Posts Tagged ‘Acer Aspire’

Acer Aspire AS9504WSMI

Monday, October 13th, 2008

I really like this laptop and use it to do video editing and computer graphics work. Rendering is fast and smooth. The screen is very clear and crisp. I was expecting this to be super heavy, but its actually not bad. I was excited aabout the ability to watch tv on my laptop, but the dvb-t tv tuner that should have come with my laptop, didnt. The manual says that this tuner is optional, so maybe mwave.com chose not to include it. Or they forgot it. I am willing to buy the antenna separately, but ive looked all over the internet, and its not being sold anywhere. I went to the acer site for more info, but their site is terrible. I tried filling out their question form, but their form page isnt even online. (URL does not exist error)I can attach the laptop to my cable from my wall and watch cable tv, but the whole point of having a tv tuner with a laptop is to be able to watch tv wirelessly! I would like to get basic antenna broadcasts, but apparently need to have this ‘optional antenna’ that isnt sold anywhere on this planet. The built-in Acer software is a bit annoying. When I boot up my computer, it assumes i will be connecting to a wired broadband connection so it enables my LAN card and disables my wireless card. I actually have a wireless router in my house so i just need my wireless enabled and my LAN disabled. I switch these settings and try to save them, but it always reverts back to the defaults when you reboot. (so its a pain to turn by wireless card back on every time i turn on my laptop) I ended up uninstalling their software because it annoyed me. I also think its weird that they used the FAT32 file system to format their drives. I reformated the 2nd drive to NTFS which is faster and can handle bigger files sizes.

The Acer Aspire 9504WSMi, with Windows XP Media Center Edition, is a good entertainment notebook that has the power to serve as an office workhorse. The sheer breadth of its features is impressive. However, this Aspire doesn’t quite get everything right; in particular, the speakers and the keyboard don’t do justice to this sturdy black-and-silver unit.

I liked the screen, a dazzling 17-inch display with an easy-to-read WXGA+ resolution of 1440 by 900 pixels. The laptop’s 120GB 5400-rpm hard drive is top of the line, and the multiformat DVD burner is the same sleek, slot-fed type found on Apple notebooks.

The entertainment applications–for TV, DVD movies, music, and photos–and the hardware required to support them, including a built-in TV tuner and a remote control, mesh nicely for the most part. Moreover, the 9504WSMi offers the rare option of instant-on TV, which saves you the hassle of turning on the notebook and launching Media Center Edition just to catch the evening news. Acer’s stand-alone Arcade software, with its dedicated controls on the front of the notebook, also plays movies, music, and photos at the press of a button, so you don’t have to start Windows to enjoy your media. Bonus audiovisual connections include a DVI-D port for taking in a movie on your flat-panel screen and ports for downloading camcorder and VHS video, a plus for home-movie aficionados. Five USB ports, conveniently scattered all over the case, handle other peripherals.

Battery life is good for this big, 8.5-pound notebook, at a little more than 3 hours on one charge. And its speed was red-hot in our tests, earning a WorldBench 5 score of 99–no surprise since the 9504WSMi is loaded with high-performance components, including a 2-GHz Pentium M 760 processor and 2GB of RAM.

Considering all you get, the $2299 price is not bad, but several compromises become noticeable drawbacks. One is the keyboard, which will make number crunchers happy with its dedicated numeric keypad but will disappoint touch typists despite its size. The right Shift key is no bigger than a regular alphanumeric key, and the arrow and question mark keys are half-size. To advance pages you must use the keypad, which is too far away to reach easily and clumsily separates the PgUp and PgDn keys with the right arrow key. The four-way scroll button is a nice bonus, but it feels flimsy.

My other beefs are with the stereo speakers–which lack a subwoofer and distort a bit at high volume (something resonates inside the case)–and with the lack of a docking station. None of these failings are deal breakers alone; put them all together, however, and the 9504WSMi is not the most attractive entertainment-cum-desktop-replacement option.

Upshot: So-so sound and a cramped keyboard limit this otherwise well-equipped desktop replacement and entertainment laptop.

Popularity: unranked [?]

Acer Aspire 5920-6954

Monday, October 13th, 2008

I needed a gaming and college computer for daughter. Bought this for $835. Set it up with various games and set the graphics on high to test 8600 and found excellent results. The video card was fast enough with the dedicated memory to handle all the games she couldn’t play before with her desktop. The movie playback was NG, I first thought the HD dvd drive was defective because of stalling but instead installed Nero Showtime and found that everything was all working great. The soundcard and speakers (including the subwoofer) sounded great. The software onboard was typical crap. Vista in the video games gave no problem at all, worked well. The ram for the price is good enough but every body knows you can never have enough. The case is sturdy which is great, stops the motherboard flex problems that allot of other laptops have. Battery lasted 3 hrs. installing and setting it up till I realized it wasn’t plugged in, it let me know in plenty of time.

The Acer Aspire 5920-6954 just slips under the $1000 mark, at $999 (as of 2/7/08); it’s worth every penny. Except for business applications, which it lacks, this Vista Home Premium laptop has just about everything home-office buyers could ask for in a solid budget notebook.

The notebook looks different without being too flashy. It has a black-and-cream-colored case set off by blue accents, including a big, easy-to-press triangle-shaped shortcut key set in the corner of the keyboard like a high-tech sapphire (hence Acer’s so-called “gemstone” designation).

At 7.3 pounds, the Aspire 5920-6954 is the heaviest budget laptop we looked at, but it has a 250GB hard drive and a fairly nice 15.4-inch screen (it’s a bit too reflective). Though it lacks a few things like Bluetooth, the 5920-6954 is the most high-definition-ready unit here, including both an HDMI port and an HD DVD reader. It has a subwoofer for better-than-average sound and a handy volume wheel. The terrific keyboard boasts loads of shortcut buttons that do everything but take out the trash. One set, on the left side of the keyboard, launches applications. A second, right-hand row controls multimedia, including an instant-on button that lets you play music and movies without launching Windows. A button placed between the mouse buttons scrolls documents in all four directions.

Finally, this is the only sub-$1000 laptop we reviewed that had a dedicated graphics chip–an nVidia GeForce 8600M GS with 256MB of memory. Thus it was the only one powerful enough to properly play the 3D games in our tests such as Doom 3 and Far Cry. Its frames-per-second rates weren’t the highest we’ve recorded for a laptop, but are more than enough for smooth, glitch-free play.

Equipped with a 1.66-GHz Core 2 Duo T5450 and 2GB of memory, the Aspire 5920-6954 earned a solid WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 70, the second best on the budget laptops chart. The score is five points higher than the group average of 65, and it’s one point better than the average of 70 earned by the 16 recently tested all-purpose notebooks in any price range. Battery life was average, lasting 3.8 hours.

Popularity: 1% [?]