Acer releases new low-cost mobile workstation

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Mar 3, 20042 mins

Low price expected to ease concerns about notebook's weight

Acer America Corp. came out with a new notebook Wednesday that offers the performance of a workstation at a price that helps make up for the system’s significant weight, the company said in a release.

Heavy desktop replacement notebooks are nothing new to the PC market, having driven much of the consumer demand for PCs over the past year. True mobile workstations for traveling business customers, however, are generally more expensive than the $1,499 Acer Aspire 1710 introduced Wednesday.

At that price, the Acer notebook includes a 2.8GHz Pentium 4 processor from Intel Corp., a 17-inch widescreen display, 512M bytes of memory, an 80G-byte hard drive, a DVD-ROM/CD-RW combo drive, a GeForce FX Go5700 graphics card from Nvidia Corp. with 64M bytes of video memory, and built-in 802.11g wireless LAN technology.

Dell Inc. offers a low-end configuration of Precision Mobile Workstation M60 for $2,446, but it features Intel’s Pentium M mobile processor, more memory, and a higher-end graphics card. Hewlett-Packard Co.’s nw8000 Mobile Workstation also comes with the Pentium M processor and more memory than the Acer system, but is priced at $2,699 in a low-end configuration.

The Pentium M is more power sensitive than the desktop Pentium 4, preserving battery life in mobile systems. Intel’s newest Prescott Pentium 4 processors are especially power hungry, compared to older versions of the Pentium 4.

Acer will release other configurations of the Aspire 1710 with the Prescott processors. The base configuration of the notebook comes with the older Pentium 4 processor based on the Northwood core.

The miserly power consumption of the Pentium M also allows the notebook manufacturers to make lightweight systems. Desktop replacement notebooks with desktop processors need more elaborate cooling technology and heavier heat shields to protect the system against the heat given off by the processor.

The Aspire 1710 weighs 15.7 pounds (7.1 kilograms), much more than the Dell or HP systems. Dell’s Precision M60 weighs 7 pounds while HP’s nw8000 weighs about 6.5 pounds.