Netbook: Acer Inc. Aspire One A150
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Product Details
- cpu
- Intel Atom N270 1600 MHz
- ram
- DDR2 512 MB
DDR2 1024 MB - storage
- 120 GB HDD (5400RPM)
8 GB SSD
16 GB SSD
160 GB HDD (5400RPM) - network
- Ethernet 10/100 Mbps
WiFi 802.11b/g 108 Mbps
Bluetooth 2.0 . - battery
- 3-Cell (3 Hours)
6-Cell (7 Hours) - camera
- 0.3 megapixels
1.3 megapixels - weight
- 990grams
- dimensions
- 170mm x 249mm x 29mm
- operating system
- Linpus Linux Lite
- Windows XP Home
- display
- 1024x600 Glossy 8.9 inches
- keyboard size
- 89%
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Reviews
Good netbook but let down by battery life.
This is a good little machine with a great screen and keyboard but it is let down by the 3-cell battery. I generally get around 1.5 to 2 hours between charges which is annoying. I am running Windows 7 Beta and the performance is fantastic. I bought a cheap 4GB SD card to use as a ReadyBoost drive and it makes a huge difference. Consider buying this with the 6-cell battery.
by Blair Munro on 29/04/2009 10:05:30 AM
Acer Aspire One Review
There are some issues. Shoddy speakers and a trackpad that is more hand-cramping and difficult than doing the secret ant-man handshake with every ant in a colony are the main problems, but the Aspire One does a good job of overcoming them and still offering great performance and usability. It isn’t quite perfect, but it comes damn close and is definitely the most attractive subnotebook we’ve seen since the Eee PC 701 first landed.
by Bit-Tech.net on 23/04/2009 2:36:10 PM
Editors` Rating (Acer Aspire One)
The Acer Aspire One is easily the best of the current under-$400 Netbooks, but its meager allotment of memory and tiny battery limit its appeal.
by CNET on 23/04/2009 2:38:39 PM
Acer Aspire One Review
Acer says the Aspire One is not a laptop. It might look and smell like one, but the company has gone to great lengths to promote the message that the One is an `Internet device`. Others, such as Intel, refer to it as a netbook — a new category of device spawned by the Asus EeePC 701. You, friends, can call it what you want. We`ll stick with mini laptop.
by ZDNet Australia on 23/04/2009 2:41:06 PM
Acer Aspire ONE AOD150 Review
I love it when a company sees fit to shake things up a little and cook up some crazy new design. The Acer Aspire One AOD150 is not that netbook. In fact, many of the changes made from the original Aspire One make the AOD150 seem more like everything else on the market. And that isn`t necessarily a good thing. The new Acer Aspire One has some strong points, but even better netbooks are on the market now, and more are on the way. If you want in on the battery lottery for the long-life battery, then go for it, but even the included battery will give you solid day-long performance, That said, I`d still recommend that you take a peek at what Asus offers with the Eee PC 1000HE. I`m digging that netbook a whole lot more and it only costs a few dollars more.
by PCWorld on 27/07/2009 8:43:20 AM
Acer 10.1-inch Aspire One AOD150
The affordable, stylish, and compact Aspire One catapulted Acer to the top of the heap in terms of market share for the red-hot netbook category. The latest version, the 10.1-inch Aspire One AOD150, is likely to keep the company in the lead. Expanding the original Aspire One’s screen from 8.9 to 10.1 inches, the new Aspire One is nearly as svelte as its predecessor and, even though the keyboard is the same size, its revamped touchpad is a marked improvement over the original. Add in a six-cell battery, which offers 6 hours of battery life, and you have a killer deal for $349. For $349, the 10.1-inch Aspire One AOD150 is an excellent value. It offers a slim and stylish design, good performance, and 6 hours of endurance on a charge. While the similarly configured ASUS Eee PC 1000HE ($399) and Samsung NC10 ($449) have better keyboards and touchpads and last longer on a charge, the Aspire One beats those machines on price. And in the netbook arena, bang for your buck is the name of the game.
by Laptop Magazine on 27/07/2009 8:44:31 AM


