Acer Rl100 Driver For Mac

Acer Rl100 Driver For Mac Average ratng: 4,6/5 3588 votes
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The Good The Acer Revo 100 RL100-U1002 boasts a living-room-ready design, a unique touch-pad input device, and capable media features, including a Blu-ray drive, for a fair price. The Bad This Nettop is not meant for gaming or general productivity because of a low-power CPU, and we'd feel better about its value if it had a 1TB hard drive. The Bottom Line Not everyone wants a living-room computer, but the Acer Revo 100 is one of the better low-cost HTPCs we've seen thanks to a wisely chosen feature set, its attractive design, and a mostly well-conceived input device. Visit for details. There's a lot to like about Acer's updated home theater Nettop, the Revo 100. At $499, this system has an ultraslim design and a unique touch-pad device, all wrapped around a low-power dual-core AMD chip, a Blu-ray player, and a large 750GB hard drive. The result is an attractive, living-room-ready system with a strong design focus on delivering PC-based entertainment to your HDTV.

Not everyone will see the value of such a system, and we found that the touch pad is not responsive as we'd like. But for those who still believe in the concept of a home theater PC, the Acer Aspire Revo 100 will provide a fairly well-conceived reward for keeping the faith. It's ironic that the Revo 100 looks so much like the Slim version of Sony's PlayStation 2 game console considering the Acer system is effectively in competition with the newer PlayStation 3. Like the PS2, the Revo 100 can stand on end, or you can detach the removable stand and lay it down flat. The irony comes in the Revo 100's value proposition.

Acer Rl100 Driver For Mac Windows 10

This $499 PC features a Blu-ray drive and wireless networking, and can receive and transmit streamed content from and to other devices on a home network, in part thanks to Acer's Clear.fi media-streaming software. A $299 PlayStation 3 offers almost the same functionality. You can only stream content to the PS3, it won't transmit across a network. It also doesn't support the full breadth of content services and formats available to a Windows system. For those features and others, Acer is hoping you'll pay an additional extra $200 over the cost of a PS3.

The Revo 100 and its Nvidia Ion chipset do not mirror the PS3's ability to run games well. What you do get is a unique touch-pad input device that makes a respectable attempt to conquer the input dilemma that has forever plagued living-room PCs. The Acer Revo 100 features a removable input device with keyboard and touch-pad usage modes. The touch pad measures roughly 0.25 inch thick, 4.5 inches wide, and 6.25 inches long, and is housed in the body of the Revo 100 itself. A slider button on the side of the Revo pops the touch pad out of its housing, and we found the wireless signal strong enough to detect the touch pad from as far as 40 feet away from the system. The pad functions in two modes, working as a touch pad that supports Windows 7's multitouch gestures, and becoming a full QWERTY keyboard when you press a small button on the edge of the device. A dial built into the side of the pad works as a remote volume control.

The touch pad works surprisingly well in its keyboard mode thanks to the size of the keys and satisfying tactile feedback. Acer uses a standard key layout, but because of the size constraints of the device, it uses arrow keys for menu control, and a set of dedicated media control keys sit above the number keys. We expect you'll find it sufficient for the short spurts of typing involved in searching for content or entering payment information from your couch. We're less impressed by the touch pad as a cursor control. It maps your finger movement to the onscreen arrow well enough, but tapping to select often requires pressing down twice, or four times to double-click.

You hold your finger on the pad to simulate a right click. Overall, using the touch pad for scrolling is manageable, and compared with the bundled alternative for most HTPCs-a mouse on your lap-the touch pad seems to be a more elegant solution. In short bursts it is one, but its unresponsiveness quickly becomes irritating with prolonged use, particularly if you're trying to navigate between menus or execute other multistep processes. The Revo's low-power, low-clock-speed Athlon II Neo chip guarantees that it won't match the performance of more-traditional desktops. Our charts show that the difference in performance is rather dramatic, which is no surprise, and highlights the fact that this PC is entirely unsuitable for any sort of productivity. It can perform basic tasks fast enough, but you'll notice a lack of peppiness when opening programs, particularly the included media player software.

More importantly, we had no problems playing passive content, including the 'Boondock Saints' Blu-ray, which has one of the highest bit rates around. You should not use this system for playing games other than Web-based or other lightweight games, however. Acer did not design the Revo 100 for upgrading. While you can get inside the case by removing three hex screws from the back edge, we expect that only the most serious upgraders will venture inside. On the outside, you get a smart assortment of connectivity options, a welcome advantage over the laughably sparse slim tower. On the Revo 100 you get three USB 2.0 jacks, an HDMI port, an Ethernet input, two analog audio jacks, an SD Card reader, and an optical S/PDIF digital audio output.

If the design and features of this system weren't enough to demonstrate that this is meant for the living room, the fact that it has only an HDMI output for video should make that obvious.

There's something seductive about slimeline black slabs of technology. Perhaps it's the indoctrination that black monoliths are a gateway to some godly realm or better yet, that they might play your Blu-ray discs without making too much of a racket. To add to the clutter of boxes huddling up to your TV for warmth, Acer has its very own slab of tech to throw into the ring. In many ways it's an unassuming thing, being just 25mm thick, 300mm high and 180mm deep. But inside that chassis it packs enough to connect, entertain and surprise us all. The key is its Blu-ray/DVD-RW combo drive and HDMI v1.4 video output. We say this is key because it means this comes Blu-ray 3D-ready.

Currently you're either rolling your eyes and these words are possibly flying through the air with the rest of the magazine, or else we still have your attention. It's probably best to think of this as a Blu-ray player that also happens to run and has an integrated digital TV tuner. It gives you a complete digital entertainment station in one; well, apart from 3D but hold that thought. Alongside the HDMI is an optical S/PDIF, plus 3.5mm headphone and mic jacks, so you can hook the audio up to anything you need. Pulling faces Powering this along is the lowpower AMD Athlon II Neo K325. Technically a mobile dual-core CPU, it draws 12W, runs at 1.3GHz with 2x 1MB L2 cache. It's not strong stuff as the encoding results of 3.43fps show: even in the mobile space we'd be pulling faces at its performance.

But function here is more important than form. Alongside it is the Nvidia Ion 2, which provides flawless 1080p HD decoding and a level of 3D performance that hovers somewhere around Arrendale integrated levels of 3D performance. That's good enough to play older DirectX 9 games at 720p resolutions: hardly inspiring but it's at least better than a poke in the eye. Slide-out surprise The surprise the Revo RL100 has waiting for you is a slide-out touchpad that doubles as a backlit keyboard. It's a genius addition that even the wife approves of. A button switches between the keyboard and touchpad modes. It works well and is highly responsive: we personally had to turn off some of the multi-touch features but other people may take to them better.

Acer also bundles its Clear.fi media sharing software, something it's clearly going to push heavily. It will make media sharing easy between Acer products but nothing else. Plus we thought that was in Windows 7 already, so what's the point? The RL100 is quiet in use and provides all the connected PC features you want alongside Blu-ray playing and an unobtrusive living-room design. Running Windows 7 offers every service you could want, plus complete web browsing with that continually awful Windows interface (when compared to, Xbox or PlayStation 3). But at £500, why not simply choose a PS3 if you just want a Blu-ray player, or otherwise buy a cheap dual-core laptop and get something that's more flexible and just as able?

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