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Acer AspireRevo R3600 Pro Reviews

bit-tech‘s review Edit

The Revo is something of a disappointment. Limited by the 1.6GHz Atom CPU and Windows Vista Home Premium it’s a jack of all trades, but master of none and we struggle to think of a situation where it holds a real advantage over specifically targeted devices. Sure it's a much more capable all-round system, but the extra Ion features are more of a gimmick than something you'd really want to make use of on a daily basis.
6.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jun 22, 2009

PC Advisor‘s review Edit

Acer’s Aspire Revo is promising as a low-cost nettop, with better graphics performance than any conventional netbook, but it misses the mark as a quiet-running desktop companion that can comfortably play modern 3D games. You’ll also have to be careful how you play video if you want it played smoothly. We found a great solution in CyberLink PowerDVD 9, so be prepared to add the cost of this to the Revo if you need smooth and stress-free video playback.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Aug 06, 2009

PC Pro‘s review Edit

Finally, the first genuinely desirable nettop, thanks to an HD-capable graphics chip.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
May 19, 2009

netbooked.net‘s review Edit

The Acer Aspire Revo Excels as a media player and handles 1080P HD video with ease. It also serves well as a desktop replacement. Pricing is very decent as well. The Acer Aspire Revo falls flat when it comes to 3D games.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jul 28, 2009

HotHardware‘s review Edit

The Acer Aspire Revo is a lot of things. It's a sexy ultra small form factor system. It's a low power nettop. And it's a potential HTPC candidate. What the Acer Aspire Revo is not, however, is a replacement for a full-sized desktop PC - at least not for discerning HotHardware readers who might prefer a more powerful PC.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Apr 28, 2009

Register Hardware‘s review Edit

Nvidia’s Ion platform makes perfect sense here, but Atom, at least the single-core version, has no obvious place in a mains-powered nettop PC. Still, the Revo is cheaper and sexier than its nearest rival, Asus' HDMI-equipped Eee Box B206. Still too pricey at £250? We say get the £150 one with Linux and an 8GB SSD, while stocks last.
7.5 Rated at:

Published on:
Jun 25, 2009

www.trustedreviews.com‘s review Edit

nVidia's ION platform delivers handsomely and Acer has responded in kind with the Revo. It ticks all the right boxes where nettops are concerned, while ION gives it a definitive edge over competing offerings. Only the use of Vista really holds it back, but if you're after a cheap and effective media PC for your living room, you shouldn't let this hold you back.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jun 05, 2009

The average pro reviews rating is 7.5 / 10, based on the 7 reviews.


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