Showing posts with label Acer Aspire S3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acer Aspire S3. Show all posts

Harga Laptop Acer - Spesifikasi Acer Terbaru

Posted by Edo Suseno Tuesday, December 13, 2011 0 komentar
Harga Laptop Acer - Spesifikasi Acer Terbaru - For those of you who did want the latest news and info about the latest Laptop prices from us, then we will give you special just for this in 2011, and this time we would give price Acer laptops for all of you who really want to have a new laptop with a type of Acer .


Harga Laptop Acer - Spesifikasi Acer Terbaru
If you are confused to choose a new laptop, then you just try to see the price of Acer laptop from us, hopefully you are interested and willing to buy at your nearest store selling specially laptops and computers, because we are providing this price, just to help you all who want to naru and buy a laptop can be your own reference.

Well you just look at Acer Laptop - Acer specifications below:

Acer Aspire 4741-351G32Mn Rp 5.400.000
Core i3-350M, 1GB DDR3, 320GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, VGA Intel GMA HD, Camera, 14inch WXGA, Non OS, Black, Silver

Acer Aspire 4741-352G32Mn Rp 6.200.000
Core i3-350M, 2GB DDR3, 320GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, VGA Intel GMA HD, Camera, 14inch WXGA, Win7 Home Basic, Black, Silver

Acer Aspire 4745G-5462G64Mnks Rp 8.100.000
Core i5-460M, 2GB DDR3, 640GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA ATi Radeon HD5650 1GB, Camera, 14inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium


Acer Aspire 5745DG-7744G64Mn Rp 12.700.000
Core i7-740QM, 4GB DDR3, 640GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA NVIDIA GeForce GT425M 1GB, Camera, 15.6inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium

Acer Aspire 5943G-7744G64Mn Rp 13.600.000
Core i7-740QM, 4GB DDR3, 640GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA ATI Radeon HD5650 1GB, Camera, 15.6inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium

Acer Aspire One AO532H Rp 3.200.000
Atom N450, 1GB DDR2, 160GB HDD, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA Intel 3110 - HD video playback 720p, Camera, 10.1inch WSVGA, Win XP Home Edition (with 6-cell battery)

Acer Aspire One AOD260 Rp 3.300.000
Intel® Atom™ processor N450, (512KB L2 cache, 1.66GHz, 533MHz FSB) Hyper Threading, Display 10.1inch WSGA LED, Intel NM10 Express Chipset, DDR2 1GB, HDD 160GB, VGA-Out, 10 / 100 LAN, 5-in-1 Media Reader, 6 cell battery, 3x usb, Acer Crystal eye webcam, wireless LAN 802.11b/g, Super Slim Design, Windows XP, Color Available : Black, Silver, Pink

Acer Aspire One D255 Non OS Rp 3.000.000
Intel Atom N550 1.5Ghz, 1GB DDR3, 160GB, Hyper Threading 10.1inch Wide TFT, No Optical Drive, No Modem, Camera, Wifi, Card Reader, Linux, Batt 6 Cell, black

Acer Aspire One D255 Win 7 Starter Rp 3.500.000
Intel Atom N550 1.5Ghz, 1GB DDR3, 250GB, Hyper Threading 10.1inch Wide TFT, No Optical Drive, No Modem, Camera, Wifi, Bluetooth, Card Reader, Win 7 Starter, Batt 6 Cell

Acer Aspire One D260 Rp 3.000.000
Intel® Atom™ processor N450 (512KB L2 cache, 1.66GHz, 533MHz FSB) Hyper Threading, Display 10.1inch WSGA LED, Intel NM10 Express Chipset, DDR2 1GB, HDD 160GB, VGA-Out, 10 / 100 LAN, 5-in-1 Media Reader, 6 cell battery, 3x usb, Acer Crystal eye webcam, wireless LAN 802.11b/g, Super Slim Design, Linpus Linux OS, Color Available : Black, Silver, Pink

Acer Aspire Timeline 1410T-232G25n Rp 5.700.000
Celeron SU2300, 2GB DDR2, 250GB HDD, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA Intel GMA 4500 271MB (shared), Camera, 11.6inch WXGA, Non OS - FREE DVDRW External

