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Acer Aspire 752 Netbook Ditches Intel Atom Z520 For CULV
Update: Hands on from Netbooknews.de. It uses the 1410 / 1810T series chassis, not the Atom based 751H. Video below in German. It’ll be priced at 399 Euros and have the lower capacity battery (4400mAh, I suppose). Coming soon.
Acer has a new product coming soon: The Acer Aspire One 752. It’s not a totally new beast, in fact it uses ...Read More
Acer Aspire 1410 (aka 1810T) on sale in US now

Acer’s latest ultraportable notebook, the Aspire 1410 – the US version of the Timeline 1810T – has shown up for sale at CostCentral. Priced at a reasonable $460.33, the 11.6-inch 1,366 x 768 notebook packs an Intel CULV 1.4GHz Core 2 Solo SU3500 processor and 2GB of RAM into a slimline casing strikingly similar to that of the Acer Aspire ...Read More
Sony announces VAIO W… netbook!
Sure, the Japanese press release translates to “internet book,” but there’s no mistaking that 10.1-inch screen and 1.6GHz Atom running Windows XP on 1GB of RAM: Sony’s new VAIO W is a netbook, folks. We’re not sure how or why the company decided to enter this market after six months of hawking the overpriced VAIO P and insisting that netbooks ...Read More
Acer Aspire One AO751h reviewed — sweet battery life, sad CPU marks
Acer’s 11.6-inch netbook — the Aspire One 751h — has been available Stateside since mid-May, and Laptop’s spent some quality time with it, delivering a full review. Overall, they found the nice, large screen to be welcoming, and the battery life (on their 6-cell configuration) was fantastic — clocking in at over seven hours. They were, however, pretty disappointed in ...Read More
Acer shows off Android on a netbook, sneaks Firefox into the proceedings
After confirmation of basement experimentations, and then a surprising announcement of product, Acer’s now actually showing off an Android-powered netbook at Computex. Acer is careful to say that this isn’t their actual Android netbook in the flesh, they’re just the Aspire One D250 as a test platform. Naturally, startup and shutdown times are fairly rapid (eighteen seconds up, one second ...Read More




