The Acer Aspire S7-393 Review: Broadwell Comes To Acer's Ultrabook
by Brett Howse on October 5, 2015 8:00 AM ESTWireless
Like many Ultrabooks that shipped this year, Acer uses Intel’s networking solution, which is the Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 model. Performance has not been as good as Broadcom, but it has also been a pretty stable card as far as connections.
The Acer S7 has better than average performance with the Intel solution. It is still not quite as fast as the Broadcom models, but at over 400 Mbps it is a strong showing. There is of course no room for a full RJ-45 port on a notebook this slim, so users wanting to use a wired connection would have to resort to a USB adapter for this.
Speakers
Acer has stereo speakers mounted on the bottom of the notebook, like many other Ultrabooks around. It is not an ideal location due to the sound being directed away from the user, but Acer has tapered the sides of the notebook where the speakers are to try and allow some room there for the sound to get out.
Like most Ultrabooks, the sound quality is certainly not theatre level. The S7 is actually a bit low on volume compared to most other devices, coming in at a peak of around 75 dB(A) playing music, with an average range closer to 70 dB(A). This could be by design though, since I could not detect any distortion even at maximum volume. SPL levels are measured with the meter 1 inch over the trackpad.
On the software side, the Realtek codec is augmented with Dolby Digital Plus software, which allows you to set custom equalizer settings, or use some of the pre-configured ones. It also gives you the ability to use a surround virtualizer, a volume leveler, and a dialogue enhancer through software, which are nice touches when trying to watch movies in a quiet environment.
Noise
One area that has been a big win for Acer is the cooling system. At idle or light workloads, the Acer S7 is completely silent. I could not detect any noise at all on my sound meter. There are designs out in the wild that have a faint background whine of fans even at idle, so this is a great start.
The Acer excels even more under load though. After a gaming session, the SPL level went up only 7 dB(A) over the noise floor in my room, which is about 35 dB. 42 dB at load for a notebook, especially one this thin and light, is a great result. The cooling system seemed to have no issues keeping the 15 Watt Broadwell CPU under control.
Software
When I reviewed the Acer Aspire R 13 convertible notebook, I was somewhat amazed at how little software was installed on the R 13, and even commended Acer for that fact. Unfortunately, it appears that I had received a Microsoft Signature version of the R 13, because the S7 model is as loaded down with software as anything I have seen in recent times. The task bar is so full of shortcuts that anything you open instantly compresses what is there since there is no more room for icons.
The desktop is not much better, cluttered with plenty of cruft that really has no place on a premium notebook. In fact, many of the shortcuts are just web links to thinks like booking.com and ebay.
Software is one way that a company can try and differentiate itself from the competition, but in the case of the S7, the differentiation is for the detriment of the product.
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smorebuds - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
the hyperbole is strong with this onecgalyon - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
While "perfect" is probably an understatement, it was quite good, except the keyboard. I make no exaggeration when I say that it was not possible to type much more than a short word without having to make a correction. People were modifying registry files in an attempt to compensate (by changing the latency between detected key presses)DanNeely - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
I'm a bit surprised that Acer would want you to review a Broadwell model now when Skylake is out. Was this laptop stuck in your todo queue for a while?lmcd - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
Most of Skylake is a connectivity upgrade, no? Which would be lost on a unit like this, with nearly no connectivity to speak of.DanNeely - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
That's true for desktop processors. On the mobile side, improvements to power management and a bigger IGP have potential to make significant improvements to some performance numbers.lilmoe - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
Acer probably got a better deal for those parts...p1esk - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
Those specs at that price would be OK back in 2012. But now? At $799 it could sell a few. At $999? Meh, no thanks. At the asking price? You gotta be completely crazy.kmmatney - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
I'm pretty sure Intel is charging up the nose for the Intel Core i7-5500U - easily adds a few hundred to the price over an i5.solipsism - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
May I request when detailing the USB ports going forward to make clear if it's USB-A or USB-C.lilmoe - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link
"Something pretty remarkable is that Acer has sampled us nearly identical Aspire S7 models for the past three generations"I would have gotten excited here since I wanted a good comparison between Haswell and Broadwell in terms of efficiency. But I'm not sure if even this is a good comparison since you're not using the same browser for battery life tests. Edge is the most efficient browser on Windows.
It would have been nice if you also posted battery tests using IE for this particular product since you have identical specs other than the CPU.
On to the product itself, dat screen is seriously awful... The price tag is a bit high. Otherwise, not too shabby.