Acer Aspire Timeline 3810T-354G50N Rp 7.200.000
Core2 Solo SU3500, 4GB DDR3, 500GB HDD, GbE NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA Intel GMA 4500 271MB (shared), Camera, 13.3inch WXGA, Win Vista Home Premium

Acer Aspire Timeline 4820TG-5464G64Mnss Rp 9.000.000
Core i5-460M, 4GB DDR3, 640GB HDD, DVD±RW, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA ATi Radeon HD5650 1GB, Camera, 14inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium

Acer Ferrari One 200-314G32n Rp 7.200.000
AMD Athlon X2 L310, 4GB DDR2, 320GB HDD, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA ATi Radeon HD3200 256MB (shared), 11.6inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium

Acer Ferrari One 200-314G50nrk Rp 7.300.000
AMD Athlon X2 L310, 4GB DDR2, 500GB HDD, NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, VGA ATi Radeon HD3200 256MB (shared), 11.6inch WXGA, Win7 Home Premium

Acer TravelMate 6293-872G32Mn (3G) Rp 11.400.000
Core2 Duo P8700, 2GB DDR3, 320GB HDD, DVD±RW, HSDPA, GbE NIC, WiFi, Bluetooth, Fingerprint, VGA Intel GMA 4500 358MB (shared), Camera, 12.1inch WXGA, Win7 Pro

Nah semoga berita dan informasi Harga Laptop Acer - Spesifikasi Acer Terbaru bermanfaat untuk anda dan kami akan terus memberikan berita dan informasi yang lainnya untuk anda mengenai berita yang lainnya.

G Styled: Acer Aspire S3 Review

Posted by The Best Review Wednesday, October 19, 2011 0 komentar
 
Man oh man, I witnessed such a design failure this week. It’s so bad I’m ashamed to even talk about it. But the Acer Aspire S3 committed some fashion No Nos, so I feel compelled to inform you before you go out and buy this laptop.



First off, Acer tried to go cheap with this laptop. The top is covered by a beautiful brushed metal finish, but they ruin the effect by not springing for real brushed metal. Come on Acer, brushed metal on the top, but brushed metal look-alike plastic on the inside and underbelly? Very lame Acer, very lame.
I will give this notebook points for being uber-thin (0.51-0.6 inches thick) and somewhat lightweight (3 pounds), but too much was sacrificed to achieve this thinness. Acer didn’t just skimp on the looks, the company compromised the inside specs as well (sporting a 320GB, 5,400-rpm hard drive as opposed to the SSD found in the similar looking Apple MacBook Air). I can understand wanting to create an ultraportable that looks as good as Apple’s machine, but the Macbook Air is sexy all over and Apple doesn’t skimp on the details. You can learn a thing from them, Acer.

On the flip side, one thing I liked about the Aspire S3 was the keyboard. While the rest of the LAPTOP staff didn’t like it, I didn’t find it too bad. I even like the placement of the power button. I will say the brushed metal on top was a good start, but Acer got lazy or cheap and didn’t go all the way.

Acer Aspire S3 G Style Rating: Fashion Fail

Acer Aspire S3 Review

Posted by The Best Review Sunday, October 16, 2011 0 komentar

The Acer Aspire S3 ($899.99 direct) is the first ultrabook in the PCMag Labs, the first of many in the next few months. If this sliver of a laptop is the shape of things to come, consider us excited. This new breed of laptop checks off all of the boxes Intel has laid out for the ultrabook category—ultra-thin, ultra-fast, and ultra-affordable, with more than 5 hours of battery life. Compared with similar laptops and the few Ultrabooks we've spent time with, like the Asus Zenbook UX31 ($1,099 direct) and Lenovo IdeaPad U300s ($1,199 direct) (stay tuned for our review of both), it falls short on a couple features, but it still gives you a slim, mobile laptop for less than premium competitors.

A Word on Ultrabooks
When Intel announced the guidelines for ultrabooks, it became clear that it intended to create a new laptop sub-category that most closely resembled the specs of the Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (Thunderbolt)'s ($1299.99 direct, 4 stars), with requirements about thickness (under 0.83 inch), battery life (at least 5 hours), and faster boot times that would rely on Intel's Rapid Start technology. Intel has also made it clear that it wants ultrabooks to carry sub-$1000 price tags.

