Showing posts with label Iconia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iconia. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Acer's new Honeycomb driven Iconia Tab A500 tablet

As the table in AnandTech's review demonstrates, the interior of most tablets is dominated by a 1 Ghz ARM Cortex A9 with Tegra 2 doing the heavily graphical lifting.  This puts the onus for standing out among the crowd on the look of the tablet and the compatible peripherals as well as the pice.   Acer's design was not particularly well received at AnandTech, with several seams reducing their enjoyment of the tablet.  On the plus side is the peripheral support, with HDMI and both a microSD card reader and a miniUSB port you will have no problems interfacing with your other gadgets.  With a cost just under $400 AnandTech does like the tablet but they can't help but point out that with quad core ICS/Android 4.0 and Kal-El just around the corner you might want to wait for the next generation.


AAT_iconia


"Next in our series of Honeycomb tablet reviews is the Acer Iconia Tab A500. The A500 was the second Honeycomb tablet to go on sale, and is one of four on the market at present, all of which are very similar. They share basic specs—10.1” 1280x800 displays, NVIDIA’s Tegra 2 underhood, 1GB LPDDR2 RAM, 16-64GB onboard NAND, front and rear facing cameras with HD video capture, basic wireless connectivity options, and stock versions of Android 3.0/3.1 Honeycomb (albeit with different preloaded software packages). The hardware similarities makes things like design and price that much more important, and the latter is where Acer seemed to have an edge."


PC Perspective

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Acer Iconia Tab A100 Review

Acer Iconia Tab A100 Review : The price of Acer Iconia Tab A100 it’s 483$, and can be bought starting from 20 April. It has a 7 inch display, and a hardware platform based on Tegra 2. The processor it’s a dual core of 1Ghz and, only 512 MB RAM

Acer announced the release of the new Tab, called Iconia A100 on April 20. After the huge success of Ipad, many manufactures are trying to create tabs to compete with the big Apple. However, the market it’s almost owned by Apple, by 70%. In the next lines you will find a review of the Acer Iconia Tab A100, and we will try to tell you if it’s worth buying one.

The Acer Iconia Tab A100, it’s a tablet that run’s on Android 3.0 system, and it’s a low-cost gadget. Acer it’s trying to create a useful pad, at a competitive price. The price of Acer Iconia Tab A100 it’s 483$, and can be bought starting from 20 April. It has a 7 inch display, and a hardware platform based on Tegra 2. The processor it’s a dual core of 1Ghz and, only 512 MB RAM. The storage it’s supplied by a memory card of 8 GB.

The list of facilities also includes Bluetooth module and 803.11n Wifi connectivity. On the front, you can find a 2MP camera, for video conferences, and a 5MP camera with autofocus and Led flash on the back. The memory card can be extended up to 32Gb capacity. The new tab from Acer can be connected on the PC by a Micro USB interface and also Multimedia, HDMI connector. Like all the tabs, and smartphones, even the Acer Iconia has an accelerometer, gyroscope, and digital compass. The screen resolution it’s 600 x 1024 pixles.


When I was asked to review the new Acer Iconia Tab A100, I first noticed, the weight. It’s not really the lightest gadget in the world. It has 450 grams, and 470 grams, the 3G version.


Looking forward to see what impact this new tab will have on the market.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Acer 7-inch Iconia A100, A101 to arrive May 14

iconiataba100


Acer’s 7-inch Iconia A100 and A101 Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) tablets are set to arrive May 14. The devices, which are already up for pre-order in the UK, come with either a 3G + Wi-Fi (A101) or Wi-Fi-only (A100) configurations. Both devices run the Tegra 250 dual-core Cortex A9 processor clocked at 1GHz matched with 512MB of RAM and incorporate 8GB of memory expandable with microSDs.


Graphics is delivered by ultra low power (ULP) NIVIDIA GeForce GPU with Flash 10.1 support. Movies can also be played back at 1080p on HD TV’s through the integrated HDMI port. Both also come with 5-megapixel auto-focus rear camera, and a 2-megapixel front camera.


While North American pricing is yet to be revealed, The Android Community notes that they are selling for the equivalent of $660 for the A101 with 3G + Wi-Fi, and $485 for the Wi-Fi only A101 in the UK.


