Today I am going to review a foldable bluetooth keyboard from a company called Hapurs® is an industry leader offering a range of wireless consumer electronics worldwide. they has developed over 100 products and 20 design patents, ranging from bluetooth wireless products, WiFi wireless, NFC wireless, 4G LTE wireless, and Smart Gadget. the keyboard costs about $18.99 USD and comes with Free shipping if bought on Amazon, so that’s all you will pay. So not bad for the price but how does it perform? That’s what this review intends to show you, so read on….
Info:
Product Name: Hapurs® Foldable Wireless Bluetooth 3.0 Keyboard
Provider: Hapurs®
The Review:
The packaging, is a brown box with a label which shows a the Bluetooth Keyboard along with specifications and features for retail purposes



The Bluetooth Keyboard does have an identifying mark on it which is Hapurs® logo This product indeed lives up to the unique design and concept that Hapurs envisioned in my opinion…

The Bluetooth Keyboard does come with an Instruction manual as well a mini USB cable to charge

On the front of the keyboard you will see that it looks just like any laptop keyboard but just like the other Hapurs keyboard I reviewed there is 3 setup options for IOS, Android and Windows this is also works on Macs as well at the very left you will see the off and on and connect button as well as the caps and bluetooth light


Pairing
This keyboard is very easy to pair just turn on your bluetooth setting on your device then turn on the keyboard which is the top left switch then press connect then just find the keyboard on your device
Conclusion:
So yes the keyboard is inexpensive, but is it even worth it? I would say yes if you want a bluetooth keyboard that’s just as good as a laptop keyboard and will be able to fold and stay folded for travel
So in all it’s not bad for a bluetooth keyboard I really liked that the magnet kept it close and how the keyboard keys were equally spaced as other bluetooth keyboards in the past I have tried were not
The final score averages out to be a 10 out of 10, but that takes into account everything,
