Wireless

Like many Ultrabooks that shipped this year, Acer uses Intel’s networking solution, which is the Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 model. Performance has not been as good as Broadcom, but it has also been a pretty stable card as far as connections.

WiFi Performance - TCP

The Acer S7 has better than average performance with the Intel solution. It is still not quite as fast as the Broadcom models, but at over 400 Mbps it is a strong showing. There is of course no room for a full RJ-45 port on a notebook this slim, so users wanting to use a wired connection would have to resort to a USB adapter for this.

Speakers

Acer has stereo speakers mounted on the bottom of the notebook, like many other Ultrabooks around. It is not an ideal location due to the sound being directed away from the user, but Acer has tapered the sides of the notebook where the speakers are to try and allow some room there for the sound to get out.

Like most Ultrabooks, the sound quality is certainly not theatre level. The S7 is actually a bit low on volume compared to most other devices, coming in at a peak of around 75 dB(A) playing music, with an average range closer to 70 dB(A). This could be by design though, since I could not detect any distortion even at maximum volume. SPL levels are measured with the meter 1 inch over the trackpad.

On the software side, the Realtek codec is augmented with Dolby Digital Plus software, which allows you to set custom equalizer settings, or use some of the pre-configured ones. It also gives you the ability to use a surround virtualizer, a volume leveler, and a dialogue enhancer through software, which are nice touches when trying to watch movies in a quiet environment.

Noise

One area that has been a big win for Acer is the cooling system. At idle or light workloads, the Acer S7 is completely silent. I could not detect any noise at all on my sound meter. There are designs out in the wild that have a faint background whine of fans even at idle, so this is a great start.

The Acer excels even more under load though. After a gaming session, the SPL level went up only 7 dB(A) over the noise floor in my room, which is about 35 dB. 42 dB at load for a notebook, especially one this thin and light, is a great result. The cooling system seemed to have no issues keeping the 15 Watt Broadwell CPU under control.

Software

When I reviewed the Acer Aspire R 13 convertible notebook, I was somewhat amazed at how little software was installed on the R 13, and even commended Acer for that fact. Unfortunately, it appears that I had received a Microsoft Signature version of the R 13, because the S7 model is as loaded down with software as anything I have seen in recent times. The task bar is so full of shortcuts that anything you open instantly compresses what is there since there is no more room for icons.

The desktop is not much better, cluttered with plenty of cruft that really has no place on a premium notebook. In fact, many of the shortcuts are just web links to thinks like booking.com and ebay.

Software is one way that a company can try and differentiate itself from the competition, but in the case of the S7, the differentiation is for the detriment of the product.

Battery Life and Charge Time Final Words
Comments Locked

63 Comments

View All Comments

  • Sietse Vliegen - Monday, February 8, 2016 - link

    OK. I've been using one for about a year now. I have the i7 with the 2560x1440 display. Simply a brilliant piece of equipment.

    Unlike some of you, I have no preference for a particular brand. But I needed a sturdy reliable machine as I am on the road most of the time for business. Hence, the price was also not a decisive factor. In the past I have used laptops from Samsung, Toshiba, IBM, Lenovo, Apple. All of them had issues sooner or later. Therefore, I do not believe that any particular brand will guarantee a trouble free laptop future. I'm sure I'll have some issues with Acer too, eventually. But so far so good and boy, I do like this machine, a lot.

    At the time I looked at the HP Spectre . Promising, but sold out pretty much everywhere. Didn't like the rubber surface on the Dell XPS, gets stained after a while. Didn't like the hinges on the Lenovo Yoga 3, looks like a weak point. Not enthusiastic about the Macbook Pro 13 inch either, especially the rough edges. And I need a Windows machine, for business purposes, not a Macbook running Parallels desktop or similar. Looked at the Acer, couldn't figure out why they chose a SSD raid config either. But I did like the look and feel of the machine, and most specs were on par with the other machines.

    Ended up buying the Acer, and I must say I am impressed. Build quality is excellent, sturdy aluminium top, gorilla glass cover. Heck, you can even use it as a whiteboard. In business meetings, everyone wants to know what type of laptop it is, and checks how thin/light it is.

    I use it almost every day and it is 100% silent most of the time, only at full load the fan spins up, but never gets really noisy. The 2560x1440 display is simply gorgeous. Everyone loves it. No problems with scaling of fonts or apps using Windows 8.1 or 10 (never tried Windows 8).

