Acer, Gateway, and Lenovo

I've gone through just three companies' worth of PR and images, and I'm only about half way through the CES laptop announcements. Rather than delay this further to sort through Sony, Toshiba, Samsung, and other companies, I'm going to wrap things up here with a few other quick blurbs. I'll see about adding the other companies I just listed in the near future. For now, here are a few last words about Acer and Gateway.

Gateway Pine Trail and CULV

Gateway sent me some images and details on a few of their new laptops. The Gateway LT21 is another 10.1" Pine Trail netbook with battery life listed as 8+ hours. It weighs 2.76 pounds and should be available shortly for around $350 MSRP. It comes in three colors, the red LT2118u, black LT2119u, and the white LT2120u.

Gateway also announced an update to their EC series, with the more interesting option being the new EC14D. It's an 11.6" laptop, but it manages to cram in an optical drive along with other standard CULV options. Pentium SU4100, 4GB DDR2, 320GB HDD, and a 1366x768 LCD are available later this month for an MSRP of $630. Meanwhile the EC58 is an alternative to the EC54 with a 15.6" LCD (still running at 1366x768). Pricing for the EC58 starts at $650.

Acer Arrandale

Like everyone else, Acer has some Arrandale (Core i3 and i5) notebooks to announce. The Aspire 5740 starts at just $750 with a Core i5-430M (2.26GHz + 2.53GHz Turbo). That's not the fastest Core i5 CPU by any stretch, but it will compete very well against older Core 2 Duo processors. The 5740 has a 15.6" 1366x768 LCD, 4GB DDR3-1066 RAM, 500GB 5400RPM HDD, 8X DVDR, and all the other usual features like Acer 802.11n WiFi. It also includes an ATI HD 5650 GPU for decent gaming performance, with the all-important ability to switch to integrated graphics in order to cut power and improve battery life. Weight is just over 6 pounds and battery life is listed as up to 4 hours - not a lot, but it's good for a 15.6" laptop that provides good performance.

The Aspire 7740 is a larger 17.3" chassis that is also priced at $750, but with some changes in the components. It uses a Core i3-330M CPU (2.13GHz and no Turbo), and it drops the discrete graphics on the base model. In contrast it adds a 1600x900 LCD and a Blu-ray drive, along with Intel WiFi 1000 networking. It weighs just over 7 pounds with battery life of up to 3.5 hours. Other models of the 5740 and 7740 will have different components and pricing, naturally.

Lenovo - More to Come!

We close with some parting shots from Lenovo. We already discussed some of the new ThinkPad designs from Lenovo (included in the above gallery are a few new images), and Lenovo isn't through with interesting new concepts. Lenovo announced on Wednesday the first hybrid laptop for consumers, the IdeaPad U1. What's a hybrid laptop? At first blush it looks like a tablet PC, but the catch is that it has two complete CPUs/OSes. The screen contains a Qualcomm Snapdragon ARM processor, and you can remove the display from the rest of the chassis and carry it around. The OS for the tablet is Lenovo's customized Skylight OS (which will also appear in the Lenovo Skylight 2 lbs. alternative netbook this spring), and it synchronizes with the Win7 OS on the main body when connected. Battery life for the tablet portion is listed at 5 hours for 3G Web browsing or up to 10 hours when idle. The IdeaPad U1 will be available in the summer.

MSI's Latest Laptops
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  • SlyNine - Saturday, January 9, 2010 - link

    On Dells site they have the XPS 16 studio, but it only has the 4670 1gig, not bad but not new.
  • Wolfpup - Friday, January 8, 2010 - link

    Darn, I was dying to see what Asus has. And I hope Dell fixes the USB and throttling issues on the M15x...wish that came with these new options, but I doubt it.
  • JarredWalton - Friday, January 8, 2010 - link

    We already covered a bunch of ASUS stuff a couple days ago:

    http://www.anandtech.com/tradeshows/showdoc.aspx?i...">http://www.anandtech.com/tradeshows/showdoc.aspx?i...

    I have a few other pics I can add to that, but other than the Essentio CG5275 I don't have anything to add. The CG5275 is a Core i3/i5 gaming laptop with GTX 260M... I don't know anything else right now.
  • 5150Joker - Sunday, January 10, 2010 - link

    Wow you deleted my comment about Dell's Alienware M15x throttling? Is Anandtech a shill website now?
  • 5150Joker - Sunday, January 10, 2010 - link

    Nevermind, my mistake. It didn't show until I had to clear the cache.
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, January 10, 2010 - link

    Honestly, without personal verification of the problem, I leave it to the users to talk about this sort of thing. This article was just a rundown of various laptop updates seen at CES and nothing more. Anyone looking to spend $1500+ on a laptop really ought to spend some time reading multiple reviews and attempting to find out if there are any known problems.

    Your issues with the M15x are duly noted and if we ever get another one for testing we'll try to replicate the problem. Would I buy a 15x, though? With or without the throttling concern, there are a lot of other laptops that would be higher on my list.
  • 5150Joker - Saturday, January 9, 2010 - link

    I sent you an e-mail regarding the M15x throttling problem before. It would be nice if Anandtech mentioned it before users go out and buy one and discover their $3000 shiny new toy throttles in their favorite games.
  • mschira - Friday, January 8, 2010 - link

    Yea, well I know Arrandale is the next big Intel thing, but I can't help I am not to excited.
    I can see that integrating the stuff into the CPU is the way to go, but that's not what they have been doing here.
    I mean they didn't really move the memory interface into the CPU like the Core iWhatever numbering should imply.
    What they did is they shrunk the Core 2 to 32nm and the Northbridge to 45nm, then sticking them on one die.
    And the new integrated GPU sucks like every Intel GPU sucked ever since they started making them.
    Since they didn't put the memory interface on the CPU (why by the way? AMD does it since forever and GPU in the northbridge still works), they should have left the Northbridge outside the Chip casing so NVIDIA could still offer their better GPUs.

    Pitty that all is.
    M.



  • MrSpadge - Saturday, January 9, 2010 - link

    You didn't understand what Arrandale is. It is a "full Core i7", just with 2 cores instead of 4. You get everything: HT, the new cache system as well as new instructions. And it's the same excellent memory controller. Yes, it's not on the CPU die, but it's not connected via a limiting FSB either. It's connected via a "fast enough" on package link (much shorter and thus easy to implement) between GPU and CPU die. Sure, the graphics is not for 3D, but it does anything else in a power efficient way. It's free, so why complain? Want to game -> external GPU. Everyone else -> enjoy less power consumption.

    Just take a look at the performance of i7 860 versus i5 660: in typical apps their're almost similar, as they both turbo to similar clock speeds.

    MrS
  • mschira - Saturday, January 9, 2010 - link

    "It is a "full Core i7", just with 2 cores instead of 4."
    Nope. It isn't. The memory controler is NOT in the CPU die, but in the Graphic/Northbride chip.

    So it's simply not a full Core i7. If it was I would be very excited. But it isn't.
    M.

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