Launched in the Philippines back in October, the Acer Aspire S7
became the company’s 3rd-generation ultrabook running Windows 8. Since
we can no longer wait for our turn to borrow a review unit, we decided
to just buy one instead.
Acer Philippines was kind enough to give us a media discount so we
got the 11-inch model. Having owned the first-generation Aspire S3,
we’re excited how Acer has refined their R&D to design and develop
the S7.
We actually first saw the Aspire S7 last June 2012 during Computex in Taiwan. It was one of the show-stoppers in Acer’s booth.
The package came with a lot of free accessories, the most in any
ultrabook we’ve seen thru the years — a micro-HDMI to VGA adapter,
USB-to-LAN adapter, a matching Bluetooth mouse and a docking station
with an additional battery capacity of just over 3,000mAh. Acer claims
this docking station and the built-in Li-Polymer battery has a combined
life of 12 hours on a single full charge.
There’s also a dirty gray, stitched leather case that came in the
box. Perhaps, our only disappointed here was that the matching white
power cable/adapter is actually a bit big and bulky.
Nevertheless, we were pretty impressed that Acer had everything you
need right out of the box so there’s no reason to buy additional
accessories for the Aspire S7 (the whole set of accessories probably
costs between Php10-12k if they were sold separately).
The S7 has a unibody design and uses aluminum on almost all corners,
including the lid cover that comes with a diagonally crisscrossing
pattern.
The front screen uses an edge-to-edge display panel which is
protected by Gorilla Glass 2. The IPS display has a good tactile feel to
it allowing for a comfortable touch experience with using Windows 8.
The screen has a full HD 1080p resolution so the pixels are really
packed together.
The one other unique feature of the Aspire S7 is a the microSD card
reader. Most other 11-inch ultrabook don’t provide an SD card reader
(normally afforded on the 13-inch variants).
Acer found a way to squeeze it into the thin frame by including a
microSD slot (I normally use regular SD cards which I use to transfer
files from my camera but for this one, I might use a microSD card with
an SD card adapter for my point-and-shoot units).
We noticed that the keyboard, while slightly spaced apart and
back-lit, has very little to no flex (meaning, the low height of each
chiclet keys will force you to press down really hard to get a key
response).
The hardware configuration is pretty much standard to ultrabooks
although the inclusion of a full HD and touchscreen display does add up
to the over-all value.
Acer Aspire S7 11.6″ specs:
11.6-inch IPS full HD LCD display @ 1920×1080 pixels
Intel Core i5-3317U 1.7GHz
Turbo Bost up to 2.6GHz
Intel HD 4000 graphics
4GB DDR3 RAM
128GB SSD
WiFi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0
micro-HDMI port
microSD card slot
Thunderbolt port
USB 3.0 port
Windows 8
4-cell Li-Ion battery
Friday, January 25, 2013
Acer Aspire S7 unboxed, in the flesh
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