The one thing you’ll quickly notices about the Aspire R7 is the arm that holds the screen with the base, something that Acer named “Ezel Hinge”, and it allows to move the display in four different positions: “Ezel Mode” which makes possible to position the screen forward over the keyboard in almost any angle:”Notebook Mode”, “Display Mode”, and “Pad Mode”. You can even flip the screen over to show a presentation — and of course the screen will rotate too. Another noticeable feature is the location of trackpad, this is located behind the keyboard — quite unusual and in an awkward position to use it in the laptop mode, but the thinking behind is that users will spend more time using natural touch and the keyboard. It is also said that there is a lot of tension on the hinge and that allows to move between modes with a single-hand and the display stays steady when touched.
Tech specs
Under the hood of the new hybrid Acer Aspire R7 have some good specs, the device features: a full 1080p (1920 x 1080) ten-point touchscreen, an Intel Core i5 processor and 6GB of memory, a 500GB hard drive and 24GB solid-state drive (which I’ll interested on knowing if they are combining both drives for speed or if one drive is for the OS and the other storage), 3 USB ports, a HDMI port, your typical SD card reader and a VGA, USB and RJ45 adapter. As well as Dolby Home Theater v4 speakers and backlit keyboard.
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Price and availability
The Acer Aspire R7 will be on sale on May 17th, it will be exclusive to Best Buy in the U.S., per-orders is already open (May 3, 2013), and the price will start around $1000. No words yet if there will be a higher-end model with the choice of a Core i7, more memory and bigger solid-state drive.
Although the R7 has a very interesting design and I can actually see myself using this Windows 8 PC, I can’t stop thinking that Acer has borrowed some of the ideas from old Dell’s XPS M2010 model, which was a desktop with similar lines and hinge. What do you think? It looks pretty darn similar, right?
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