Showing posts with label Acer Aspire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acer Aspire. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Review: Acer Aspire One 751

http://www.geekiegadgets.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/acer-aspire-one-751-netbook-0.jpg

Review Summary

The Acer Aspire One 751 excels in most areas making it an excellent all-round 11.6” mini-netbook. Great bright, high resolution display, excellent sound quality, large keyboard and 5.5-6.5 hours of battery life. The only major downside is the slow Atom Z520 processor.

If it had a more integrated battery that didn’t stick out and had an Atom Z530 processor (at least), it would easily become the best mini-notebook ever.

Pros

  • Plays 1080P HD video (certain files)
  • Good battery life at 5.5 - 6.5 hours.
  • Excellent sound quality
  • Large keyboard
  • Bright 1366 x 768 Display
  • Silent (Fanless - I’ve been told there’s a small fan in here)
  • Easily Upgradable

Cons

  • Gets very warm, maybe even hot.
  • Atom Z520 processor feels sluggish (outside of web browsing)
  • 6-Cell Battery juts out, is ugly.
  • Linux unfriendly

Introduction

The Acer Aspire One 751 is the first 11.6-inch netbook, or mini-notebook as I like to call anything larger than 10-inch, to hit the market. The main issue with the 751 is the relatively slow Atom Z520 processor used. Is it fast enough?

There’s now the ASUS Eee PC 1101HA Seashell and the Gateway LT3100 series netbook on the 11.6-inch market now, and I will test the 1101HA in a few weeks to see how that compares to the 751 but for now lets take a good look at the 751.

Technical Specs

Memory, OS and battery specs are going to vary. Some models have Windows Vista Home Basic, some have 3-cell batteries. You want to get the XP models, not Vista Home Basic.

  • 11.6” 1366 x 768 (16:9 Ratio) Glossy LED backlit Display (200 nits)
  • Atom Z520 (1.33GHz) Processor
  • Intel US15W Chipset + GMA 500 Graphics
  • 1GB RAM (2GB max)
  • 0.3MP Webcam
  • 160GB HDD (2.5” SATA)
  • Stereo Speakers, Dolby Headphone
  • 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, 10/100 Ethernet, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR
  • 6-Cell Battery (5200mAh, 54Wh)
  • 5-in-1 Card Reader, 3x USB 2.0, 1x VGA, Audio Jacks, Kensington Lock, RJ45
  • 284 x 198 x 25.4 mm Dimensions
  • 1.37 kg / 3.0 lbs Weight (6-Cell battery weighs 325g)
  • Windows XP Home SP3

As with all other Acer netbooks, there’s no recovery DVD, but there is a recovery partition on your HDD, so make a backup!

Layout

On the left: LAN port, power plug, 2x USB, audio and microphone head jacks. Labels on top of the chassis is a great touch. I don’t need to fumble around figuring out which audio jack is which.

On the right: VGA out, kensington lock, 1x USB and card reader.

On the front: A switch for Bluetooth and one for Wi-Fi.

On the back. You have your battery, which juts if you have a 6-cell battery. I find this rather ugly, but your opinion may differ. There’s a SIM card slot for 3G enabled models. Mine is a dummy since 3G models are not available in Japan. I don’t think they’re available in the US just yet either.

Opening up the device: Power button on the top right, with LED status indicators next to it.

One the screen bezel at the top is the webcam, with a microphone to the left of that.

Upgradability

Excellent. Access panels for everything. You have access panels for the hard drive, RAM and Wireless card. Unfortunately, I’m unable to open them due to warranty stickers covering all the screws, which is pretty disgusting and shocking. (Japan only).

I’m only able to open the Wireless card slot and it looks like there’s room for one more card:

Size & Weight

In terms of weight, if you’ve ever handled an ASUS Eee PC 1000H/HE/HA, then this is how the Acer Aspire One 751 pretty much weighs in terms of weight, though, with the 6-cell at least, it is heavier.

