Technology Zones - Ultrabook. Thin, light, mobile, etc. That is mostly people think when they heard about that. Ultrabook recently have taking people attention. This is not a new technology. But still fresh for some vendor to develop. The one of that vendor is Acer. They have launched Acer Aspire A5. The Thinnest Ultrabook in the world.
It was back in January, at CES 2012,
that we first saw the $1,399 13-inch Acer Aspire S5 ultrabook. Of
course, if you remember the S5 from CES, you'll recall its most unique
feature -- a tiny motorized door at the back of the bottom panel that
opens at the touch of a button, revealing a ports-and-connections block,
including HDMI and Thunderbolt (making this one of only a handful of
Thunderbolt laptops). Acer calls this the MagicFlip I/O Port.
It's
certainly clever, and it earns points for originality and engineering.
But call me crazy, I'd prefer to have my USB ports sitting right on the
side of the laptop, easy to access without having to push a button and
wait.
Full specifications and benchmark test:
Click here
Full specifications and benchmark test:
Click here
Another potential issue is that the MagicFlip is just one
more mechanical part to potentially break down (but note that it has
worked perfectly fine in the CNET Labs for several days and dozens of
activations). If, for whatever reason, it gets stuck or stops working,
you're sitting on a laptop with very limited connectivity. Especially in
a thin, light ultrabook, having fewer moving parts is better -- hence
the move to SSD storage over spinning-platter hard drives.
That
said, the motorized port door is not even the most noteworthy thing
about the S5, nor its biggest selling point. Even compared with other
13-inch ultrabooks, this system is incredibly thin and light. It weighs
only 2.6 pounds (without its power adapter), and is 15mm thick at its
thickest point (tapering to 11mm at the front).
That makes the 13-inch MacBook Air look
and feel a bit chunky in comparison, which is no easy task. Acer also
manages to work in an Intel Core i7 CPU (but no discrete graphics,
sorry), so it's certainly powerful enough for everyday use.
At
$1,399, this is scraping the high end of the ultrabook market, and I'm
not sure even the extreme portability justifies the price, but it's
certainly tempting -- this is a laptop that's simply fun to use.
What
I'd love to see is a version of the S5 that stays as thin and light,
but skips the gimmicky motorized flap, perhaps adding a millimeter or
two to fit in the USB and HDMI ports. The MagicFlip can't be an
inexpensive part to include. Dropping it might allow Acer to bring the
price down closer to $1,000, where it would be much harder to resist.
In a matte-black brushed metal, the Acer Aspire S5 looks and feels
sophisticated, if anonymous. Only a small chrome Acer logo on the back
of the lid gives away your laptop's provenance. The system is so light,
at barely 2.6 pounds, that the metal body (aluminum and magnesium) helps
it feel more substantial and secure.
The look is very
minimalist, as you'd expect from a laptop without visible ports. Besides
the keyboard and touch pad, only the button to activate the MagicFlip
door sits on the keyboard tray -- a tiny sliver-style power button is
relegated to the left side panel, along with an SD card slot.
The
keyboard makes good use of the available real estate, leaving little
dead space around it. The keys are island-style, flat-topped and widely
spaced, but a little on the shallow side. The stiff construction helps
with typing, as there's absolutely zero flex, even under heavy use.
The one serious shortcoming here is that the keyboard is not backlit.
For a $1,400 laptop, even one as thin as this, that's simply
unacceptable. Less seriously, a few keys, such as Tab and Caps Lock, are
on the small side, and the multimedia function keys are spread around
haphazardly. You'll have to press Fn+Arrow Up and Fn+Arrow Down to raise
and lower the volume, but Fn+F8 to mute -- that's an entirely different
area of the keyboard.
The large click-pad-style touch pad isn't
as responsive as you'd find on a MacBook, but the multitouch gestures
worked well, including the all-important two-finger scroll.
The
big design feature on the Aspire S5 is the MagicFlip. Hit the button on
the upper right of the keyboard tray, and the motor (loudly) whirs to
life, pushing the port flap open, and lifting the entire rear edge of
the laptop up. It actually makes for a decent ergonomic kickstand if you
need a slightly higher angle for comfortable typing.
