Five Multimedia Notebooks, Tested

Acer 8920G

The Acer 8920G combines a sizable 18.4" display in a simple black-and silver interior design package with a glossy black exterior. At 8.9 lbs, it’s not much heavier than most 17" notebooks, though it does offer more screen real estate. Our primary beef with the packaging is one you’ll hear repeatedly in this roundup: like many multimedia notebooks, this one’s exterior has a glossy black finish that’s attractive when clean, but far too good at picking up fingerprints and smudges.

The GeForce 9650 GS graphics circuitry and a Blu-ray player let its owners exercise the fullest capabilities of the high-definition 1920x1200 screen. It not only accommodates 1080p video, but also does a good job with broadcast and cable high-definition signal sources (thanks to the ATI TV Wonder HD 650 Combo USB for PC device that nearly every notebook maker in this review sent with their units). We also obtained good results piping audio and video from this notebook into our AV receiver for display on a 42” LG HDTV and multi-channel sound playback via its built-in HDMI port (though audio was limited to 5.1 Dolby or DTS formats, with no support for high-def audio available).

We provide an overview of this notebook’s specifications in Table 1 later in this story, along with the data for the Asus and Eurocom units. The review unit we received included an Intel Core 2 Duo T9300 (2.5 GHz) processor, 4 GB of DDR2-667 RAM, a single 5400 RPM 320 GB SATA hard disk, and both wired 10/100 Ethernet and 802.11a/g/n wireless network connections. The Blu-ray burner is a nice touch, with 25 GB of capacity on a single-layer media blank (it also handles dual-layer DVDs as well).

Of all the notebooks in this review, we came to like using this one the best, because of its high-quality full-size keyboard with a numeric keypad. We also got to like what Acer calls its "OneTouch" media controls (at the left of the keyboard in the preceding photograph), which provide touch-sensitive volume, playback and media selection buttons that all spiral outward from the center in different arcs. Acer also includes a multimedia playback suite called Arcade Deluxe that even incorporates Blu-ray playback. The built-in 5.1 speakers are great for personal viewing and playback, with three speakers mounted along the bezel on the display deck, two above the keyboard and a 10 W subwoofer underneath the system for surprisingly powerful bass. Sound and graphics performance on the 8920G are both very good, which we especially appreciated.

  • urimiel
    I am really sorry to be the one that points this out. I am Tomshardware reader for quite many years now. This is the first time I have seen an article or any kind of presentation like that. You guys are posting bar graphs and change the legend of each color bar for every different graph... this does not make sense.
    Reply
  • fudgeboy
    You guys are posting bar graphs and change the legend of each color bar for every different graph
    wow, and thats like the basic fundamentals of presentation. the writers on this site really need to go back to high school. they should have a standard layout over the whole thing (like you would if you were doing an experiment)
    Reply
  • Master Exon
    Basically purple is always at the top, regardless of who purple represents. Kinda dumb, but they really should have had the manufacturer's name on the bar itself.

    Hey, when will TH compare $300-$450 netbooks? You already did the $2000 ones.
    Reply
  • cangelini
    urimielI am really sorry to be the one that points this out. I am Tomshardware reader for quite many years now. This is the first time I have seen an article or any kind of presentation like that. You guys are posting bar graphs and change the legend of each color bar for every different graph... this does not make sense.
    Heya guys--sorry about that. I should have caught this in editing. The charts are now correct with each notebook appearing in the same place with the same corresponding legend data.
    Reply
  • FrozenGpu
    Master ExonBasically purple is always at the top, regardless of who purple represents. Kinda dumb, but they really should have had the manufacturer's name on the bar itself.Hey, when will TH compare $300-$450 netbooks? You already did the $2000 ones.
    Pretty pretty please with a cherry on top?
    Reply
  • TheGreatGrapeApe
    To me the $300-450 laptops aren't worth an in depth review, just a quicky 2 pager (is it capable as a netbook yes/no) that's a disposable laptop you buy a kids or as a couch laptop or travel one.

    I want to know what my $2K+ buys me, the $300 laptop is the price of one of the options on these things. That's the bigger risk. What's anyone really expecting in a $300-400 laptop, certainly not heaving gsaming, video editing or programming.

    It may seem elitist, but with the limited amount of info out there on laptops period, netbooks shouldn't consume much of the reviews time, nor space, I'd rather see more $1,000 and $2,000 and then $3,000+ reviews those 3 categories have more variability and value than the cheapest ones. Who can't figure out if a $400 laptop is worth it from a visit to the best buy or whatever?

    Personally I want to see an IBM W700 review, tell me if it's worth the $3,000+ (is the built in Wacom pad good enough, the keyboard stiff enough, is it worth it to get turbo memory now that it's faster & bigger or just go SSD and be done with it, etc), not something to tell me which of the cheap laptops is slower than my previous laptops that you could buy at a discount store for as much and which might be just a tiny bit faster but still just suited for M$ office and websurfing and light photoshoping.
    Reply
  • Is the image for this on the Toms Hardware site supposed to say "Multiedia" on the laptop screen or is that a typo?
    Reply
  • johntmosher
    I have been wanting to find a 20 inch laptop so I was excited to see the HDX review.....But still can't find it for sale online at HP.COM
    Got a sales link?
    Reply
  • maric423
    johntmosherI have been wanting to find a 20 inch laptop so I was excited to see the HDX review.....But still can't find it for sale online at HP.COMGot a sales link?
    According to the HP Sales guys, its out of production (I got interested and looked for it too). The replacement machine is supposedly the HP HDX 18t, which is only an 18.4", and doesn't have the same hinge structure. Not really a comparable machine. You can still find a few HP Pavilion HDX 20" from third parties if you search around, but I wasn't thrilled about the idea of buying a system they'd already stopped making.
    Reply
  • Can you please test one more little thing? Linux compatibility.

    Its easy, just toss in an ubuntu live CD, and tell us if things like sound, webcam, wifi etc work out of the box. If they don't, don't bother much trying to get it to work. But Acer for instance is notorious for having buggy ACPI implementation in the bios that detects the OS and only work with Vista. With Linux (possibly even XP) standby will be highly unreliable. Dell and IBM do a much better job at it, and that deserves to be known.

    Doing such tests should be very straightforward and accomplish two things:
    1) inform us linux users (we buy notebooks too you know :) )
    2) put some pressure on oem's to test their BIOS and hardware with linux

    Id appreciate it. No one does this, please be the first :)
    Reply