We look back with some amusement to the time when Acer launched its Gemstone
chassis, used by the 7720G.
The chunky grey chassis was praised as beautiful by Acer, but in our eyes
this is one of the ugliest we’ve ever used.
It has awkward lines, the LCD’s bezel is too wide and it looks like a cheap
prop off the set of a 1960s Star Trek episode. The weight, 3.55kg excluding and
4.1kg including power adapter, is also a bit on the heavy side.
Another problem lies with the keyboard which, we discovered, won’t accept
more than three key presses simultaneously, whereas the
Rock Pegasus
710-T7700 easily coped with eight presses before problems.
Pressing three keys at once might not sound like your everyday scenario, but
if you’re a fast typer you may hold down multiple keys for a fraction of a
second, meaning letters sometimes don’t appear after a key press, and gaming is
out of the question unless you plug in an external keyboard.
That aside, this £799 is a very good price for an HD DVD enabled notebook. We
were surprised to not see a single HD DVD drive in our recent high-definition
group test, but Toshiba has since informed us it is ignoring individual drive
sales and is aiming for big manufacturer sales, selling thousands to the likes
of
Acer
and
Rock.
The HD DVD drive is read only, rated at 1x, but it’ll write to all DVD media
including DVD-Ram. Playing back high-definition content looks great on the 17in
screen. The LCD is far better than the Pegasus 710’s, producing a bright, good
contrast picture with reasonable viewing angles. The 1,440x900 resolution means
1080p content will get scaled down but you can connect a bigger screen via the
HDCP-enabled DVI output, although you’ll probably need an HDMI-DVI dongle.
Speakers are excellent for a notebook though; a subwoofer on the bottom, like
on the Pegasus 710, and Dolby-certified speakers give real kick for a small
device.
A big flaw with HD DVD playback is that Acer pushes you through the Cyberlink
Arcade Deluxe software. It’s cumbersome, slow to respond and less flexible than
a proper version of Cyberlink PowerDVD. The graphics card, an Nvidia Geforce
8400M GS, isn’t particularly good either - AMD’s Radeon HD 2600 mobile chipset
would be better, as video processing to reduce noise and jaggies isn’t the 8400M
GS’s strong point.
It has 256MB of dedicated memory and scored 3,067 in 3Dmark05 and 26fps
(frames per second) in Fear at 1,024x768 and high detail settings. The 7720G
will be fine for the occasional game at lower resolutions. Other hardware
includes a Santa Rosa-based Core 2 Duo T7300 processor, running at 2GHz, with
2GB 667MHz DDR2 Ram.
For storage, Acer has fitted two 5,400rpm 160GB disks, each with its own
controller, so there’s no Raid.System performance was exactly what we’d expect
from a Core 2 Duo T7300-based system, scoring 4,491 in PCmark05 and 2,952 in
PCmark Vantage, our new Vista-optimised benchmark.
Battery life was rather lacklustre, staggering to 68 minutes in the DVD
section of Mobilemark07 and two hours 24 minutes in the Mobilemark Reader test.
The high-definition war hasn’t been won yet, but £799 for an HD DVD notebook
doesn’t seem such a big gamble. HD DVD has such a strong following that we doubt
it will ever disappear.
The Aspire 7720G is great value for money, but the hefty design and poor
keyboard means we can’t recommend it wholeheartedly.
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