Now, I am really surprised by the size of the Acer Aspire One 751. It has the same footprint as the 10” ASUS Eee PC 1000HE (with a 3-cell battery) except the 751 is a tad wider. (there was a YouTube video comparing the two). The 751 is very thin, more so than the 1000HE. The 751 has no trouble fitting into my 10-inch non-stretchable Zeroshock sleeve with some room to spare.

Also, if you take a look at the screen bezel it’s extremely thin especially at the sides which tells you Acer have tried to keep the 751 as small as possible.

Power brick is small, but do you have a thick power cable which makes up most of the bulk.

Keyboard

The 751 has a roomier keyboard than you would find on any 10-inch netbook and it is much easier to type on too. Nice to see the keyboard take up the full space on the chassis, with no wasted space.

No shrunk down keys, apart from the cursor keys. The keys are flattish and somewhat similar in style to the keyboards found on the HP Mini and Dell Mini netbooks.

Though, tactile feedback wise it’s not the best keyboard and I feel like it’s lacking something. Maybe deeper key presses.. I’m not sure. I’ve seen some reviews mention flex in the keyboard, but have noticed very little and I absolutely hate keyboard flex, even just a little.

Overall, a very good improvement over any 10-inch netbook keyboard.

Display

The 751 display is glossy and very bright. Just seems like any other netbook with a glossy display, really. I don’t notice anything different, except the HIGHER RESOLUTION. 1366 x 768 pixels on this 11.6” display.

This makes the netbook a joy to use! I do get frustrated sometimes with the puny 1024x600 resolution you get on 10-inch netbooks. Also, the dot pitch is perfect and I don’t have to squint or lean in closely like you have to on 8.9-inch netbooks. It’s all very comfortable. This is one of the main reasons to get this mini-notebook.

I did wish the brightness could be lowered a little more at the lowest level for pitch dark rooms, but having a lamp on nearby helped alot in reducing eye strain.

Here are some pictures of Firefox webpages in normal and fullscreen mode (Hulu and Digg) on the display:

Have a look below at how far the lid goes back:

Touchpad & Buttons

I find the touchpad decently sized, after you max out the movement. Surface feels good and slick. Scrolling on the right edge is extremely responsive. The best I’ve used on a netbook. There are also pinch and swipe gestures which work okay, I wouldn’t say super responsive like with the scrolling though.
The button is a single rocker bar and is average for a netbook, a bit stiff and noisy but not ultra stiff like on the old Eee PC netbooks (1000H/901) that had the silver buttons. I haven’t had any problems with it.

Noise

Extremely quiet. Even in a quiet room. I can’t even recall ever hearing a fan, but checking right now, I see that it is fanless! No wonder. The cannot hear the buzz and clicking of the hard drive unless I put my ear against the keyboard. Excellent. The 751 joins of super quiet, fanless netbooks. Being fanless it does have me worried about heat though.

Heat

So, the 751 is fanless and I have noticed that the 751 gets extremely warm, dare I say, hot? The hottest netbook / mini-notebook I’ve layed my hands on. Even if the 751 is just left idling for a couple of hours the bottom gets very warm. Might be an issue if you are running the CPU at 100% for hours on end, though for most people I don’t see this as much of an issue, unless you place it on a bare lap where it will get uncomfortable. For me, I’d take fanless over a little heat anyday of the week.

Webcam and Microphone

I made a business Skype call with audio only and the whole ordeal went smoothly. Oh boy, the microphone is one of the best I’ve used on a netbook and was extremely sensitive without picking up noise. This meant I didn’t have to put my mouth right up to the speaker and shout like I have to do on some other netbooks. Some netbooks have really poor microphones that will barely pick up anyone’s voice.

The webcam is also excellent, producing a great image even in low-light situations, which is pretty much my whole apartment even during the brightest of days.

Audio

I am really amazed by the sound quality on the 751, both the speakers and through the headphones, which is powered by DOLBY HEADPHONE technology.

The dolby headphone technology is kind of like an equalizer applied to the sound, like you’re listening to the sound in a hall or something. Usually I hate these kind of equalizers and never use them but here it works extremely well.

Speaker sound is excellent. This has the best sound quality I’ve heard on a netbook / mini-notebook, or at the very least joins the top rank in terms of sound quality. Excellent clarity and bass. The sound comes out of speakers on the bottom left and right sides, so placing it on a surface can reduce the volume ever so slightly and really helps to introduce more bass.

