet
14.3 التقييم العام

The 30-Second Version

This is a $231 Android tablet in a desktop stand, not a real computer. Its Rockchip CPU performance lands in the 3rd percentile, making it too slow for general use. Only consider it if you need a large, mountable touchscreen to run one simple kiosk app all day.

Overview

The OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One is a $231 Android tablet dressed up as a desktop computer. It's built around a Rockchip RK3399 processor with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage, specs that land it in the bottom 3rd percentile for CPU performance in our database. The main draw here is the 15.6-inch 1080p touchscreen on an adjustable, foldable stand, designed to bolt onto a wall or sit on a counter. It runs Android 12, not Windows, which is a critical detail. This isn't a general-purpose PC; it's a specialized industrial panel for running a single app, like a point-of-sale system or a kitchen display. For that very narrow use case, it might work. For anything else, the numbers tell a pretty clear story.

Performance

Let's be direct: performance is this device's weakest link. The Rockchip RK3399 CPU sits in the 3rd percentile. That means 97% of the devices we track are faster. The integrated GPU is even worse, ranking in the 6th percentile. You're not going to be gaming or editing videos on this. In practical terms, it can handle basic Android apps and a single kiosk-style application, but multitasking with 4GB of RAM (35th percentile) will be a struggle. The 64GB of eMMC storage is slow and ranks in the 31st percentile. The screen quality is also below average at the 18th percentile, though the 1080p resolution is fine for text and basic interfaces. Its best trait is arguably its physical design—the 180-degree folding bracket and VESA mount options are genuinely useful for installation.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 2.3
GPU 5.2
RAM 38.6
Screen 12.3
Battery 48.7
Feature 27
Storage 31.5
Connectivity 56.8
Social Proof 5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 180-degree folding stand and VESA mount make it incredibly easy to install in tight spaces like kiosks or under cabinets.
  • A wide array of ports including HDMI 2.0, USB 3.0, Gigabit LAN, and USB-C provides solid connectivity for a fixed installation.
  • The 15.6-inch 1080p touchscreen is large enough to be functional for a dedicated display purpose.
  • Running Android 12 means it can sideload a huge library of simple apps for business or signage use.
  • At $231, it's one of the cheapest ways to get a large-format touchscreen with a built-in computer, even if that computer is very weak.

Cons

  • CPU performance is in the 3rd percentile, making it unsuitable for any task beyond running a single, simple app. 2th
  • With only 4GB of RAM (35th percentile), don't expect to run multiple Android apps smoothly. 5th
  • The 64GB eMMC storage (31st percentile) is slow and fills up quickly, especially with Android system files. 5th
  • It's an Android tablet, not a Windows/Linux/Mac computer. This limits software compatibility drastically. 12th
  • The integrated GPU ranks in the 6th percentile, so even basic animations or video playback might stutter.

The Word on the Street

3.0/5 (9 reviews)
👍 Several buyers are happy with it for very specific commercial uses, like point-of-sale systems or kitchen display screens, where it runs a single app reliably.
👎 A common complaint is confusion and disappointment from users who expected a Windows PC and received an underpowered Android device instead.
🤔 Some owners appreciate the clean, cable-free setup and the adjustable stand for their desk, but note its limitations for anything beyond basic tasks.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Rockchip RK3288
Cores 4
GPU Integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 4 GB
RAM Generation LPDDR3
Storage 64 GB
Storage Type eMMC

Display

Size 15.6"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 5

Physical

Weight 3.7 kg / 8.1 lbs
OS Android 12

Value & Pricing

At $231, the OuuOee is cheap. But value is about what you get for the price, and here you're getting a very limited device. You're paying for the form factor—a big screen on a stand—more than the computing power inside. Compared to buying a used business desktop and a separate monitor, you get less flexibility and worse performance. However, if your need is literally 'a mounted Android screen that runs one app all day,' this is a budget way to achieve that. Just know you're trading all general-purpose computing capability for that low price.

‏٤٩٢ €

vs Competition

This isn't competing with an iPad Pro or a Surface Pro. Those are premium tablets with top-tier performance. A real comparison is against other industrial Android panels or repurposing old hardware. For similar money, you could buy a used Intel NUC mini PC (which would run full Windows) and a basic touchscreen monitor, giving you vastly more software options. If you must have an all-in-one Android panel, there are alternatives with newer chips like the Rockchip RK3566 that offer better performance for maybe $50 more. The OuuOee's main advantage is its specific physical design and current price point. Against any modern tablet, it loses on every performance and screen quality metric.

Spec OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One Desktop Computers, FHD Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU Rockchip RK3288 Apple M5 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 4 12 32 12 16 32
Storage (GB) 64 512 1000 256 256 2048
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080 11" 2420x1668 13" 2880x1920 12.4" 2800x1752 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS Android 12 iPadOS Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Can this run Windows or Linux?

No. It runs Android 12 on an ARM-based Rockchip processor. You cannot install Windows or standard desktop Linux distributions on it. It's fundamentally a large Android tablet.

Q: Is this good for video calls or office work?

Not really. The CPU is in the 3rd percentile for performance, and 4GB of RAM (35th percentile) will struggle with multiple Chrome tabs or Android office apps. For basic document viewing, it's okay, but a used laptop would be far better.

Q: Can I expand the storage?

Yes, via the MicroSD (TF) card slot. The internal 64GB eMMC storage is slow and ranks in the 31st percentile, so adding fast external storage is a good idea for media files or app data.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a computer for general use. Students, artists (it scored 4.5/100 for art_design), home office workers, or anyone who needs to multitask should look elsewhere. Its CPU and GPU percentiles (3rd and 6th) are a brick wall for productivity. If you envision using Microsoft Office, editing photos, browsing with many tabs, or doing anything creative, this device will frustrate you immediately. It's built for a single job, not a suite of them.

Verdict

We can only recommend the OuuOee 15.6" All-in-One for one specific scenario: as a dedicated, single-application kiosk or display in a commercial setting where it will be mounted and never asked to do more than launch one app. Its 3rd-percentile CPU and 6th-percentile GPU make it a poor choice for any general computing, office work, or media consumption. If your use case fits that narrow industrial niche, it's a functional, affordable panel. For literally anyone else—students, home users, small businesses needing versatility—this is an easy skip. You'd be better off with a used laptop.