Tuesday, February 16th 2010

Acer Announces Aspire One 532G: First Netbook with Discrete Graphics

The new Acer Aspire One 532G sets the netbook trend in the digital world where Hi-Def viewing online is growing dramatically. Acer presents the world's first netbook with dedicated next-generation NVIDIA ION graphics acceleration enabling users to enjoy Hi-Def content online as well as playback at 720p; alternatively, connect through HDMI output to a secondary Hi-Def TV/LCD monitor for sharing Hi-Def content with friends at a larger 1080p resolution.

With up to 10 hours of battery life, integrated Wi-Fi, 10.1" Hi-Def LED backlit display and optional 3G, the Aspire One 532G matches outstanding performance with an ultra-compact design, offering all the power you need. Netbook users can now enjoy flawless Hi-Def web content streaming and multiple Internet applications with ease.
Flawless web Hi-Def acceleration and Hi-Def entertainment
Go beyond simple Internet browsing to experience full high-definition video on sites like YouTube HD, Hulu and Facebook, Aspire One 532G with dedicated graphics accelerates web Hi-Def content streaming effortlessly. Enjoy smooth and flawless 3D computing, mainstream PC gaming, boost the performance of editing and converting videos, face-tagging photos and Hi-Def video playback up to 1080p via HDMI-output to HDTV; and effectively perform everyday Internet browsing, emailing, chats, photo viewing, document editing and such on the Aspire One 532G. All of these are achieved with the new Intel Atom N450 platform and next-generation NVIDIA ION GPU with dedicated 512MB memory.

Smart power and Hi-Def performance
The Aspire One 532G makes no compromise on great performance and battery life; it mobilizes online Hi-Def computing, at the same time lowers power consumption for longer-lasting battery. NVIDIA Optimus Technology intelligently, automatically, and seamlessly transitions between the powerful NVIDIA ION GPU, and battery-saving integrated graphics - depending on the needs of the application - delivering great battery life and great performance when you need it.

Care-free mobile companion
Making light work of Internet multi-tasking, the Aspire One 532G needs only a single charge for up to 10 hours* of cable-free power, enabling users to stay connected and get the most on-the-go. The innovative AC adapter is travel friendly, lighter than typical adapters, saves 1/3 charging time and comes with interchangeable AC converters. No matter where you are, you can always have the right plug.

Measuring only 1" thin and about 1 kg in weight, the Aspire One 532G is available in three contemporary colors - Sapphire Blue, Ruby Red and Pearl Silver. Its compact form, fluid Hi-Def cinema and flawless Hi-Def flash video quality along with great battery life, truly realizes barrier-free communication.

This highly efficient netbook is Energy Star v5.0 qualified and compliant with RoHS and WEEE EU directives, regulating the use and disposal of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. It also features LED backlight, making it mercury free.

The Aspire One 532G will start shipping at the end of Q1 2010.
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20 Comments on Acer Announces Aspire One 532G: First Netbook with Discrete Graphics

#1
Semi-Lobster
The ION 2 is an interesting concept and its a great idea with the Optimus, but the CPU is such a bottleneck that anything beyond watching a video is going to be a problem for it.
Posted on Reply
#2
gvblake22
Semi-LobsterThe ION 2 is an interesting concept and its a great idea with the Optimus, but the CPU is such a bottleneck that anything beyond watching a video is going to be a problem for it.
But they're not designed for anything beyond watching video. The focus is on battery life and portability (small size and light weight) as well as low cost. I agree that Atom isn't powerful enough for anything more than watching a movie, but in this case it is powerful enough for what most people will use these things for. And that's a good thing because of the great battery life and low cost associated with it (which typically outweigh the low performance in this market).

If these second generation Ion netbooks can really pull off 10 hours battery life on a six-cell, I will be impressed as it will offer the best of both worlds.
Posted on Reply
#4
Semi-Lobster
VIPERIs it really the first netbook with discrete graphics? What about Lenovo IdeaPad S12? shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/controller/e/web/LenovoPortal/en_US/catalog.workflow:category.details?current-catalog-id=12F0696583E04D86B9B79B0FEC01C087&current-category-id=8EE56652C33D4452A778393130C14F42 check the last 2 models...
The Nvidia ION 1 was, infact, an IGP and not a discrete graphics card, on the otherhand, this Acer netbook has the ION 2 which is not an IGP on the motherboard but is actually a separate discrete video card (a G 210 or something like that IIRC). The motherboard's IGP is still the Intel GMA 3150 but the 'Optimus' technology allows quick, on the fly switching between the two depending on how much power whatever you're running needs
Posted on Reply
#5
Gzero
I guess I got my hopes up too high, was hoping it could pass through HD audio, and maybe hook it up to a external BluRay drive.