There are laptops that meet some of these requirements—most notably the Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (Thunderbolt)—but this unit is the first that meets all of them. The Samsung Series 9 hits plenty of these points, but it costs far more and lacks Intel's Rapid Start technology. Thus, while the MacBook Air 13-inch and Samsung Series 9 (NP900X3A) ($1,599 street, 4 stars) have many similarities, they are not ultrabooks under Intel's definition. So while we may compare the Acer Aspire S3 to, say, the Editors' Choice Toshiba Portege R835-P50X ($889.99 list, 4.5 stars), it's still, technically speaking, in a category by itself. Until there's an opportunity to dig into the other ultrabooks recently announced, like the Asus Zenbook UX31, we won't be able to compare the Acer Aspire to its closest competitors on anything but a superficial level.

Design
Like the Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (Thunderbolt), the Aspire S3 is ultra-thin, measuring a scant 0.51 inch thick, not including a bit of thickness added by the four foam-rubber feet underneath. It measures 0.7 by 12.6 by 8.5 inches (HWD) , making it small enough to slip into a backpack or large purse, while adding less bulk than a single-subject college ruled notebook. It's also extremely light, at a featherweight 2.94 pounds, which is barely more that the MacBook Air 13-inch (2.9 pounds).

Specifications

Type Ultraportable, Consumer Ultra-Low Voltage
Processor Name Intel Core i5-2467M
Operating System Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium
Processor Speed 1.6 GHz
RAM 4 GB
Weight 2.9 lb
Screen Size 13.3 inches
Screen Size Type Widescreen
Native Resolution 1366 x 768
Graphics Card Intel HD Graphics 3000
Graphics Memory 128
Storage Capacity (as Tested) 320 GB
Rotation Speed 5400 rpm
Networking Options 802.11n
Primary Optical Drive External
Wireless Display Capability (WiDi) No
WiMax No
PCMark7 1899
3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - 1,024 x 768 - Default 3530
3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - Native – 0X/4X 1791
Crysis - Medium quality - 1,024 x 768 - AA/AF=Off/Off 16.34
Lost Planet 2 (DX9) - Middle quality - 1,024 x 768- AA/AF=Off/Off 15.4
MULTIMEDIA TESTS - Handbrake 2:36 min:sec
MULTIMEDIA TESTS - PhotoShop CS5 5:37 min:sec
MULTIMEDIA TESTS - CineBench 11.5 1.93

One of the first differences you'll notice once you get your hands on the Aspire S3 is in how it feels. Though its magnesium lid and silvery color scheme resembles laptops with all-metal construction, the rest of the chassis (including the palm rest) is made of plastic. Like the MacBook Air 13-inch, it's thin and lightweight, but the MacBook feels solid and luxurious, while the Aspire S3 feels less substantial.
The 13.3-inch widescreen display—at 450 nits—is even brighter than the screen found on the Samsung Series 9, thanks to an LED-backlit screen. The 1366-by-768 resolution doesn't match the 1,440-by-900 one on the MacBook Air, or the 1,600-by-900 screen on the Asus Zenbook UX31. It also has pretty narrow viewing angles, and anyone attempting to share the screen will likely see the image in negative, so content consumption will be primarily a one-person affair. Audio is another story: the Aspire S3 has two 3DSonic speakers, one on either side, with the experience improved thanks to Dolby Home Theater v4 audio enhancement. The quality of sound produced by the slim ultrabook is unexpectedly robust and clear.

Also notable is the keyboard. The chiclet-style keys look similar to the square-tiled keys of the MacBook Air, and they also manage to impart the same smooth typing and shallow keystrokes. The quality is quite good, but you won't find a backlight on the Aspire S3 like you would on the MacBook Air. The touchpad may not be enormous, but it's large enough for all of the gestures available on the glass-topped trackpad. The right and left mouse buttons are integrated into the trackpad surface as well, and clicking is as simple as pressing on the face of the mouse, or in either lower corner. It's the closest I've seen to replicating the Apple clickpad experience on a Windows laptop, and it managed to pull it off pretty well. As testing wore on, however, I did notice that multitouch controls, like zoom and scroll, didn't always register properly.