Battery Life

I have the 6-cell 5200mAh, 54Wh battery.

First I did some benchmark testing:

5/10 brightness, Wifi OFF, Bluetooth OFF and Sound 50%
6:22 - Batter Eater Classic
6:19 - Battery Eater Classic (overclocked)
5:50 - Looped 480P movies

Then, actual real life usage:

5/10 Brightness, Wifi ON, Sound 50%, Bluetooth OFF
6:03 - Web browsing mixed in with YouTube viewing. (Windows XP)

Overall, I think on most occasions you will get 5.5 - 6.5 hours out of the 6-cell battery, on a single charge, which is very good, though many hours behind netbooks with the best battery life. None of them are 11-inchers though.

Performance

Now, this is the big one. How does the Acer Aspire One 751 perform with the measly Atom Z520 processor? Note, I only had 1GB of RAM through the whole review. Windows 7 may become faster with 2GB of RAM. I don’t know.

For general use, performance is acceptable if slow. That is with Windows XP though. I find performance on Windows 7 to be a tad slower, but that is due to the graphical effects of the GUI, once you turn those off, it’s much more responsive. I keep Aero off, it’s just too slow even with the latest GMA500 graphics driver that was released this month (June). The latest driver in use, in Windows 7, is glitchy but usable. (Window redraw issues)

When opening up several programs at the same time or just in general trying to work with several programs at the same time, the Acer Aspire One 751 slows down to a crawl. You can really feel the slowless of the Atom Z520 processor on these occasions.

Windows XP performs the best in terms of performance.

Overall, I can get by with the Acer Aspire One 751’s performance, but only just. If I were on the market for another netbook / mini-notebook, I would be really hesitant to pick up another with the Atom Z520 processor, but given that these 11.6-inch mini-notebooks have a 1366x768 display makes the decision very difficult.

1080P HD Video

It’s great to know that the Poulsbo chipset can handle 1080P video and the Acer Aspire One 751 is no exception. It handles 720P video flawlessly and certain 1080P HD videos are a piece of cake. I will cover this in a how-to article shortly following this review (and I’ll link it here).

Overclocking

You can slightly boost the CPU frequency without having too much an impact on battery life. (see above battery life benchmarks). Following advice over on the AspireOneUser forums, I am able to overclock from the default 1330 MHz up to a stable 1449 MHz. I don’t perceive any improvement on speed though. Feels the same. I’ll cover this in a separate article, following this.

Review:Acer Aspire Revo

http://www.pcgameshardware.com/screenshots/418x627/2009/04/Acer-Aspire-Revo-04.jpg

Review Summary

The Acer Aspire Revo Excels as a media player and handles 1080P HD video with ease. It also serves well as a desktop replacement. Pricing is very decent as well. The Acer Aspire Revo falls flat when it comes to 3D games.

I will reveal pricing once / if it arrives in the US.

Pros

  • Very quiet
  • HDMI port
  • Wireless keyboard / mouse (some countries)
  • 1080P HD Video
  • Easily upgradable
  • Small size
  • Good price
  • 4GB Max RAM
  • Free Upgrade to Windows 7

Cons

  • Can’t play games well
  • Warranty sticker protecting insides (may depend on country)
  • Loose / wobbly stand.
  • No DVI port for desktop usage.
  • Limited audio out options (headphone jack and HDMI)

Acer Aspire Revo Review

Review Summary

The Acer Aspire Revo Excels as a media player and handles 1080P HD video with ease. It also serves well as a desktop replacement. Pricing is very decent as well. The Acer Aspire Revo falls flat when it comes to 3D games.

I will reveal pricing once / if it arrives in the US.

