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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

Acer introduced the TimelineX series of laptops in its Aspire range a couple of years ago, separating them from the flock by their extraordinary battery backup. Acer continues to manufacture TimelineX series laptops, now using newer components with the latest Intel's second generation Core processors. The Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb was sent to us for a review. It was obvious for us to expect a good battery life and a better performance. The review will tell you whether or not this TimelineX lived up to our expectations.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

The Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb.


Design And Features
The Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG instantly mesmerises you with its slim profile at just 24 mm thickness. The sturdy blue body is constructed out of plastic and aluminium with a rich brushed finish. The 15.6" 1366x768 LED backlit panel is just 6 mm thick at the bezel. The screen and the bezel have glossy finish, which easily gathers dust and fingerprints. The hinge of the lid is pretty sturdy, making it unnecessary to have a lock to secure it. It can open up to 150 degrees wide.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

The TimelineX is noted for its slim profile.


Acer has changed the type of keyboard to chiclet-style in this iteration of the TimelineX laptops. This is a full size keyboard with a separate Numeric pad. The keys are comfortably spaced and have a good tactile feedback. The direction keys seem to be too small, though it is hardly a negative to be considered. Function keys double as keys to handle special functions using the "Fn" modifier key, which allows them to be used to perform tasks such as switching between displays, toggling wireless on and off, multimedia functions, etc. The main ENTER key is deliberately made larger so that you don't miss this oft used key, while the SPACEBAR is of perfect length. The touchpad supports multi-touch and has a clearly demarcated vertical scroll zone. It is intelligently placed right below the SPACEBAR, thus reducing the chances of the palm from accidentally touching it.

A backlit Power button is present just above the keyboard towards the left corner, while the right corner has two blue LED indicators to conveniently indicate the status of CAPS and Numeric lock. There is also the PowerSmart button, which can switch the laptop to operate in a power saving mode to maximise the battery life, although in this mode, the screen becomes too dim to work without straining your eyes. A 2.0 speaker system is present behind the perforated metallic strip at the centre. Acer mentions that these are professionally tuned with Dolby Home Theater 4.0 certification.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

The laptop has a comfortable chiclet-style keyboard.


Three USB 2.0 ports are provided side by side on the left side of the laptop to connect peripheral devices. A DVD-RW drive is situated next to them to take care of tasks related to optical discs.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

Ports on the left side.

The ventilation grills are flanked by a Kensington lock slot on its left and various ports on the right. These ports include a Gigabit Ethernet port, a D-Sub port to connect older monitors, an HDMI port for HDTV output, a SuperSpeed USB 3.0 port marked by its blue plastic interior and audio jacks for microphone and headphones. The USB 3.0 port in this laptop supports charging of devices such as mobile phones and media players even when the laptop is switched off.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

Ports on the right side.

A multi-memory card reader slot has been provided at the front. Various LED indicators for power, hard drive activity, and Wi-Fi are present just besides this. This laptop also has a battery gauge button with an LED at the centre. This button lets you find out the battery charge status by pressing it, even when the laptop is switched off. The LED at the centre of this button glows red if the battery is low and blue when it is charged.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

Indicators and battery gauge button on the front.

Ventilation grills are present at the bottom of the laptop for hot air exhaust. RAM can be upgraded from the 3 GB to 8 GB by opening the panel secured by screws. The laptop comes with a six-cell battery with the manufacturer rating of 6000 mAh. Unfortunately, the battery is concealed and cannot be replaced or upgraded by the user.

The laptop is powered by an Intel Core i5-2410M dual-core hyperthreaded processor running at 2.30 GHz, with 2.90 GHz Turboboost. It comes with 3 GB DDR3 memory and a 500 GB 5,400 RPM hard drive. The graphics subsystem is handled by NVIDIA Optimus technology, which intelligently switches between the Intel onboard and NVIDIA GT 540M graphics to manage performance and battery life. You can also force the graphics processor to be used with an application via the context menu.

