Minggu, 27 Mei 2012

Review Acer ASPIRE 4810T

This is one of my Laptop. As part of Acer’s new Timeline range, the 4810T makes a good initial impression. Slim and clad in sombre grey plastic, it’s a surprisingly good-looking machine for the money. But while it looks good while closed, it’s a little disappointing to open it up and find the interior is standard Acer fare. The bezel around the screen is dark, matte grey, and the base is an inoffensive gunmetal grey that doesn’t provoke the response the system does when it’s closed.
The 14in, 16:9 screen has a native resolution of 1,366 x 768, which is fine for office work and web browsing. It’s also compatible with 720p HD sources, although there’s no Blu-ray drive. The screen itself is reasonable; you won’t notice its foibles while looking at photos or watching films, but DisplayMate revealed a limited contrast range that will stop particularly bright or dark areas of an image being clear. It’s also irritatingly reflective, so use in a brightly lit office will soon grow tiresome.




The keyboard at first resembles the Scrabble-tile arrangement of recent Sony and Apple laptops. The keys are laid out flat against the base of the system, and we had no problem getting up to speed when touch-typing. The wide channel between each key is a concern, however – with nearly 3mm between each it’s possible that those prone to dropping crumbs will spend a lot of time cleaning their system. The keys are also a bit wide for our liking, and have a shiny, smooth finish which can be tiring to type on for long periods.


The trackpad has had a little attention paid to it, and it supports multi-touch gestures. You can, for instance, scroll down by tracing a circle starting from the right-hand edge, or zoom in or out by pinching. But pinching in Vista is clunky and there’s nothing like the smoothness that you’ll find from the similar feature in Apple’s latest MacBook range. We do, however, appreciate the trackpad on/off button next to the pad, which comes in handy if you find the mouse pointer jumping around while you’re typing.

Elsewhere you get three USB ports, plus HDMI and D-SUB outputs. The 3.5mm headphone port is S/PDIF-capable, although those with high-spec external devices should note the lack of FireWire. There’s no ExpressCard slot either, although there is a 5-in-1 memory card reader squeezed into the tapered front of the machine. And, despite the slimness of the chassis – just 29mm at its highest point – the 4810T manages to include a DVD drive, the eject button for which is at the far right hand side of the base above the keyboard.
But if the 4810T looks a little drab, or we’re unconvinced by the keyboard, we’re willing to forgive it for one reason. In our light use battery test, it ran for a staggering 8hrs 52mins – the equivalent of a full working day with a short commute on top. Even our intensive test, which pushes a system as hard as possible, ran for nearly three and a quarter hours before the battery was exhausted. This kind of battery life is ordinarily the preserve of ultraportables, and is extremely impressive on a laptop which is comfortable to use all day. It even beats Acer’s claimed eight-hour mark by nearly an hour.
Naturally, this comes at the expense of performance, with the Acer returning an overall score in our benchmarks of 0.75. It’s a little behind the times, but nonetheless, you’ll have no problem running heavyweight creative applications. The reason for the slowdown is the low-voltage processor: the Intel SU9400 runs at just 1.4GHz, but on the upside merely sips power with its maximum TDP of only 10W. It also requires minimal cooling, which means the 4810T is comfortable to use on your legs and quiet when it’s being pushed. Performance is aided by 3GB of RAM, and storage is provided by a 320GB hard disk.















Color:Black
Part Number:LXPBA0X020
Promo:FREE CANON PRINTER MP145
Processor:Intel Core 2 Solo Processor SU3500 (3MB L2 Cache, 1.40 GHz, 800 MHz FSB, 5.50 W) supporting Intel 64 architecture
Chipset:Mobile Intel GS45 Express Chipset
Operating System:Windows Vista Home Premium
Memory:2GB DDR2, upgradeable to 4 GB using dual soDIMM modules
Hard Drive:350GB HDD S-ATA
Optical:DVDRW
Display:14 inch HD 1366 x 768 pixel resolution, high-brightness (200-nit) Acer CineCrystal LED-backlit TFT LCD
Video Card:Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD (Intel GMA 4500MHD) with up to 1759 MB of Intel Dynamic Video Memory Technology 5.0 (64 MB of dedicated video memory, up to 1695 MB of shared system memory), supporting Microsoft DirectX 10
WiFi:Intel Wireless WiFi Link 802.11 a/b/g/Draft-N) Wi-Fi CERTIFIED network connection
Ethernet:Gigabit Ethernet; Wake-on-LAN ready
Modem:56K ITU V.92 modem with PTT approval; Wake-on-Ring ready
Bluetooth:Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (Enhanced Data Rate)
Webcam:Acer Crystal Eye high-def webcam
PC Card Slot:ExpressCard/54 slot
Card Reader:5-in-1 card reader (SD, MMC, MS, MS PRO, xD)
Audio:Dolby Sound Room audio enhancement, featuring Dolby Headphone, Dolby Natural Bass, Dolby Sound Space Expander
I/O Ports:1 x Acer EasyPort IV connector, 3 x USB 2.0 ports, 1 x External display (VGA) port, 1 x Headphone/speaker/line-out jack with S/PDIF support, 1 x Microphone-in jack, 1 x Line-in jack, 1 x Modem, 1 x Gigabit Ethernet, 1 x DC-in jack
Battery:48.8W 6-cell Li-ion battery pack up to 8-hour battery life 2.5-hour rapid charge system-off, 3.5-hour charge-in-use
BIOS:Windows Vista® Home Premium
Size (WxDxH)mm:13.3″ (338.4mm) W x 9.4″ (240.0mm) D x 0.9″ – 1.1” (24.0mm – 28.9mm) H
Weight (Est):1.6 kg (2.5 lbs.)
Warranty:1-year Limited Warranty by Authorized Distributor


Source :
http://www.anugrahpratama.com/product/notebook-acer-aspire-timeline-4810t-352g32mn
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/laptops/252981/acer-aspire-4810t#ixzz1rSQjXYa7

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