Acer Aspire 1705 SCi

A notebook on steroids, the Aspire 1705 SCi has a 3.06GHz desktop-class processor, a 17in. display and a full-size keyboard. It’s worth considering for company meeting rooms or home use, but there are credible alternatives for both scenarios.… Read full review

Typical price: £1199
Editors' rating:
  • 7.5 out of 10
7.5 out of 10
User rating:
  • 7.8 out of 10
7.8 out of 10

Pros

  • Large 17in. screen
  • full-size keyboard with number pad
  • fast desktop-class processor
  • fast, high-capacity hard disk
  • copious ports and connectors.

Cons

  • Very bulky and very heavy
  • poor 3D acceleration
  • short battery life.

Acer was the first PC manufacturer to announce a notebook with a 17in. screen. Since then a number of others, including Toshiba, have followed suit, but the Aspire 1705 SCi is the first system we've had in for review. Can any computer with an integrated 17in. display really be called a notebook? Perhaps it can. However, any use of the term 'portable' with reference to this 7.1kg monster will certainly raise eyebrows.

Acer was the first PC manufacturer to announce a notebook with a 17in. screen. Since then a number of others, including Toshiba, have followed suit, but the Aspire 1705 SCi is the first machine we’ve had in for review. Can any computer with an integrated 17in. display really be called a notebook? Perhaps it can. However, any use of the term ‘portable’ with reference to this 7.1kg monster will certainly raise eyebrows.

Design and features
Obviously the first thing to note about the Aspire 1705 SCi is its massive size. Although it looks about twice the size of an average notebook, this isn’t strictly true. In fact, the actual measurements of 37.8cm wide by 32cm deep by 5.5cm high aren’t enough to accommodate two tiny JVC MiniNotes. Even so, it’s a bit of a monster to look at, and at 7.1kg you certainly won’t want to carry it far. A computer for working with on the train or taking on business trips this is not. There are two likely two uses for a notebook with a 17in. display. In the office, the Aspire 1705 SCi could have a role in meetings, particularly where presentations are required. The screen delivers a huge viewing area in comparison to other portables, and if you add 802.11b wireless networking (as fitted on our review sample), you have a computer that can hook into the company LAN to download presentations and other data. In the home, the Aspire 1705 SCi could attract those who don’t have the space for a powerful desktop system, or would like to move their computer between rooms regularly. The processor, a 3.06GHz Intel Pentium 4 is accompanied by 256MB of SDRAM which you can boost to 2GB via twin 1GB modules. The hard drive, an area where desktop replacement notebooks often disappoint, is a desktop-class 120MB Maxtor unit with a rotational speed of 7,200rpm. The display itself delivers a native resolution of 1,200 by 1024 pixels (SXGA+). The image quality is clear and crisp, and working with multiple documents open should be no more or of a less of an issue than it is with a similarly sized desktop display. It is an issue, though, that it takes a while to move the cursor around the screen using the touchpad with the default settings. You may need to adjust the mouse settings in the Control Panel to get things just right. It’s a pity Acer hasn’t made this easier by supplying an applet to do the job. On the plus side, the touchpad incorporates a rather good scroll key which supports left and right movement as well as up and down. In our review system, the 17in. display was driven by an SiSM650 controller, which is integrated into the SiS 962 chipset. This commandeers up to 64MB of system RAM for its purposes, and performs fine for 2D applications. However, its 3D performance is poor (see below), so don’t look to this configuration if you’re a keen gamer. Because there’s so much width in the casing, Acer has managed to fit in a 103-key keyboard including a separate number pad. The keys have a light touch, and touch typing is no problem. Heavy spreadsheet users will find the number pad extremely useful. Acer has certainly gone to town with ports and connectivity. On the right-hand side there are two FireWire ports, one supporting miniature connectors and the other standard sized. There’s also a pair of USB 2.0 connectors on this side, plus microphone and headphone jacks, and the DC port. The left-hand side provides housing for the DVD-ROM/CD-RW combo drive with which our review unit was supplied. There’s also a floppy drive and a single Type II PC Card slot. All this is fine, but given the amount of space available, it should have been possible to include a CompactFlash card slot too, but Acer has not pursued this option. The back of the system is well populated with connectors, too: there’s a further two USB 2.0 ports, an RJ-11 modem jack, an S-Video connector, VGA out, a serial port, an RJ-45 Ethernet connector, a parallel port and a PS/2 connector. It’s nice to see PS/2 supported, even though there are four USB ports. Home users, in particular, may want to play high-quality audio through a computer like this, and to that end the stereo speakers on the front of the casing are supplemented by a subwoofer. A bank of buttons on the front allows you to control audio volume, the playing track, and even implement a shuffle play mode. This could prove useful in both work and home settings.