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Acer Aspire S5-391-9880 13.3-Inch HD Display Ultrabook (Black)
Acer Aspire S5-391-6419 13.3-Inch Ultrabook (Black)
Acer Aspire AS5251-1805 15.6-Inch Laptop (Black)
Of course,
very few laptops have all their ports on the back edge, because it's
often simply more convenient to have them on one of the sides, but it's
not a deal breaker. Smartly, the port door will not close if it detects
something plugged into one of the two USB 3.0 ports, or the HDMI or
Thunderbolt ports. And, if you close the lid while the MagicFlip door is
open, the door will close itself after a few seconds (provided nothing
is plugged in).
That said, every single person I showed the
Aspire S5 to asked exactly the same question: "What do you do when the
door breaks down?" While I didn't have any trouble with the MagicFlip
door while testing the Aspire S5, it's still a legitimate question.
Adding extra motors and moving parts is always a bit of a roll of the
dice, especially in highly portable devices that stand a good chance of
being knocked around regularly.
Many PC makers have bitten the
bullet over the past couple of years, and stopped loading up their
desktops with preinstalled bloatware and ad-ware icons. Acer must have
not gotten the memo. Preloaded desktop icons for eBay and Netflix don't
feel right on a $1,400 laptop; you'll also find desktop links for Nook,
Skype, McAfee, and a half-dozen Acer-branded products and services.
Some
of those icons point to Acer's oddly named clear.fi media management
software, which is perfectly usable, but unless you plan on going
all-Acer, all the time, you may not want to take the time required to
learn a new set of proprietary software.
The 13-inch display has a
native resolution of 1,366x768 pixels, another area where the system's
features don't live up to its high price. For $1,399, I'd expect at
least a 1,600x900-pixel display. The screen itself looks very good when
viewed straight on, but off-axis viewing deteriorated quickly. While the
display isn't covered in edge-to-edge glass, I liked the look achieved
by the thin, brushed-metal bezel around it.
The built-in stereo
speakers, positioned on the far left and right sides of the bottom
panel, were thin-sounding, as one would expect from such a small laptop,
but fine for casual media consumption.
With such a thin laptop, you've got to choose what ports and connections
to include carefully. The MagicFlip port compartment has limited room,
but I think Acer made mostly the right call in including twin USB 3.0
ports and HDMI. The Thunderbolt port is a bit of a high-end gimmick
right now, if only because there are so few accessories that support it.
But, it's nice to see someone other than Apple try out this still
newish technology.
The trade-off, of course, is that some common connections, such as an
Ethernet jack or VGA video output, get relegated to external dongles.
I'm generally fine with that, even for the Ethernet jack, but you should
consider your exact needs (for example, I recently ran into someone who
needed a thin laptop with a VGA output, because she was always
connecting to older projectors).
Simply looking at a laptop's size is no longer a reliable indicator
of what sort of processor you're going to find in there. This model,
despite being the slimmest ultrabook currently available, packs in a new
third-generation Intel Core i7 CPU. It's the ultra-low voltage version
of the Core i7, but it's still more than powerful enough for all but the
most demanding users. Thanks to the fast CPU and solid-state hard
drive, applications launched quickly, and the system even booted up and
resumed from sleep very quickly.
Discrete graphics have turned up
in a small handful of ultrabooks, but not here. That means you'll have
to rely on the basic Intel HD4000 graphics, which is fine for casual
games and playing HD video, but not much more.
Ultrabooks are supposed to emphasize best-in-breed battery life, thanks
to efficient CPUs and SSD drives. Unfortunately, this is one area where
the S5 falls down a bit. With an Intel Core i7 CPU, a motorized port
door to power, and very little room in its slim chassis for a battery,
it's perhaps not all that surprising that the system only ran for 4
hours and 37 minutes on our video-playback battery-drain test. Sony's
Vaio T ultrabook ran for an hour longer and a 13-inch MacBook Air about 3
hours longer as a comparison.
Acer includes a standard one-year
parts and labor warranty with the Aspire S5. The company has a support
Web site and I was able to navigate to a specific support page for the
Aspire S5, which included driver downloads and support documents, as
well as access to e-mail, chat, and phone support. Annoyingly, Acer
won't show you the toll-free support phone number until you enter your
laptop's serial number, but the number is 866-695-2237.
The Acer
Aspire S5 leans heavily on its motorized port door, but it really
doesn't need gimmicks to sell itself. This is the current leader in the
arms race for the thinnest officially labeled ultrabook, and has the
rare quality of being just plain fun to use. That said, I'd kill for a
backlit keyboard.
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