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In Latin America, especially Argentina (and in any way the biggest Mercosur countries), devices face shameful prices. They use to cost, comparing the cost of life between countries, ten times more than in European countries. For ex., an Italian colleague of mine purchased an Asus Duo for a few thousand euros, while in my country it costs 40K reais (my small business needs 10 years to accumulate such an amount, while an Asus Duo in Italy costs like 3 minimum salaries). So I use to stick with my older devices, even having purchased 2 cheap netbooks in the last years (to not explore them, so letting them last as time passes by, I put them to rest for fairly long periods) cause studying and working reasons. My older devices count respectively 13, 12, 11 and 10 years (one of them, purchased in the beginning of 2012, doesn't serve for almost anything anymore, out of a short browsing). The older one is an Asus Seashell line and needed a repairing. The other two are Toshibas and I still can work and study with them (until they don't freeze, so I need to use the newer ones in such a case). One of the Toshibas became a Linuxian and both of them lost the functionality of any hardware, needing an external keyboard. I think the use of my old devices is sparing lifespan of my newer netbooks, letting them to last longer.