Performance & battery life
With a 3.06GHz Pentium 4 processor, 512MB of RAM and a 7,200rpm hard disk at its disposal, you’d expect the Aspire 1705 SCi to run mainstream and high-end applications pretty quick -- and you’d be right. In fact, its Business Winstone 2001 and Content Creation Winstone 2002 scores of 70.5 and 43.3 respectively are now the fastest we’ve recorded from a notebook -- although, as the specification makes clear, calling this system a ‘notebook’ is stretching things somewhat. As mentioned above, 3D graphics isn’t this system’s strong point, thanks to the limited power of the integrated SiS M650 controller: a 3DMark 2001 score of 1,134 just isn’t going to cut it games-wise. Fortunately, Acer offers a range of beefier 3D options from Nvidia, including a GeForce 4 448Go and a pair of GeForce FX Go models (5600 and 5200). Although you’d be mad to carry this 7.1kg monster anywhere beyond the reach of a desk and a mains plug, there may be times when battery powered operation is required. If so, you won’t get much work done: BatteryMark 4.01 recorded just 1 hour and 54 minutes, although you should be able to boost this to over 2 hours by dimming the screen and adjusting other power management settings.

Conclusion
Given its specification, the Aspire 1705 SCi makes an expensive home computer. You can get more for your money if you go for a traditional desktop replacement notebook -- and home users should bear in mind that it’s more difficult and costly to upgrade a notebook than a proper desktop system (and some upgrade options simply aren’t available). For business use, on the other hand, we can see a niche for a system like this in presentations and meetings, where the large screen and ability to connect to a wireless network are distinct advantages.

Benchmarks

Specifications

Audio
Audio processor Realtek AC'97 Audio
Microphone yes
Speakers stereo + sub-woofer
Audio connectors microphone, headphone
Battery
Battery technology Li-ion
Cabinet (chassis)
Dimensions (W x H x D) 37.8x4.7x32 cm
Weight 7.1 kg
Display
Display technology colour TFT
Display diagonal size 17 in
Maximum resolution 1200x1024 pixels
Expansion slots
PC Card 1 x Type II
Hard drive storage
Hard drive interface type Ultra ATA/100
Hard drive size 120 GB
Rotation speed 7200 rpm
Storage controller Ultra-ATA/100
Input
Pointing devices two-button touchpad with four-way
Keyboard 103 keys
Interfaces & networking
Serial 1
Parallel 1
USB 4
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 2
Ethernet SiS 900-based PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter
Modem Agere Systems AC'97 (56Kbps)
VGA (analogue) 1
Video out S-Video
Docking station port no
Wireless LAN LAN-Express IEEE 802.11 PCI Adapter
Memory
RAM installed 512 MB
Number of memory slots 2
RAM capacity 2 GB
RAM type SDRAM
Motherboard
Chipset SiS M650/962
Data bus speed 400 MHz
Optical storage
CD / DVD read speed 24x CD
CD / DVD write speed 10x CD
CD / DVD rewrite speed 8x CD
OS & software
Operating system Windows XP Home
Software included Acer Launch Manager, Norton AntiVirus 2003, Acrobat Reader 5.0, CyberLink PowerDVD with DIVX codec technology, NTI CD Maker 6 Gold
Processor
Processor manufacturer Intel
Processor model Pentium 4
Clock speed 3.06 GHz
Service & support
Standard warranty 2 years
Service & support details 1 year International Travellers
Video
Graphics processor SiS M650
Graphics RAM 64 MB
Expand

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Member reviews

Get the SMi version with the proper graphics card: if you can stand the weight and don't expect to use this like a normal laptop, it's great value for money.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
11 September, 2003 13:28
Reply

Wanted the features, didn't have much money (I'm self employed), was prepared to lug it around. Only travel interstate twice a month so it's OK.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
17 September, 2003 05:45
Reply

This is my home entertainment and communications system when I’m on the move. (40 weeks a year) The screen is bigger than that most Hotel TVs and the sound is also good for a notebook, though at this size the description “notebook” just doesn’t do it justice -- it’s more like a family bible. It really is a portable PC for ideal people who live on the road but who don’t need to move it around on a daily basis -- for that I have a 3lb Dell.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
11 October, 2003 14:48
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
29 October, 2003 16:31
Reply

The video card must be improved otherwise it is excellent!,but expensive!