Am I the only one that would love a netbook that doubles up as a Hi-Def media player?

I'm don't watch BD's all the time or very often at all, but this would be the solution I'm gunning for. xD
Posted on Reply
#6
Error 404
After seeing my sister's netbook struggle to run a 720p Youtube video, I think this will be a welcome upgrade from most Intel IGP netbooks....
Posted on Reply
#7
aj28
So when Intel's CPU-integrated graphics starts to encompass the majority of their platform sales, nVidia is going to start marketing little graphics chips (which have IGP-like performance) that motherboard manufacturers can solder onto their products for enhanced graphics performance, features and connectivity, and they'll call them "discrete". Do I understand this correctly? Out of the chipset market, into the onboard discrete graphics market? :banghead:
Posted on Reply
#8
Initialised
Didn't they already do this on the Ferrari One?
Posted on Reply
#9
ToTTenTranz
Error 404After seeing my sister's netbook struggle to run a 720p Youtube video, I think this will be a welcome upgrade from most Intel IGP netbooks....
You're assuming nVidia GPUs can accelerate flash embedded videos -> they don't, not yet.

What they accelerate is h.264 through DXVA, assuming you're using a compatible player software.


About ION 2 in general: meh.

Asus N10J is the exact same thing and has been around for ages. The only difference is the software switch instead of the hardware one.
Posted on Reply
#10
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
discrete =/= IGP :)


remember that flash and H264 video can both be accelerated reliably on nvidia GPU's these days, which would be the two main things the CPU would struggle with on these systems.

the HDMI output makes this convertible to a HTPC in a pinch as well.
Posted on Reply
#11
ktr
ToTTenTranzYou're assuming nVidia GPUs can accelerate flash embedded videos -> they don't, not yet.
Hooray Flash 10.1 (now with HW acceleration)!

Still in beta and still has high CPU utilization. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#12
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
wait, nv cant use HW flash in 10.1 yet? ATI's been doing it for ages, so i thought Nv could too
Posted on Reply
#13
ktr
Musselswait, nv cant use HW flash in 10.1 yet? ATI's been doing it for ages, so i thought Nv could too
It can! Correcting myself, it is Flash 10.1 Beta 2 which has HW acceleration. Problem is that not all websites support it yet, for some pathetic reason...stupid Adobe. GO HTML5!!! :rockout:
Posted on Reply
#14
Meizuman
My classmate has an Acer 8530G (iirc), he bought it last autumn and it has both integrated and discrete GPUs, HD 3200 and HD 4650. PowerPlay switched between gpus depending on load. But it had some serious driver issues, the drivers forced to use 3200 after every reboot. I think he got it sorted out..
Posted on Reply
#15
HolyCow02
wonder what the price will be... I'm looking for something small like that and if it can handle any sort of decent video playback, im in.
Posted on Reply
#17
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
InitialisedDidn't they already do this on the Ferrari One?
has an HD3200 IGP on it which shouldn't be much off this netbook however i think the AMD dual core will beat the atom?

and i have a netbook with an X1270 and single core athlon that eats current intel books for lunch so this hbad better be a huge improvement with the cpu chugging along @1.5ghz i can play 1080P pretty damn good.
Posted on Reply
#18
Initialised
cdawallhas an HD3200 IGP on it which shouldn't be much off this netbook however i think the AMD dual core will beat the atom?

and i have a netbook with an X1270 and single core athlon that eats current intel books for lunch so this hbad better be a huge improvement with the cpu chugging along @1.5ghz i can play 1080P pretty damn good.
Yes but it has a port for an external card using a discrete GPU.

Yes, it does beat the Atom by a long way.

Doesn't all this fit with nVidias plan of having weak CPUs with more efficient GPUs running the maths?
Posted on Reply
#19
RejZoR
Semi-LobsterThe ION 2 is an interesting concept and its a great idea with the Optimus, but the CPU is such a bottleneck that anything beyond watching a video is going to be a problem for it.
This is so not true. Atom N270 is actually pretty capable CPU. Considering its low profile and in-order design...
Posted on Reply
#20
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
RejZoRThis is so not true. Atom N270 is actually pretty capable CPU. Considering its low profile and in-order design...
as is the athlon L110 in fact the L110 eats it in benchmarks :toast:
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