It technically doesn't start for another day, but CES is in full swing in Las Vegas. As part of the fun, Acer is bringing us the thinnest Ultrabook yet: The Aspire S5. This 13.3" class laptop measures just 15 mm at its thickest point and weighs in at under 3 lbs. Specs get thin from there, the Intel Core processor, SSD and sealed battery are a given; what we don't know is the size of the battery nor the price or release date, though Q2 2012 is promised. What draws our eye more than the thinness lies beneath what's being called a "MagicFlip I/O" port panel. In an homage to the original MacBook Air, Acer is including a concealed panel for connectivity beneath the display hinge. Where the original MBA, though, made do with a single USB port, the Aspire S5 features HDMI, USB 3.0 and Thunderbolt, a first for a non-Apple laptop. Rated at 20 Gbps, the Thunderbolt port could be driven by Intel's Eagle Ridge chip, or it could be a newer Cactus Ridge part we'd been waiting to encounter. We'll be sure to report in when we get our hands on one. 

Acer's mainstream Timeline family of laptops are getting thinner and lighter than ever before. Tacking the Ultra modifier to their name is not just a marketing ploy, these 14" and 15" laptops measure just 20 mm thick, promise an 8 hour battery life and even manage to squeeze in an optical drive. The chassis is attractive and roomy enough for a full sized number pad on the 15" model. As with the Aspire S5, details are slim at the moment, we do know that an SSD/HDD storage option will be available and a Q1 2012 ship date is promised. 

There is no shortage of online lockers to store files in the cloud. That's not stopping Acer from developing an integrated solution for all of its products. Called AcerCloud, the new service promises seamless access of files stored either on remote devices or in the cloud. This fuses the concept of the 'personal cloud' and cloud storage in general, and mimics offerings like Motorola's MotoCast and DropBox. Services are a different beast than consumer products, and execution is key. Data loss or service interruption can be costly, and it will be interesting to see how Acer performs in this new role. AcerCloud will be featured on all Acer consumer PCs starting in Q2 2012 and the software will be compatible with all Android phones and tablets, with plans for a Windows Phone version at a later date. 

Speaking of tablets, Acer teased though they did not formally announce their latest tablet, the Acer Iconia Tab A700. Thoroughly leaked late last year, the new slate is no less surprising for its 1920 x 1080 10.1" display, the first of what we expect to be several such Android tablets. Though nowhere near Retina Display caliber, the 218 ppi pixel density easily bests other Android tablets. Powered by NVIDIA's Tegra 3 quad-core SoC, clocked at 1.3 GHz, and running Android 4.0, the tablet should give stark competition to Asus Transformer Prime. We'll have to wait to sometime in Q2 2012 to see who comes out on top. 

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  • MagickMan - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    Looks nice without being a MBA ripoff. Props to Acer, well done.
  • ananduser - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    There is no such thing as an "MBA ripoff". That is a fallacy usually reiterated over and over by fanbois.
  • etamin - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    Agreed. The basic "thin and light" design existed well before MBA, only the parts were not available to execute it. Apple only gets the credit of being the first to do so on a mass scale. Concepts are always years/generations ahead of reality.
  • Penti - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    Looks like it could be a good ultrabook let's see if they screwed anything up with it in any major sense. Looks like we could have some to expect on 2012 in this field. Would be interesting to see what they do with the business lines of notebooks too.

    Personally I would look forward to something like a ~13-14" ultrabook with high-res screen of at least 1600x900, Ivy Bridge, mSATA SSD, USB 3.0 and maybe thunderbolt or ethernet with a good touchpad and a platform fast enough for all but major gaming. DP out would be a requirement as I guess Intel won't support more then 1920x1200 over HDMI still. I fully expect a machine like that (given the price tag of over 1000 dollars) to be a fully functioning main machine and desktop replacement. I bought and have a 600 dollar Clarkdale based 11.6" machine as an ultraportable when I thought it was time for one some time ago. From Ultrabooks I expect something more then 1-1.4GHz dual-core Intel processors with integrated graphics and low res screens. Specially regarding the price, CULV is not something new now. Fully expect integrated graphics though, but that should be enough if they don't strangle the part and Ivy Bridge should be fine for every day use and multimedia and media creation that isn't overly cpu or GPU/GPGPU intensive. With good video decoding and encoding support, basic 3D/2D acceleration for applications with proper working drivers and all that. Couldn't really expect more like gaming any way. Not even in 15" cases. Let's see if we can get some IPS, PLS, PVA or AFFS-panels in laptops 2012 too. We might have to skip 24bit-panels but at least we should have decent viewing angles.
  • tim851 - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    Looks very, very nice and high quality. And no glossy plastic, is this the end of Taiwanese obsession with all things shiny?

    Yet, Acer has always managed to screw up their laptops ever so slightly. Looking forward to what it is this time.
  • Peskarik - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    This thing will stand or fall with screen quality and resolution.
  • KZ0 - Monday, January 9, 2012 - link

    The manage to cram a 1080p display into a 10" tablet, but most 15" notebooks are still stuck with 766p, where resolution matters more. Let's hope that will see some changes during CES.
  • ray577 - Thursday, August 2, 2018 - link

    Cloud computing is the new IT world. Now every IT infra is moving to Cloud and they are more robust than traditional IT. I love working on these technologies. https://www.unilexconsultants.com/start-a-business...

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