Acer Aspire One D150

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The new 10in. Aspire One D150 will further cement Acer's lead in the netbook market, largely on account of its competitive price.… Read full review

Typical price: £260
Editors' rating:
  • 7 out of 10
7 out of 10

Pros

  • Inexpensive 10in. netbook
  • Decent keyboard
  • Very good battery life

Cons

  • Heavy for a netbook
  • Terrible touchpad and mouse buttons

Despite owning a huge chunk of the growing netbook market, the popular Acer Aspire One has been saddled with a 9in. screen, rather than the bigger 10in. type we prefer. At long last, Acer now has a 10in. model, the Aspire One D150. Even better, it's keeping the starting price at £299 (inc. VAT, or £260 ex. VAT). 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 competitive pricing.

With the basic Intel Atom/1GB RAM/XP setup, you'll get a similar experience to using a netbook such as the HP Mini 1000 or Lenovo S10, but there are a handful of trade-offs for the Aspire One D150's price. Although  the keyboard is large enough for comfortable typing, the tiny touchpad and mouse buttons (on a flimsy rocker bar) are painful to use. Also, while the extended six-cell battery runs for up to 6 hours, it makes the whole package relatively heavy. Note that our test unit had a slightly beefed-up six-cell battery compared to what it will finally ship with.

Netbooks were originally intended as cheap, no-frills travel machines, and the new Aspire One D150 fits that bill well, but there are also plenty of slightly more expensive options that add polish.

The new D150 is available in blue, white, red and black. Our review unit was 'sapphire blue', with a glossy lid and a matte, slightly textured finish on the keyboard tray. Although the new Aspire One has a footprint similar to other 10in. netbooks, such as the MSI Wind, it's significantly thicker than the slim HP Mini 1000, and also heavier, thanks to the bulky battery.

Acer's £299 Aspire One D150 boosts the screen size from 8.9in. to 10.1in.

The first Acer Aspire One we looked at was a 9in. Linux model, and while the D150 model has a larger chassis and screen, the keyboard is virtually identical. Despite not having as comfortable a keyboard as the Samsung NC10 or HP Mini, we did appreciate the inclusion of dedicated PgUp and PgDn keys.

The touchpad is one of the few giveaways that this is a budget netbook. It's tiny and square, with a very small rocker bar below it, instead of traditional left and right mouse buttons. Getting it to properly register a click is a pain: you need to press really hard, as the contact seems to be deeply embedded in the chassis.

The 10.1in.,wide-screen TFT display offers a native resolution of 1,024 by 600 pixels, which is standard for netbooks. It's certainly readable, but most documents and web pages will require some scrolling. Bright and clear, the new bigger display is the main selling points of Acer's updated Aspire One.

The Aspire One D150 has a typical set of ports and connections for a lower-end netbook. Trading up to a more expensive system from Lenovo or HP can net you useful extras such as Bluetooth, an ExpressCard slot or even faster 802.11n Wi-Fi. Bluetooth is especially useful for syncing a smartphone for mobile broadband connectivity.

With Intel's 1.6GHz Atom N270 CPU, specifically designed for low-power netbooks, you get enough computing power for basic tasks, such as web surfing, working on documents and some basic multimedia playback. As expected, the Aspire One D150 performed on par with more expensive recent netbooks, such as the HP Mini 2140 (and slightly faster than Sony's VAIO P, which is saddled with Windows Vista). We'll soon be seeing the first notebooks with a faster version of the Intel Atom, the N280, which may expose some major fault lines in netbook performance (or not, as small clock-speed bumps are often inconsequential).

With the six-cell extended battery, teh Aspire One D150 weighs 1.33kg.

The system ran for an impressive 6 hours and 17 minutes on our video playback battery drain test, using the included six-cell battery. Note that our test unit had a slightly beefed-up battery (5,800mAH versus 5,200mAh or 4,400mAH options on the spec sheet), and we'll retest with an official six-cell battery when we get our hands on one. The trade-off, of course, is the system's weight and size; the extended battery is heavy and sticks out from the back.

The Aspire One D150 includes an industry-standard, one-year warranty; telephone support is available for both in-warranty and out-of warranty products (the latter charged at 50p per minute).

 

Benchmarks

Acer Aspire One AOD150
Windows XP Home SP2; 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270; 1024MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 224MB Mobile Intel GMA 950; 160GB Hitachi 5400rpm

HP Mini 2140
Windows XP Home SP2; 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270; 1024MB DDR2 SDRAM 800MHz; 224MB Mobile Intel GMA 950; 160GB Toshiba 5400rpm

Sony VAIO P
Windows Vista Home Premium SP1; 1.33GHz Intel Atom Z520; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 128MB Mobile Intel GMA 500; Samsung 64GB SSD

Dell Inspiron Mini 9
Windows XP Home Edition SP3; 1.6GHz Intel Atom; 1024MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 64MB Mobile Intel 945 Express; STEC 16GB SSD


Specifications

Audio
Audio processor Intel High Definition Audio
Microphone yes
Speakers stereo
Audio connectors microphone, headphone
Battery
Battery technology Li-ion (6-cell)
Battery capacity 5800 mAh
Estimated battery life (mfr) 7 h
Number of batteries supplied 1
Max batteries supported 1
Cabinet (chassis)
Case form factor small form-factor clamshell
Dimensions (W x H x D) 26.0x3.34x18.5 cm
Weight 1.33 kg
Colour sapphire blue
Display
Display technology colour TFT (LED-backlit)
Display diagonal size 10.1 in
Maximum resolution 1024x600 pixels
Expansion slots
Flash card multiformat
Hard drive storage
Hard drive interface type SATA
Hard drive type standard
Hard drive size 160 GB
Input
Pointing devices 2-button touchpad
Keyboard 84 keys, 1.6mm travel
Interfaces & networking
USB 3
Ethernet 10/100Mbps
VGA (analogue) 1
Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (optional)
Wireless LAN 802.11b/g
Wireless WAN HSPA (optional)
Memory
RAM installed 1024 MB
Number of memory slots 1
RAM capacity 2 GB
RAM type DDR2 SDRAM
Miscellaneous
Accessories AC adapter
Other Acer Crystal Eye webcam
Motherboard
Chipset Mobile Intel 945GSE Express
Data bus speed 533 MHz
OS & software
Operating system Windows XP
Software included Acer eRecovery Management, Acer Launch Manager, Adobe Reader, McAfee Internet Security Suite, Microsoft Office Trial 2007
Processor
Processor manufacturer Intel
Processor model Atom N270
Clock speed 1.6 GHz
Level 2 cache 0.5 MB
Service & support
Standard warranty 1 year
Service & support details International Traveller's Warranty
Video
Graphics processor Intel GMA 950
Graphics memory technology Dynamic Video Memory Technology
Expand

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The Aspire One D150 has a 10.1in. TFT display with a native resolution of 1,024 by 600 pixels.

The Aspire One D150 comes in a range of colours: our review unit was 'sapphire blue'.

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