Acer provides Windows 7 Home Premium with this laptop. It also provides MS Office 2010 Starter Edition along with a 30-day trial version of McAfee Internet Security Suite and a few backup tools, disc burning utility, Acer GameZone Console, etc, to make sure that the laptop can be used right after you buy it without having to install anything extra.

Performance
Thanks to the powerful processor and graphics, the laptop exhibits an overall sound performance. Watching movies and listening to music is not a problem because of the good set of speakers, and the crisp screen. Since it is not a 1080p display, any 1080p content played on it is scaled down to the native resolution, thus reducing the system load.

Gaming performance of this laptop is decent with the GT 540M aptly handling medium to high settings in most games. We tried Battlefield: Bad Company 2, which yielded around 30 fps at high settings with 4x MSAA. Similarly, Dirt3 also performed without any problem. One possible reason for the good performance is that the display resolution is limited to the display's native resolution of 1366x768. The laptop does get quite hot after around 15 minutes of such gaming, after which the CPU throttling invariably steps in and reduces the gaming performance.

Windows Experience Index shows that this system is more powerful than many a desktops.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

Windows Experience Index.


Synthetic benchmark results are as follows:


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

PCMark 7 score.


Review: Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb

3DMark 11 score.

The PCMark 7 and 3DMark 11 scores are indicative of a powerful system, easily capable of serving as a desktop replacement.

Display Performance
The 15.5" screen reproduces images with good colour and contrast. Gaming or viewing fast-paced movies is not an issue, thanks to a fast response time. However, the screen is plagued by extremely narrow viewing angle, which means that the colours cannot be viewed uniformly on the entire display from any viewing position.

Audio Performance
Audio performance was found to be exceptionally good, although it had an understandably limited bass component. The audio is very clear with dialogues crisply audible. Probably thanks to Dolby Home Theater 4 certification, the speakers present an excellent soundstage with the audio seemingly enveloping you - something quite unexpected of a pair of speakers placed less than 30 cm apart. Overall, the 5830TG exhibits an excellent positional audio performance.

Battery Life And Power consumption
We measured the battery life by actually using the laptop and also by Battery Eater Pro. While using it, we chose the Balanced power scheme of Windows 7 and performed regular tasks such as using a word processor, surfing the internet using Wi-Fi, listening to occasional music and video. The laptop lasted for around 8 hours and 26 minutes, which pretty much corroborates Acer's claims of the long battery life.

The Battery Eater Pro test results did not disappoint either. The two tests run in this utility are the Reader's test which simulates real-world reading scenario, while the Classic test uses OpenGL rendering to simulate heavy usage such as gaming. The battery backup lasted for 4 hours 4 minutes in the Reader's test, while it lasted for 2 hours 23 minutes in the Classic test. The Battery Eater Pro results put it on par with the Acer Aspire AS5755G in the Reader's test, but put it far ahead in the Classic test.

The laptop consumes around of 62 W when stressed to the limit. During regular activity with the Balanced power scheme of Windows 7, it consumes an average of just 18 W. This means that the entire laptop consumes as much power as a regular 23" LED monitor.

Verdict
The Acer Aspire TimelineX 5830TG-2413G50Mnbb presents a tremendous desktop replacement option while exhibiting extraordinary battery backup. Students who live in hostels and working professionals who are on the move would find it appealing due to its workhorse capability and good multimedia performance. A good gaming experience with the discrete graphics and excellent positional audio is a bonus. There are a few negatives as well, but these fade in view of the positives offered by the 5830TG. The laptop is priced well at a street price of Rs 41,295 with a 1-year International Travellers Warranty and free Transit Insurance.

NVIDIA GeForce LAN Tournament Comes To India

Planned anything important for 14th October? You may want to reschedule unless it happens to be more important than prizes worth Rs 10 lakh on offer at the NVIDIA GeForce LAN event. The LAN party projects a mammoth capacity of 1000 maximum participants, replete with gaming rigs sporting "NVIDIA Geforce GTX graphics processors". The game roster includes Counter Strike 1.6, Call of Duty 4, FIFA, NFS, and GTA. Interestingly, NFS and GTA will have separate "for girls" only events.

