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Posted on 14-07-2008
Filed Under (Reviews) by KiNG on 14-07-2008

Verdict: Acer’s Aspire one makes a splash. A great keyboard, a fine screen and a keen price make for a simply superb netbook.

Before we go any further, let’s get this out of the way; the Aspire one is absolutely gorgeous. It doesn’t share the HP Mini-Note’s extravagant metal shell, but slip it from its tiny box and it’s got curves in all the right places. Our review unit came in pearly white, but it’s also available in a rich shade of royal blue, a welcome contrast to the plain black and white of the Asus Eees. Whatever colour you eventually choose, though, the smooth lines and the little flash of colour on the lid’s hinges all coalesce into a surprisingly attractive whole.

And when you glance at the Acer Aspire one’s price, that surprise may just spill over into amazement. Where other manufacturers have ignored the Eee’s humble laptop-for-£200 beginnings, and consequently found that their £300+ price tags are treading on the toes of fully-fledged laptops, this, the most lowly of Acer’s five specifications, costs just £191. It also offers an assortment of hardware and vital statistics that easily trumps Asus’ most frugal of Eee PCs, the 701.

The basic specification consists of one of Intel’s Atom N270 processors running at 1.6GHz, 512MB RAM, an 8GB solid-state drive, 802.11bg networking and Linpus Linux Lite as the OS of choice. It’s not a specification to get the pulse racing - we’d have liked Draft-N and Bluetooth - but given the modest demands of Linpus’ OS, it’s still plenty enough for the core tasks expected of it - mail, word processing, internet browsing and media playback.

And, talking of the OS, Linpus Linux Lite shows some promise. The front end isn’t visually as neat as that of the Asus Eee, but it does much the same job. Programs are divided into four main headings: Connect, Work, Fun and Files. The usual suspects such as Mozilla Firefox and OpenOffice are present and correct and Asus has opted to use its own proprietary email client, dubbed Aspire one mail.

More reading here

Comments

lightpost on 16 July, 2008 at 4:19 am #

My system running PCLinuxOS plays DivX and VOB files quite nicely, either via Kaffeine, VLC or SMPlayer. Not sure what the deal is with the preview model’s lack of codecs for those formats, but it’s most definitely rectifiable. ;)

At least it seems to me that Acer has put more effort into their Linux system (a customized Linpus Lite) than Asus has with its own virtually-neglected “appliance” OS (a customized Xandros).


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