    I have no problem with the flimsy powerplug. In fact, I think it's an advantage that it easily unplug from the laptop when someone trips over the power cord. But obviously, Apple's solution is even better.

    The keyboard is fine. Spacing is ok and I can type really fast without any problems. I would prefer separate function keys, though. The silver color of the keys does not bother me one bit. The only minor niggle I have is that the keyboard backlight makes a slight whining noise at maximum brightness. Throttle down a bit and it's gone.

    I don't understand the issue the reviewer has with *only* two USB ports. I use a Logitech Ultrathin T630 bluetooth mouse, which doesn't need a USB port anyway. Occasionally I use a USB stick. That leaves at least one spare USB port.

    The reviewer states also that the displayport and the mini HDMI port could have been combined. Whereas that may be true, the simple fact remains that in business environments, most projectors/beamers either have an HDMI or VGA connector. DisplayPort is still pretty scarce although I do use it at home. HDMI works 100% of the time. VGA uses a dongle which is not always compatible with old plasma screens, so I found out: the laptop freezes until you unplug it from the screen.

    Finally, the battery lasts about 6-7 hours, depending on what it is I'm doing (mostly office apps and webbrowsing). For business use that is excellent. In fact, I can usually use it for several days without charging. My previous $1500 Samsung notebook lasted only 3 hours or so.

    All in all, I am extremely happy with this machine and I would definitely buy it again.
  • maccomb - Saturday, August 20, 2016 - link

    Hi,
    I also bought the Acer S7-392. The looks are amazing but that is subjective.
    What is not subjective is how good the 2560x1440 screen is; the battery time; how thin and light it is. It's now August 2016 and I bought this pc (where I'm typing) long time ago... don't really know 2 years or 3 ago? The gorilla glass cover is great, no scratches, no stains, nothing. It still as nice as when bought. Same for the screen itself. The keyboard: I also feel the lack of the dedicated Function key row, but other than that, it's great and the best compared to other ultrthin I know (asus and lenovo). I also don't understand the complaints on the SSD raid 0. Either I'm ignorant or you are... this provides me with aprox 1GB/s transfer rate. Specially when moving movies around from SSD to 1gbps network or to a fast USB3.0 external disk. As far as a I know, only Sony Vaio had something similar (4xraid0 or someting). It's as ran windows 7.. which I loved, then upgraded to 8.1 which was so-so, and now finally Windows 10 which is a great OS (and I'm a strong linux supporter mind you, for servers).
    I reached to this article just because what I really wanted is to know if there was a newer version to buy, with more memory or more disk. I'm an intensive business pro user with virtualization running Linux, and lots of Office and all day long email and stuff... So you see. It's a light, slim, hardcore machine. I actually think that Acer has a bad trackrecord and must have created this S7 at this price to try to change it's image. It's unfair people look this laptop down without even testing it. My previous machine was a ibm thinkpad and toshibas before that. Oh well I just hope they keep making money from this line so they keep developing it.
  • maccomb - Saturday, August 20, 2016 - link

    Hi,
    I also bought the Acer S7-392. The looks are amazing but that is subjective.
    What is not subjective is how good the 2560x1440 screen is; the battery time; how thin and light it is. It's now August 2016 and I bought this pc (where I'm typing) long time ago... don't really know 2 years or 3 ago? The gorilla glass cover is great, no scratches, no stains, nothing. It still as nice as when bought. Same for the screen itself. The keyboard: I also feel the lack of the dedicated Function key row, but other than that, it's great and the best compared to other ultrthin I know (asus and lenovo). I also don't understand the complaints on the SSD raid 0. Either I'm ignorant or you are... this provides me with aprox 1GB/s transfer rate. Specially when moving movies around from SSD to 1gbps network or to a fast USB3.0 external disk. As far as a I know, only Sony Vaio had something similar (4xraid0 or someting). It's as ran windows 7.. which I loved, then upgraded to 8.1 which was so-so, and now finally Windows 10 which is a great OS (and I'm a strong linux supporter mind you, for servers).
    I reached to this article just because what I really wanted is to know if there was a newer version to buy, with more memory or more disk. I'm an intensive business pro user with virtualization running Linux, and lots of Office and all day long email and stuff... So you see. It's a light, slim, hardcore machine. I actually think that Acer has a bad trackrecord and must have created this S7 at this price to try to change it's image. It's unfair people look this laptop down without even testing it. My previous machine was a ibm thinkpad and toshibas before that. Oh well I just hope they keep making money from this line so they keep developing it.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now