Please wait while the page is being loaded Skip this advertisement >
Saturday | 30 August, 2008
ARN
Acer Aspire M5630 AT370
Jesse Sutton (PC World) 17 October, 2007 14:10:21

Related Stories
  • +

    Life on the EEEdge: Daily life with Asus' tiny laptop 04 January, 2008 07:15:21

    6 annoying things (and 3 great ones) about Asus' ultraportable
    Like many gearheads, I've owned a lot of portable computers over the years -- and I've wanted to replace every last one with a smaller, sleeker upgrade, from the "luggable" Apple IIc onward. But most of those upgrades have left me disappointed: with the lack of software; with cheap, hard-to-use interfaces; and with "optional" add-ons that were in fact very much necessary to make the machine useful.
Additional Resources
ARN Library

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our ARN newsletters!
The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services.
RSS Feeds

Not unlike the rest of us, it seems that Acer has become tired of waiting for the high-definition format war to end and has released the Acer Aspire M5630 desktop PC, a quad-core machine with a combination Blu-ray/HD-DVD drive -- nullifying the need to make a choice between the two competing formats.

Movies filmed at high resolutions (up to 1920x1080) with high quality digital audio require considerably more storage space than a DVD can hold. Two different formats have sprung from this necessity, HD-DVD created by Toshiba, and Blu-ray created by a conglomerate lead by Sony. Both formats use essentially the same technology (a blue-violet laser, rather than the red laser in DVD players, with a shorter wave-length), but vary enough to make them both competitive choices as the replacement for the current DVD technology.

No doubt this situation is far from ideal for Sony and Toshiba, but it's also left us, the end-user, in a state of confusion. On one side there's Blu-ray, which offers greater storage capacities (25GB for a single-layer disc), but costs more per disc to manufacture, and is also considered to be a more fragile physical media. On the other side there's HD-DVD, which can only store 15GB per single-layer disc, but costs less to make. Then there are the studios and other organisations to consider. Each format has its own posse of backers, and we're looking at a situation where one movie release might be on Blu-ray only, while another will be on HD-DVD.

What this system offers is the ability to read high-definition media from both sides of the camp. Acer's Aspire M5630 uses a combination DVD-RW (+/-R DL)/BRD/HD-DVD-ROM drive to allow users the freedom to watch any high-definition movie from either format, without a second thought.

Acer's Acerplay software takes care of everything for you. We inserted Casino Royale on Blu-ray and Windows Vista Autoplay picked it up and had it playing in one click. The same occurred with King Kong on HD-DVD.

The M5630 puts Intel's Quad Core Q6600 2.4GHz CPU to use, a good value option with a 1066MHz front side bus and a 4MB L2 cache. There is 2GB of DDR2 RAM installed and a Radeon HD2400 Pro with 256MB of memory. There is no HDMI output on the rear port cluster, but the Radeon card can output HDMI (HDCP) audio and video via a special DVI to HDMI adapter.

This is especially useful as the Aspire M5630 does not ship with particularly powerful speakers so you'll want to output via HDMI to a large TV and sound system for the best experience.

Also included in the package are a 500GB Western Digital hard drive, a media card reader, which includes support for Smartmedia, xD, MS, MS-Pro, MMC, SD and CF cards and a wireless keyboard and mouse.

In our Benchmarks we saw fairly reasonable results. In WorldBench 6 the Acer Aspire M5630 achieved a total score of 104, a fair effort and enough for some video or audio encoding as well as the usual set of day-to-day applications. In our MP3 encoding test it took 68 seconds to encode 53 minutes worth of WAV files to 192Kbps MP3 files using iTunes, and 111 seconds in Cdex.

Market Place

ARN Member Login

 
Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

Play
ARN news
  • IFA: LG's newest TV includes Bluetooth

    Bluetooth will be installed in models in LG's PG7000-series plasma sets and LG7000-series LCD sets, which are due on sale across Europe before the end of September.

Play
Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

Play
Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery Zone

When an IT disaster occurs, how handy it would be to push a button and start again as if nothing had happened.
Discover and learn more about CA XOSoft today.
ARN Vendor Directory
ARN Library

How to Beef Up Your Sales Pipeline

Our economy may be heading towards a recession. Sales rates are dropping. Promotional campaigns are proving less effective than you would like. So how do you continue to grow your business and bring home the sales in such an environment? Download this white paper now to find the answers.

Sponsored Links