Acer Aspire Timeline AS1810TZ-4013 11.6-Inch Black Laptop – Over 8 Hours of Battery Life
- 1.3GHz Intel Pentium SU4100 Processor
- 3072MB DDR2 667MHz Memory
- 320GB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive, Intel WiFi Link 1000 802.11b/g/Draft-N
- 11.6″ HD Widescreen CineCrystal LED-backlit Display, Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD
- Windows 7 Home Premium, Over 8 Hours of Battery Life
Product Description
Acer Aspire Timeline AS1810TZ-4013 Notebook comes with these specs: Intel Pentium Processor SU4100, Windows 7 Home Premium, 11.6″ HD Widescreen CineCrystal LED-backlit Display, Mobile Intel GS45 Express Chipset, 3072MB DDR2 667MHz Memory, Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD, 320GB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive, Integrated Acer Crystal Eye Webcam, Multi-in-1 Digital Media Card Reader, 2nd Generation Dolby Sound Room Audio Enhancement, Intel WiFi Link 1000 802.11b/g/Draft-N, Bluetooth 2.1+ EDR, 3 – USB 2.0 Ports, 1 – HDMI Port, Convenience Buttons- Multi-Gesture Touchpad, 6-cell Li-ion Battery (5600 mAh), 8+ hours of battery life, 3.08 lbs. | 1.4 kg (system unit only), AC Power Adapter, AC Power Cord, Wireless Setup Card, Registration/ Limited Warranty Card, McAfee Internet Security Suite (60-day insert)Amazon.com Product Description
Averaging more than 8 hours of battery life, the Acer Aspire Timeline notebook PC series makes “all day computing” a … More >>
Acer Aspire Timeline AS1810TZ-4013 11.6-Inch Black Laptop – Over 8 Hours of Battery Life
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5 comments
dss702 on December 7, 2009 at 2:34 am
Nice little laptop – 11.6″ screen is nice size – good hardware specs, and pretty quick for such a small machine – when it worked. Got BSOD first time I turned it on, which gave me a bad feeling from the get-go… After that, got BSOD every time it would turn on or wake from sleep, and finally wouldn’t boot at all. Returned after 3 days. Maybe it’s just bad memory modue, but ACER doesn’t seem ready for prime-time.
M. Dubelko on December 7, 2009 at 4:13 am
I just received this a few days ago. It’s an AS1810T. It seems like a great product, although I haven’t used it much because I’m not sure if I will have to return it. The problem is that the fan runs constantly when plugged in, and although it’s not really loud, it’s just loud enough to be annoying. The moment I unplug it, the fan becomes totally silent. I would like to have it plugged in while at home in order to get the increased performance.
I’ve been trading emails for 5 days with customer support at Acer (there is no such thing as a telephone number to call)and they are totally brain dead. I’ve asked 4-5 times if the fan should be running 100% of the time when it’s plugged in, and they keep evading the question, and are giving me advice like “unplug the keyboard and mouse”, “check to see if any peripheral devices are noisy” etc. I’m really angry at this point and not sure if I will keep the machine.
The other thing that’s a bigger factor than I thought is the glossy finish on the case. Looks good when freshly polished, but it looks really smudgy the rest of the time, almost like you were eating french fries and then wiped your hands on the case.
Clarice Bader on December 7, 2009 at 5:07 am
I love this computer.It is so lite to walk around with.It is so fast with windows 7 and I do not have to recharge for 8 to 10 hours. I would like to get touch screen on it. I am told I would need some drivers. I am still working on that. I think this is a great computer, even the keyboard is large for the 11.6 size. Buy it!
Adam C on December 7, 2009 at 5:53 am
You may consider this one instead. Speaking of my own experience, I bought two Asus 1005HA netbooks last month and found them nothing but frustrating. Don’t be fooled by the Mhz thing like I did. Sure those netbooks have a higher clock 1.66GHz instead of this one 1.3 but they actually are much much slower in real world computation. In addition this one has a 11.6″ 1366×768 res lcd which will save you a lot of scrolling. With about the long battery life, the same weight only slightly longer in length and width but actually thinner, the only draw back is $150 or so, but hey you get a dual core real cpu, 3G RAM, 300G hd, Win 7 Home, a more useful screen res…
David Smith on December 7, 2009 at 7:21 am
I’m a home theater tech and wanted a compact new machine to run my various calibration and remote programming software in the field. After trying a netbook which was annoying: actually too light, smaller keys were bad. It had good processing power, but people considering netbooks should know-a lot of your existing software will not install because of the limited screen resolution!
This machine however is the perfect compromise between the laptop and netbook. Full size keys, a joy to use and good processing power for smooth operation on most apps. I’m gonna be lovin’ the 8 hr battery life when in the field! As long as you don’t need an onboard optical drive I can’t recommend it enough. It was trouble free copying my programs to a USB thumbdrive and installing from there.
I was pleasantly surprised by Windows 7, after trying and avoiding Vista MS has listened to people and made a smooth, easily customizable OS that is not a resource hog. Great machine!