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Acer Aspire 2920Z (Pentium Dual-Core T2330 Processor 1.6GHz, 2GB RAM)

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List price as of Mar 10, 2008:
S$1398

Product Summary


Excellent

8

out of 10

View score

The good: Good connectivity options; reasonable performance for the size.

The bad: Speakers aren't great; no digital video-out.

The bottom line: The Aspire 2920 should suit most people who are on a budget and like to stay portable, but still need a bit of grunt. If it had an HDMI port, it'd almost be the perfect solution.

Read full review of the Acer Aspire 2920Z »

 

Average User Rating

from 4 users


Spectacular

8.8

out of 10
 

How would you rate this product?

 
 

CNET Asia Review

By Craig Simms, CNET.com.au

Acer's Gemstone laptops haven't changed in design since we last looked at one--the lid is still a deep black with inset sparkling material, and the interior still all militaristic angles in cut, with semi-futuristic blue lights and the drab "ceramic" grey interior. The design is actually quite sharp and enduring. We just wish Acer would go for a different base color. We're told the interior is to receive a refresh shortly, so we wait with anticipation.

Editors' note :
This review is based on tests done by our sister site CNET.com.au. As such, please note that there may be slight differences in the testing procedure and ratings system. For more information on the actual tests conducted on the product, please inquire directly at the site where the article was originally published. References made to some of other products in this review may not be available or applicable in Asia. Please check directly with your local distributor for details.


Design

The 2920 needs to reorganize some elements compared to the rest of the family, purely because it's a smaller, 12.1-inch screen laptop. Acer's Empowerment software is accessible via the blue gemstone button in the top left, while a strip of blue lighting below this shows when the hard drive is being accessed, and when scroll lock and num lock are turned on.

To the top right are the quick access buttons, allowing you to launch Acer's Arcade Deluxe (Acer's built in media center software), turn wireless on or off, and run the Web browser, email, or turn Bluetooth on and off. A blue ring-lit power button is nestled right in the middle, between the indicator lights and quick launch buttons.

At the bottom, the extra wide touchpad is fantastic to use, and the mouse buttons responsive. There are indicators for whether the system is active, sleeping, or charging on the bottom left.

The screen looks good for the size, and although it suffers the usual shallow vertical viewing angles exhibited by laptop screens, is brilliant in color, and we quite enjoyed watching movies on it. It offers a 1,280 x 800 resolution. Mounted into the top of the screen are a 1.3-megapixel camera and microphone.

In comparison to its bigger cousins, the speakers are located on the lip, facing the user instead of directly under the monitor. The sound is passable, but don't let the Dolby badge fool you--these are still laptop speakers, and you'll get better results out of plugging in a good set of headphones.

Features

The 2920 bristles with ports for its size: Three USB ports, one Express Card 54, SD/xD-Picture Card/MS card reader, S-video and VGA-out. There is, very disappointingly, a lack of digital video-out, especially when the trend these days is to offer an HDMI port. A DVD+-RW is positioned on the right-hand side, while at the front is a headphone and microphone port, as well as an analog spin-wheel for adjusting the volume. The hot air vent is positioned on the back, meaning that an external mouse can be used without your hand heating up.

Connectivity is a case of all checkboxes ticked: 802.11a/b/g/n, Bluetooth, Gigabit Ethernet and 56k modem mean you should be able to communicate wherever you are.

Performance And Battery Life

Featuring an Intel GMA X3100 as the graphics card means this is an applications-focused laptop and not a gaming one, although the Core 2 Duo T7300 and 2GB of RAM means it will be very good at what it's intended for. Along with the 250GB hard drive it will satiate most users' needs.

3DMark06 gave back a very lackluster 582, but as mentioned this is not a gaming machine. The more important PCMark05 scored 4018, so unless you're going to be doing some crazy-level Photoshop work or need extreme performance, this machine will certainly fit the bill. Battery time during DVD playback was reasonable considering the extra grunt, clocking in at 1 hour 43 minutes, with all power-saving options turned off and screen brightness set to maximum.

The Aspire 2920 should suit most people who are on a budget and like to stay portable, but still need a bit of power. If it had an HDMI port, it'd almost be the perfect solution.

Service And Support

This desktop comes with a local one-year onsite warranty from Acer. Once the product has been registered on Acer's Web site, a technician will be sent to repair any hardware-related problems with the system. Users who wish to perform their own troubleshooting have access to an online FAQ, with an option to fill up a Web form for specific issues not previously addressed. Updated drivers and patches can be downloaded from the Web site. For greater peace of mind, Acer offers an additional two years of warranty for S$199 (US$140.49).

 

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Acer Aspire 2920Z (Pentium Dual-Core T2330 Processor 1.6GHz, 2GB RAM)
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User Reviews

acer



Rating: 10 out of 10 (Perfect)
Pros: It’s the size of the Aspire 2920 that first catches your eye. Measuring in at 304 x 223 x 32mm, it’s not exactly a sub-notebook or MacBook Air, but the Acer is certainly on the smaller end of the scale. The 2.04kg weight suggests that the 2920 might find a home in your hand luggage when you go travelling
Cons: It's powerful, provided you don't intend to play games
Opinion:
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) X3100: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) X3100 is an integrated (onboard) graphic chip on a Mobile Intel 965GM chipset. It is the successor of GMA 950 and features a fully programmable pipeline (supports Aero Glass fully and DirectX 10 with newest drivers). The peformance of the X3100 is clearly better than the GMA 950, still demanding modern games won't run fluently.

Only older games can be played fluently with these graphics chips (if they were not too demanding). Shared memory graphic cores in this category got the advantage of less heat production and longer battery runtimes. For office, internet, image processing, and video editing tasks these graphics chips are still useable without any restrictions


 

Great balance of size, weight, power and cost



Rating: 9 out of 10 (Spectacular)
Pros: Compact, sufficient power, feels solid, nice screen
Cons: Dull colour, wifi can struggle in poor reception areas
Opinion:
I wanted something portable but with a bigger screen and keyboard than an Acer One/Asus EeePC, but not as big as a full-strength lap top. The 12.1" format is an ideal balance of compact dimensions and useability for me.

I was also looking for good value, as all laptops become outdated sooner or later. The 2920Z was ideal for me.

The keyboard is nice to use, the mouse-pad is excellent and the screen is good. You need to get just the right viewing angle though, otherwise the colours look washed out. Microphone and camera also good for conferencing. Detail layout a little messy, but you get used to it.

A good, solid machine with compact dimensions, reasonable weight, good power at a very reasonable price.

 

small wonder



Rating: 8 out of 10 (Excellent)
Pros: price to size ratio
Cons: reliability?
Opinion:
Acer & taiwanese company in general is good in leveraging their sourcing wit VS production cost that they could offer to sell at a lower cost (compared to Lenovo X300..etc), except for HTC who wishes to grab a higher profit margin. if this product could offer more in the reliability department or may even incorporate approaches made on the Panasonic toughbook, then consumer's won't want anything else anymore (except upgrading of course). bottomline is, this product sets a good price per feature/functionality, plus it comes in a smaller package at 12-inch screen that challenges even the UMPCs & bridges the gap between ultraportables (Asus Eee) & notebook PCs.

 

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