Pros

  • Very quiet
  • HDMI port
  • Wireless keyboard / mouse (some countries)
  • 1080P HD Video
  • Easily upgradable
  • Small size
  • Good price
  • 4GB Max RAM
  • Free Upgrade to Windows 7

Cons

  • Can’t play games well
  • Warranty sticker protecting insides (may depend on country)
  • Loose / wobbly stand.
  • No DVI port for desktop usage.
  • Limited audio out options (headphone jack and HDMI)

Acer Aspire Revo Background

The Acer Aspire Revo was hugely anticipated worldwide since it went official in April because it was the first nettop to be announced with NVidia’s new ION graphics platform. Fast forward a couple of months and the Acer Aspire Revo is now available in several countries but has yet to make it to the US.

Here’s where I unboxed the Acer Aspire Revo:

Technical Specs

The Aspire Revo’s full name is the Acer Aspire Revo 3600 and my particular model name is ASR3600-A34.

There are various models and it may vary well you live. You can apply for a free upgrade to Windows 7. Dual core Atom N330 models coming in a few weeks in Europe.

  • Atom N230 Processor (1.6GHz)
  • NVidia ION chipset (GeForce 9400M G)
  • 160GB HDD (2.5” 5400rpm SATA II - Hitachi HTS543216L9A300)
  • 2GB - 4GB RAM (4GB Max)
  • 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi
  • 1Gbit wired LAN/li>
  • 6x USB 2.0, e-SATA, VGA, HDMI, Audio jacks, 1x Mini PCI-e Slot, Card Reader
  • Wireless keyboard / mouse (some countries)
  • Windows Vista Home Premium SP1
  • Webcam (some models)
  • 857g Weight (without power brick and stand)
  • 30 x 180 x 180mm Dimensions

The webcam is an external USB adapter, and comes with an optional stand.

One model comes with a 23-inch Acer LCD Monitor which also comes with a VESA mount to attach it to the back of the monitor.

Box Contents

Here’s what you get inside besides the usual manuals and warranty. Note that there is no recovery disks, typical of Acer netbooks:

  • Revo nettop + Stand
  • Mouse Mat
  • Wireless Keyboard / Mouse (dongle hidden in mouse) - Or wired for some countries
  • 4x AA batteries for the above peripherals
  • Power Adapter + Cord
  • HDMI Cable

While the keyboard and mouse feel really cheap, they work great and the keyboard is extremely light. I wouldn’t expect to get much battery life out of the mouse. There’s a switch under the mouse to turn it off when not in use.


Ports & Layout

On the front: Power button, Recessed USB port, covered with a flap. Card reader, Headphone and Microphone jacks. e-SATA port.

On the top: Air vent and another USB port.

On the back: 4x USB ports, Ethernet, HDMI, VGA ports. Kensington lock and Power plug.

On the bottom: A screw (may be covered with a warranty seal) to access the innards.

Here are some size comparisons with the Acer Aspire Revo (pen, A4 paper, netbook power brick)



This is what the Acer Aspire Revo looks like with wires plugged in.

The power button glows white when turned on:

Upgradability

To access the goodies inside, you’ll need to locate and undo the screw at the base of the Aspire Revo.

On the inside you can upgrade the 2.5” hard drive, RAM (two slots, up to 4GB RAM) and a PCI-e slot which is occupied with the Wi-Fi card.

Wi-Fi card:

Two RAM slots (4GB Max)

Fan and heatsink over the ION chipset, fan is removable:

For those who want to know how to open up the Acer Aspire Revo:

1080P HD Videos

Thanks to the NVidia ION graphics on board, the Aspire Revo excels at playing any sort of 1080P HD video you throw at it. I tested out alot of videos but not once did I encounter none that wouldn’t play.

You can’t play 1080P HD video out of the box, you will need to install the right software. There are plenty of options: Cyberlink PowerDVD, DivX Labs MKV on Windows 7 or MPC-HC.

I quickly removed Vista and installed Windows 7. I needed to install both MPC-HC and DivX Labs MKV Preview, because I couldn’t get sound working on the latest verison on some videos.

Check out how 1080P HD Video plays like on the Acer Aspire Revo below:

Games

Don’t expect to play the latest 3D games on the Acer Aspire Revo or even 3D games from several years back. Very old 3D games and 2D games should work fine.

