Some setups look very attractive on paper.
But in practice, these are the ones we usually don’t take:
Prices that are low because key specs are quietly cut.
It looks cheaper upfront, but problems show up in daily use.
Packages built around one “highlight” product.
One strong item, the rest barely adequate — the system won’t age well.
Solutions designed to win a quote, not support real workflows.
They work on paper, not in a clinic.
A deal can look great and still be the wrong solution.
If it doesn’t hold up in real use, it’s not something we recommend.