An early letdown: Acer unveils ultrabooks, cloud, and little else
LAS VEGAS–Well, it can only get better from here, right
Acer informally kicked off the Consumer Electronics Show’s wave of press conferences today with the unveiling of the Timeline Ultra and Aspire S5, along with a look at its
With its laptop announcements, Acer is doubling down on the ultrabook segment. The products underscore the company’s need to find a
The company is also trying to compete in the tablet business, which hasn’t fared so great for companies not named Apple. Acer only briefly teased a tablet boasting a super-high resolution screen, although the teaser video was frustratingly short. The Iconia Tab will be powered by a quad-core processor (it didn’t say which chip it would be using), and will run at a resolution of 1,280 by 800. Other tablets with these specs are expected to trickle out during the show.
“Acer is back on the right track,” said Acer Chairman J.T. Wang during the conference.
Acer showed off the Timeline Ultra, the second ultrabook in its lineup after the company took an early stab in September. Unusual for an ultrabook, the device comes packed with a CD drive. The device will ship in the first quarter.
It also unveiled the Aspire S5, which the company boasted was the world’s thinnest ultrabook. It’s unclear how long Acer will keep that claim given the intense pressure for companies to shave off millimeters from their
Both the Timeline Ultra and Aspire S5 boast instant-on capabilities (really 1.5 seconds), eight hours of battery life, and weeks of life in sleep mode.
Acer’s Wang said he expects to have four models of ultrabooks by the second quarter. He also said there will be another wave of ultrabooks in the second half with Windows 8.
The devices, as well as many other ultrabooks from the show, are a direct response to Apple’s hit MacBook
Acer hopes to set its products apart through its proprietary AcerCloud service, which is designed to let customers
Acer demonstrated the three services that will initially be available on AcerCloud when it launches in the second quarter: PicStream, a photo-sharing service, AcerCloud docs for documents, and clear.fi Media for
AcerCloud came out of the company’s $325 million acquisition of iGware, announced in July. The company plans to use AcerCloud to link all of its different products, including
The service will go up against a number of cloud services that already sync files between different devices. These services–which include DropBox for files and Evernote for Web sites, notes and other documents–can work on nearly any device.
Acer was unsurprisingly upbeat.
“We’re determined to make it very successful and sustainable,” Wang said
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