First I tried out Half Life 2. Even with at a resolution of 1280 x 1024 and the lowest settings for everything, frame rates were not smooth at all. Playable, almost. I certainly didn’t enjoy the speed compared to what I get on my desktop. I can’t give you frame rates because I can’t access the console (seems to be a problem on non-US keyboards of which mine is).

Next I tried COD4, and at 1280 x 720, with lowest settings for everything and some turned off, it became playable, but the frame rates were not smooth.

Both games looked very poor on the big screen at such a low resolution and low graphic settings.

Media Player Usage

The Acer Aspire Revo excels as a media player. Thanks to it’s small size, low noise, wireless peripherals and HDMI port.

You can stand it vertically with the stand or lay it flat just as easily. Since the Aspire Revo is just a PC it’s much easier to connect to your existing network that most other dedicated media players. You can easily connect via Wi-Fi or Ethernet.

With that you can easily grab videos from other computers on your network or just download them directly from your Revo.

Also, you can expect much better compatibility than you would get with a dedicated media player. I’ve used several dedicated media players and they occasionally choke on videos not encoded properly and stop playing.

Note, that you will need to correct the overscan if you use the Aspire Revo as a media player. Go into NVidia options and you can easily rescale the screen smaller to fit the screen.

Desktop Usage

The Aspire Revo performs just the same as any Atom N270 / N280 powered netbook on the market. If you have experience with any such netbooks then you will know what to expect.

Web browsing, office related activities (word documents, spreadsheets etc), listening to music, iTunes, watching videos and playing old games all work very nicely on the Aspire Revo. Installing Windows 7 over Vista can greatly improve the speed of the desktop.

The Aspire Revo does not handle the latest 3D games very well, or even games from several years back because the bottleneck is the slow Atom N230 processor inside. I wouldn’t want to use the Aspire Revo to do photoshop work with large images or do 3D rendering on it.

The lack of noise (below) and the small form factor also make this a great low-profile / small space choice for a desktop.

My thoughts about the Acer Aspire One Revo as a desktop previously, on video:

Noise

I’ve read around on the internet and seen some people complain about the fan noise. I can hear a soft whirring of air coming out of the top but it’s barely noticeable. The only other time I hear a peep out of the Aspire Revo is when you tun it on and there’s a second or two when a short burst of air is heard coming out of the top. I did not hear the hard drive at all.

Issues

Here are some minor issues I had with the Acer Aspire Revo. None of them were deal-killers though and I found ways to solve some of them.

Slow Wi-Fi

Copying over large Blu-ray sized videos takes several hours (at least) over Wi-Fi. You need to plan ahead on these occasions or use a wired connection.

Limited Audio Options

The Aspire Revo only has a headphone out jack that doesn’t carry SPDIF and a HDMI port. Trying to connect to your PC Card on your computer or to your amplifier can be tricky. Luckily I was able to connect my Aspire Revo to my Onkyo amplifier in the following fashion: Aspire Revo -> [HDMI Cable] -> HDTV -> [Optical Cable] -> Onkyo Amp.

No DVI Video Out

No DVI out means it could be tricky connecting to your large sized LCD monitor. Many don’t come with HDMI ports.

If you use the HDMI to connect to a LCD Monitor, you’ll be stuck with trying to use the headphone jack. Connecting the Aspire Revo via HDMI to my 16:10 24” LCD Monitor failed to work, I was stuck with VGA out which doesn’t give the best quality on such a high resolution display. Also HDMI is limited to 16:9 ratio displays which only my HDTV is going to give me an undistorted image.

Warranty Seal Protecting Insides

I imagine this would depend on where you buy the Aspire Revo. Here in Japan, there is a warranty sticker covering the bottom of the Aspire Revo. I haven’t actually read if it voids warranty, but I’m pretty sure it does just like with other recent Acer netbooks released here.

Wobbly Stand

While the stand looks cool, it doesn’t hold the Aspire Revo on top of it very solidly. The Aspire Revo easily wobbles side to side just touching the nettop lightly. Furthermore, any slight pressure applied to the top or front of the machine can easily dislodge the nettop from the stand. To insert anything on the Aspire Revo, you’ll need to use both hands.

Source: Netbooked.net