Features
That ultrathin profile is achieved, in part, by offering few features. Along the back edge of the Acer Aspire S3, you'll find two USB 2.0 ports and an HDMI port. On the right edge of the laptop you'll find a media card reader (SD, MMC), and on the left, you'll find a headset jack, combining a headphone and microphone jack in one. Internally, the Aspire S3 is equipped with 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0 wireless options, and a 1.3-megapixel webcam atop the 13-inch screen. But what don't you get? To maintain that greyhound-thin profile, Acer has jettisoned common connections like a VGA port, Ethernet, and optical drive, which is par for the course in all the Ultrabooks we've seen so far. You also won't enjoy the faster speeds of USB 3.0, which you will find on the Zenbook UX31, and the even faster speeds of Thunderbolt technology, which is only found on Apple products right now.

Though several competitors have opted to use nothing but solid-state flash memory in their Ultrabooks, Acer has chosen a mechanical hard drive, which offers greater capacity for a lower price. The 320GB 5,400rpm spinning hard drive offers far more storage than the 128GB solid-state drives (SSD) found standard in the MacBook Air and Asus Zenbook UX31. On the flipside, the spinning drive is more prone to damage from bumps and falls, and doesn't offer the same speed and responsiveness that an SSD can provide. Acer addresses the responsiveness problem with an additional 20GB of flash memory, allowing the Aspire S3 to have the same speedy boot and wake times offered by an SSD. To protect the hard drive from physical damage, the Aspire S3 is equipped with an accelerometer that activates drive protection whenever the laptop is moved.

Acer includes a lot of pre-installed hardware on the Aspire S3. Some of it is useful, like Clear.fi, Acer's wireless media sharing solution, Microsoft Office Starter 2010, and a 60-day trial of McAfee Internet Security. Others are just bloatware, like a New York Times reader, the Barnes & Noble Nook App, Blio e-reader, Acer Games, and dedicated links to eBay and Netflix. You'll also find a number of Acer utilities for everything from tweaking the sleep settings to using the webcam.

New Acer Aspire S3 Review

Posted by The Best Review Saturday, October 15, 2011 0 komentar
The good: With a slim, MacBook-Air-like design at a reasonable price, the Acer Aspire S3 is an example of how the Ultrabook laptop category can work if done right.
The bad: The construction is a step below superpremium, connectivity is limited, and battery life is on the low side of acceptable.
The bottom line: The Acer Aspire S3 is the closest you can get to the look and feel of a MacBook Air for less than $1,000, but it requires a few compromises.
Call us skeptical (please do, we like it), but the Ultrabook concept always struck us as being a bit suspect. Intel has been pushing for several months the idea of a new class of laptops that are slim and powerful with excellent battery life, but simply putting out a list of suggested specs and coining a name isn't the same thing as creating an entire new top-level category that can stand alongside ultraportable or desktop-replacement laptops. On paper, the Ultrabook concept seemed like just a way to pitch Windows-based versions of Apple's popular MacBook Air, but now that we've seen the first few models in action, we may not be total converts but we're certainly more inclined to think of these as something new and unique.
The best of the new Ultrabooks may be Acer's 13-inch Aspire S3. Slim, lightweight, and powerful, it certainly looks and feels a good deal like a MacBook Air, and is, at first glance, nearly indistinguishable from Ultrabooks from Asus and Lenovo. The difference is that Acer has decided to sell the Aspire S3 for $899, a steep discount from what you'd pay for a 13-inch MacBook Air (starting at $1,399), and indeed, about $300 less than Asus and Lenovo are charging for very similar systems.
All of the examples above have default solid-state drive (SSD) hard drives and Intel Core i5 processors (some have upgraded Core i7 options as well). The Acer has a large clickpad-style touch pad, which, while not MacBook-level, is one of the most responsive mutltitouch touch pads we've seen on a Windows laptop. To hit that $899 price, however, a few corners were cut. You don't get a USB 3.0 port, the 1,366x768-pixel display has a lower resolution than other Ultrabook-style laptops, and, most importantly, the SSD in this system is only 20GB, and paired with a standard 320GB HDD in a hybrid configuration. None of those concessions would work for us at $1,200, but for $899 and for something this slim and powerful, it seems like a fair trade-off.