Electronista

Monday, May 2, 2011

Acer Iconia 6120 Review: A Good Implementation of a Terrible Idea

acer-iconia-6120


The Acer Iconia 6120 laptop is one of those marquee, "halo" products meant to draw attention to the brand as much as to satisfy everyday computing needs. In many ways it's a pretty ordinary 14-inch laptop. The standout feature, however, is its second 14-inch multitouch screen, which replaces the entire lower keyboard-and-touchpad deck. As high-concept products go, the Iconia is fairly affordable at $1199 (as of May 2, 2011). Still, at that price it isn't a very good deal, and you're better off choosing something a little more down to earth. Acer's dual-touch implementation of a Windows laptop is about as good as you could expect it to be, but it's just not a great idea in the first place.


You don't actually get a whole lot of computing power for your $1199. The system ships with a 2.66GHz Core i5-480M; that processor isn't slow, but it is part of the previous generation of Intel Core CPUs. Acer would get better performance and battery life from one of the newer Sandy Bridge models. The Iconia also relies on Intel's integrated graphics, which is fine for everyday desktop productivity stuff, but a poor choice for high-def video playback or 3D gaming. Here, again, the newer generation of Intel processors would help a lot. The Iconia comes standard with 4GB of fairly slow RAM, and the 640GB hard drive is a pokier 5400-rpm model instead of a snappier 7200-rpm drive. In our tests all of that added up to a ho-hum WorldBench 6 score of 109. Everything is responsive enough when you're just checking e-mail, browsing the Web, or writing documents. Push the system with more-intensive tasks, though, and it becomes sluggish.


To fit the second screen, Acer clearly had to give up some of the standard features we expect on laptops of this size. You get HDMI and VGA ports for video output, a pair of USB 2.0 ports on the left, a USB 3.0 port on the right, headphone and microphone jacks, 802.11n Wi-Fi, and gigabit ethernet. What's missing? Most laptops of this size and weight also have a multiformat card reader, Bluetooth, an optical drive, and a combination USB/eSATA port, none of which appear on the Iconia. Acer is obviously banking on the desirability of its dual touch-screen design to make up for the shortcomings.


Since the entire bottom deck--where the keyboard, touchpad, and other miscellaneous buttons usually reside--has been replaced by a multitouch capacitive touchscreen, you do all typing on a soft keyboard. It works better than I expected, but I still found myself typing more slowly and making more errors than I would on a good physical keyboard. The keyboard's size makes using it a little easier than typing on an iPad or a similar tablet, but that's faint praise. The touchpad area beneath the keyboard is oddly small, and lacks support for the standard gestures we've come to expect, such as two-finger scrolling. That's a little mind-boggling, as it's all just software and Acer could easily have addressed those issues.


Touch all five fingers to the lower screen, and you'll bring up a special hub that lets you draw gestures, quickly select from several features, or launch one of Acer's touch-enabled applications. The touch Web browser spans both screens, but won't make you switch from Chrome or Firefox. The SocialJogger app shows your Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube feeds; it works as advertised and feels like a slightly laggy tablet application, but you really have no need to use it when you have a full Windows laptop at your disposal. The same goes for the touch-based music and photo apps. Yes, they all work as described, but they're just so...superfluous. Navigating these programs on a lower-deck touchscreen doesn't save you significant time or effort. Most of them would work just as well on the upper touchscreen, and none of them are huge timesavers compared with the plethora of standard keyboard-and-mouse software out there.


If the Acer Iconia has one main problem, it's that the lower touchscreen comes with a whole lot of baggage. It makes the system thick, for starters. At 1.4 inches thick, the Iconia isn't huge, but it is considerably thicker than laptops with similar specs and no optical drive. It's pretty heavy at 6 pounds, too. I already mentioned the missing card reader and Bluetooth. And driving two large LCDs puts a strain on the battery, which lasted a paltry 2 hours, 11 minutes in our tests. All so that you can have a mediocre soft keyboard and some touch apps that don't take up space on the upper screen?


Acer would have been much better off equipping the Iconia with a standard physical keyboard and replacing only the touchpad with a fairly high-resolution 4-inch touchscreen. It's good to see Acer trying some aggressive designs, especially ones as aesthetically pleasing as the Iconia's, but as a practical matter it just doesn't make sense to replace the lower deck of a Windows laptop with a touchscreen.


PCWorld