TOP 3 Acer aspire one laptop Reviews
Posted in Cell Phones & Plans on August 16th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to commentToday,Mambate laptop batteries give you top 3 acer aspire onelaptop review,Welcome:
Reviews From PCworld
The Aspire One is also fairly well constructed. The hard, candy-colored exterior (it comes in a number of hues; my favorite: Sapphire Blue) is fairly polished and feels solid to the touch–certainly tough enough to withstand being tossed in your bag. And a huge, well-secured bezel keeps the 8.9-inch, 1024-by-600-pixel display in place. The screen itself, though, is a little too glossy. Even with the brightness cranked up, you might find it tough to see outside. Then again, many full-priced, full-featured notebooks stumble with the same problem
Reviews from Cnet
Despite owning a huge chunk of the growing Netbook market, the popular Acer Aspire One has been saddled with a 9-inch screen, rather than the bigger 10-inch type we prefer. At long last, Acer now has a 10-inch model, the Aspire One AOD150 battery,acer laptop battery. Even better, it’s keeping the starting price at $349, which is about $50-$100 cheaper than similarly configured systems from other PC makers. The Aspire One series has been neither the best nor the worst Netbook out there, and Acer’s market share to date has largely been based on its lower retail-price strategy.
Excellent portability
As you would expect from a sub-notebook, the Acer Aspire One is designed with portability in mind, although the decision to opt for a 3-cell 2200mAh battery as standard does work against it slightly.
Even so, the options for forcing the processor to run at 800MHz are easily accessed, and the brightness settings for the 8.9-inch screen are genuinely usable as opposed to a gimmick.
512MB of RAM would be a tight squeeze for Windows, but is fine for the custom Linpus installation, so there’s no excessive caching either. And even if there were, the SSD won’t impact performance in quite the same way that a traditional hard drive would.
The tiny chassis doesn’t have a lot of room for ports, although even here Acer has been reassuringly sensible. There are three USB ports in total, along with a pair of card readers.
The one on the left-hand side is labelled as Storage Expansion, as it seamlessly integrates this as part of the main storage area. The slot on the right hand side acts like a traditional card reader, and accepts a surprising array of memory cards.