Price as reviewed $899
Processor 1.6GHz Intel Core i5 2467M
Memory 4GB, 1,333MHz DDR3
Hard drive 20GB SSD / 320GB 5,400rpm
Chipset Intel UM67
Graphics Intel HD3000
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
Dimensions (WD) 12.6x8.5 inches
Height 0.5 - 0.7 inch
Screen size (diagonal) 13.3 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 3 pounds / 3.7 pounds
Category 13-inch

Though it clearly leans on the design of the MacBook Air, we thought the Aspire S3 also looked a lot like Dell's old Adamo XPS. It's also very similar to the handful of other Ultrabooks we've seen, including the Lenovo U300s and Asus Zenbook UX. Of all of those, the Acer S3 is clearly the least fancy of the bunch, with a body made of both aluminum and plastic parts.
The dull gray color isn't very eye-catching, but the overall slim silhouette is still appealing--this is a good-looking laptop, but not a great-looking one. It has a bit of a sedate business laptop vibe to it.
The keyboard tray is sparse, with a single power button built into the center hinge. The keyboard is a typical island-style one, with widely spaced, flat-topped keys. The keys are on the shallow side, but still usable, and they clack a little loudly while typing. The Shift, Tab, Ctrl, and other keys are full-size, but the Enter key is surprisingly small; we rarely see PC makers shave anything off that very important key. The arrow keys are positively microscopic, which is a shame, as they also control the speaker volume via an alternate Fn-key mapping, and there are equally tiny Page Up and Page Down keys in the same lower-right corner of the keyboard.
The touch pad is larger than most Windows laptop examples, but still not as big as what's on a 13-inch MacBook Air. As it's a clickpad-style device, the separate left and right mouse buttons are eliminated, and instead you have to click on the lower-left and -right corners of the pad for those functions. On thing we miss is the ability to tap with two fingers to perform a right-click, which is a staple of Mac trackpads. On the bright side, multitouch gestures, such as two-finger scrolling, work very nicely--not quite as well as on a MacBook, but it's easily some of the best two-finger scrolling we've ever found on a Windows laptop.
The 13-inch display has a native resolution of 1,366x768 pixels, which is standard for most laptops with 11- to 15-inch screens. It's fine for casual Web surfing and video streaming, but some of the other (more expensive) Ultrabook-like systems we've seen have higher resolutions, including the 1,440x900-pixel MacBook Air and 1,600x900-pixel Asus Zenbook UX31. The screen itself is overly glossy and catches some room glare, and the off-axis viewing angles aren't great, but at $899 it's hard to complain.



Acer Aspire S3 Average for category [13-inch]
Video HDMI VGA plus HDMI or DisplayPort
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone jack. Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks
Data 2 USB 2.0; SD card reader 2 USB 2.0, 1 USB 3.0, SD card reader
Networking 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, optional mobile broadband
Optical drive None DVD burner

For all its success in design, performance, and price, the Aspire S3 still cuts a few corners, mostly in its connectivity and configuration. There's no USB 3.0, or even a built-in Ethernet jack. Instead of the larger SSD hard drives found in other Ultrabooks, up to 256GB, this fixed-configuration system has a hybrid hard drive, with 20GB of SSD storage and a 320GB traditional 5,400rpm hard drive. While not great for data storage, the SSD allows the system to boot up and resume from sleep very quickly, and Acer claims that the S3 can sleep for up to 50 days and still keep some of its battery charge (we've only had our review unit for a few days, so we can't verify that claim).
The Intel Core i5-2467M CPU is a solid midrange choice, and it's a pleasant surprise that it runs so well in such a slim chassis without the need for excessive cooling. In our benchmark tests, it was comparable with other midrange Core i5 laptops, such as the Toshiba Portege R835, but fell behind high-end models such as the 13-inch MacBook Air. Interestingly, it was faster than the very expensive Samsung Series 9, an early Ultrabook-style 13-inch laptop.
In anecdotal use, we found the Acer Aspire S3 speedy and responsive, with no slowdown or stuttering during everyday entertainment and productivity use. It played back HD video files with no problem, but with only Intel's integrated HD3000 graphics, you shouldn't expect much in terms of gaming performance.