Member's rating:
  • 7.00 out of 10
7.00 out of 10
14 November, 2003 20:02
Reply

I've got the 1705Smi (3.06GHz, 120GB HDD, 512MB DD-RAM, 128MB GeForce, wireless LAN, DVD-R/RW). The specs are really impressive. The software is also superb. But firstly, I had a stuck pixel at nearly the center of the screen, and a subpixel on the center upper side. I returned the machine the next day. Acer Italy wanted to see the machine and the dealer I bought it from sent the notebook to them. Two weeks later I received my "repaired" device; they replaced the LCD screen. Unfortunately it has a stuck pixel, too! And this time it's near to the right edge of the display. Therefore it cannot be replaced with a warranty. A good thing that it's not a "stuck" pixel really. It's viewable only on an all-black screen, all-blue display and during DVD watching. Anyway, it’s quite annoying to have such a thing on a machine you pay US$2,500 for. Two defective LCDs in a row is quite a lot for me. I also have a Toshiba Satellite 3000-400. The screen is not so bright but it's pixel-free and the sharpest display I've ever seen. I spend sometimes 7-8 hours with it, and it is always comfortable on my eyes. Only for that reason I think I'll go for a Toshiba again next time... Apart from my subpixel problem, this DeskNote has no other weaknesses. "VERY" bright screen (I had to make a gamma correction since the brightness is really high even on the lowest level, and I mean it); perfect software; very, very fast; has numeric keyboard (same as desktop ones); great sound features; impressive 128MB GeForce 5600 with 4x AGP... it's a dream machine! Don't forget, it is not really portable. Buy it only for a desktop replacement and I hope you find a dead/stuck/subpixel-free one. If anyone from Acer reads this and wants to offer me a replacement, I would appreciate it! :)

Member's rating:
  • 7.50 out of 10
7.50 out of 10
19 November, 2003 14:07
Reply

Had this one for 5 months, and haven't had an ounce of trouble from it! Haven't yet found the microphone, (see specs!) -- and one criticism of the numeric keyboard is that you lose the use of Home/Pg Dn/Pg Up/End/Ins/Del -- a minor irritation, but annoying when you forget to Num Lock. All told though - a cracking machine! (If anyone finds a case to fit this monster, please let me know!)

Member's rating:
  • 9.00 out of 10
9.00 out of 10
9 December, 2003 20:27
Reply

Very impressed; every function performing well.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
11 February, 2004 13:28
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 5.50 out of 10
5.50 out of 10
4 March, 2004 15:33
Reply

I just don't know why they use that power-hungry P4 when there are fast enough processors that draw far less juice. The reason for the short battery life is that stupid processor.

Member's rating:
  • 6.00 out of 10
6.00 out of 10
4 March, 2004 18:44
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
22 March, 2004 13:59
Reply

Good product, good performance for great price.
Mine does not have that shared RAM video card, it has a Go5600 -- no problem with that card.
However three disadvantages:
-weight
-keyboard (shift and enter are to small)
-noisy fan
But I am really happy with this computer.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
6 April, 2004 19:51
Reply

Great specs, but the noise is simply horrible -- the fan is on all the time, and after a few hours I have to stop using it.

Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
14 April, 2004 09:32
Reply

A desktop replacement of power
good screen , good speed ,
DVD backup (with backup my pc.) Its a very effective piece of kit if you need the power or want to future proof a bit in a non-64 bit kind of way. No real complaints .
battery life cannot support power so xtra supply needed for portability (away from plugs!)

Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
1 August, 2004 21:29
Reply

too noisy!!!

Member's rating:
  • 6.50 out of 10
6.50 out of 10
16 March, 2005 19:23
Reply

Ideal for the presentation work I need and the hard drive backs up my desktop better than anything else around. It's the tops for me.

Member's rating:
  • 9.00 out of 10
9.00 out of 10
14 April, 2005 03:14
Reply

Over all the spec for this machine is excellent. But its rating is lowered by the terrible support and quality of parts. I bought this laptop on 29/10/03. It arrived with a dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen (not covered in the guarantee). Within 6 months the DVD failed. It took Acer a month to agree to repair the fault and another month to repair it. Another 6 months pass and the DVD fails again, same fault. I couldn't afford to send it away (I use it for business) at that time, so after 4 months without a DVD I send it back. Meantime both fans fail, and the monitor catch breaks.

Acer have had the machine for two months with no word from them as to what is happening. I have tried phoning and emailing but the do not reply. I found out from another source that this machine and all its spare parts are no longer available. SO DO NOT BUY. I sit and wait to see if I ever get my machine back.

Member's rating:
  • 5.00 out of 10
5.00 out of 10
19 April, 2005 15:45
Reply

very good laptop, has everything needed

Member's rating:
  • 9.50 out of 10
9.50 out of 10
24 September, 2006 20:56
Reply

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