Acer Puts AMD Chips into Aspire One Netbooks
Acer has updated
two netbooks in its Aspire One line, offering evidence, should anyone still
need it, that gone are the days of netbooks as low-powered couch surfers.
The Aspire One AO521 and AO721 each feature AMD
Athlon II Neo processors and ATI Radeon HD
4225 graphics with 384MB of dedicated memory.
"Users can vigorously multitask, even with visually intense, high-def
applications, while freely exploring the Internet, sending and receiving
emails, watching videos and playing games-all on the go and untethered from a
power source," Acer officials said in a statement June 18, in what hardly
read like a statement on netbooks.
With the Aspire One AO521, users get a 10.1-inch CrystalBrite LED backlit
display, a keyboard that's 93 percent full size, 1GB of DDR3
memory and an up to 250GB hard drive. It measures just shy of 1 inch thin,
weighs 2.75 pounds and runs Microsoft's Windows 7 Starter.
The AO521 is offered in glossy shades of black or brown-while the larger AO721
comes in matte black, with a meshlike finish that's said to limit fingerprints
and smudges.
The Aspire One AO721 also features a high-definition, 11.6-inch CrystalBrite
LED backlit display, a full-size keyboard, 2GB of DDR3
memory and an up to 250GB internal hard drive. It's less than an inch thin,
weighs approximately 3 pounds and runs Microsoft's Windows 7 Home Premium
operating system.
With either the AO721 and the AO521, users will get 802.11b/g/n, Ethernet LAN
and Bluetooth connectivity, as well as a Webcam and digital microphone for
video conferencing, and HDMI connectivity for connecting to an HDTV.
And for easy navigation, each netbook also features a Multi-Gesture touchpad,
for pinching, flicking and swirling one's way through Web pages and documents.
Both netbooks are now available at popular retailers, the 10-inch AO521 for a
starting price of $349.99 and the 11.6-inch AO721 starting at $429.99.
Acer is the No. 2 PC market share holder worldwide, and in the first quarter of
2010 it shipped 12 million units-preceded by Hewlett-Packard and followed by
Dell. In the U.S.
market, however, tight competition between Acer and Dell pushed Acer to third
place, with its 2.7 million units following the Texas-based PC maker's 4.1
million units, according
to April data from Gartner.