However, what's even more interesting is that NVIDIA may have found the one thing missing in Indian gaming - Shah Rukh Khan. Not only will the winners personally receive prizes from the "King of  Bollywood", but the event also vaguely promises "a chance of trying your skills against megastar gaming fanatic Shahrukh Khan!". With NVIDIA expecting 1000 gamers for the one-day event, I wonder how many will actually get to go mano-a-mano with Khan. Hopefully, this gimmick should, at the very least, fulfil the quorum for the girls-only gaming events.

The NVIDIA GeForce LAN event is open to everyone. Click here to register. There's no word on the event location and prizes, but the organisers have promised to reveal more information as the event draws near.



NVIDIA GeForce LAN Tournament Comes To India



FIFA 12 Midnight Launch With Game4u


Pop quiz: What's common between marksmanship, chess, and spelling bees? These are games that Indians excel in, and not coincidentally, the ones involving the least physical activity. It's little wonder then that most Indians prefer playing football over most other games. By that, I obviously mean the multi-platform video game from Electronic Arts.

Another year and another FIFA game. This time around, FIFA 12 will get the proper midnight launch treatment, courtesy of Game4u. Mega Mall, Oshiwara (Bombay) will throw open its doors for FIFA fans on September 30, 2011 (Thursday night) precisely at 12 AM. While the first customer to buy the game will get a 1st to own certificate, everyone who picks up a copy at the midnight launch will also receive a Rs 500 voucher redeemable at any Planet Sports Bombay outlet.

Game4u has also scheduled the Score & Win contest, which will be hosted at four of its stores in: Mega Mall (Oshiwara, Mumbai), Infiniti Mall (Malad (W), Mumbai), VIVA (Jalandhar), and MBD (Ludhiana). The contest starts 30th September and goes on till 2nd October, 2011. One who scores the highest number of goals and beats the current top scorer, stands to win undisclosed, but "cool" freebies from the video game retailer.

Bounce Boing Voyage Nokia N-gage Review

I grew up playing a lot of 2D games - Double Dragon, Mario, Contra, Top Gun, Green Beret, and so on - and till today, I rank these way up on my list of games. There is something really unique about 2D games; they have a different appeal. A few years back, I played the original "Bounce." It was a fun game and reminded me of "Dangerous Dave," another 2D classic. The latest version of Bounce ditches its classic roots and takes on a 3D avatar; this may not go well with everyone, but to be honest, the developers have created something very special. Bounce 3D is the perfect mobile game. It's simple yet challenging. It's vibrant, fun, and has tremendous replay value.
 




Bounce follows a simple concept; you have to reach from point A to B, and your only special ability is "Jump." The levels are beautifully designed and suit the core gameplay. While reaching your destination is easy, an important factor is collecting brightly colored spheres, which can be found throughout the level. Some of the spheres can be found very easily, while some others are harder to get. The hidden spheres add quite a bit of replay value, as you will find yourself often going back to previous levels to collect more spheres, and thus, getting a better score. The score can then be posted online. It will be compared with that of others and result in an online rank/position. Consoles have been following the ranking strategy for years, but it's rather new in mobile gaming.




The controls are easy to use and completely customizable; you can even tilt and rotate the screen, which is a great option. The superior level design strikes a great balance; there are times when you will be rushing downhill like you do in Sonic, and then there will be times when you take it slow and solve a puzzle. In the second half of the game, you gain the ability to transform yourself, turning from a spongy ball to a solid rock. The transformation is on-the-go and adds a completely different dimension to the gameplay. The second part of the game is less about bouncing and more about breaking into objects, hence the transformation into a rock.




The game looks really good for a mobile game and can easily pass of as a Nintendo DS title. The levels are designed very well and the presentation is quirky; overall, this is a great game, apt for mobile gaming.