acer v5-552g-x414 review
The Acer V5-552G-X414 is an all-purpose laptop that looks nice, boots fast, and delivers more than enough everyday performance for the average user. It renders movies smoothly on its 15.6-inch, 1366-by-768-pixel display, and it plays a good game up to a resolution of 1024 by 768. The keyboard is better than average, but the touchpad isn't a favorite.The Acer V5 weighs 4.41 pounds—just over 5 pounds when you add its AC adapter—and is handsome in a minimalist fashion. Our test unit appeared entirely in slate gray except for the black keys on its short-throw keyboard—one of the better keyboards I've tried (if not quite up to Lenovo or recent Dell quality).
The $630 configuration Acer sent is built around an AMD A10-5757M CPU, with integrated HD 8750M graphics. Throw in 6GB of memory and a 5400-rpm, 750GB hard drive, and you have a notebook that scored a pedestrian 124 on PCWorld's Notebook WorldBench 8.1 test suite. Subjectively the unit feels snappy enough while on AC power, but less so when it's trying to preserve battery life. Most of our test games, however, were playable at 1024 by 768 resolution, which isn't something we can say about all laptops in this class.
Beware: Bloatware onboard
The V5 has all the ports and connectivity options the average user is likely to need. On the right side are the headset jack, SD card slot, and a single USB 2.0 port. The left has only a single USB 2.0 port and the power button. The back has a USB 3.0 port, an ethernet jack, and both HDMI and what Acer calls a converter port. The converter port offers VGA connectivity via a $25 dongle. The V5 also features 802.11 a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 4.0+HS. The Webcam is a 720p model that delivers a smooth picture.The Acer V5-552G-X414 is a viable everyday laptop, and it's more than viable when it comes to playing movies and low-resolution games. But the bendy feel of the touchpad continued to irk even after I'd had a few days to acclimate to it. And the inability to easily access the hard drive or memory stymies one of my usual suggestions for most users, which is to go cheap on the CPU and upgrade overall performance with an SSD (a component that's not available as an option at the time of writing).
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