Tech Advisor

Acer Swift 1

£329 inc VAT from fave.co/2kGNt4V

-

Acer’s Swift 1 is one of the cheapest laptop you can buy that looks a little like a MacBook. It’s slim, and has a metal frame with plenty of bright aluminium on show.

Whereas MacBooks start at £949 for the arguably out of date Air 13, the Swift 1 costs £349 in the variant we’re using. Let that sink in: just over a third the price of Apple’s cheapest alternativ­e.

Low CPU power and minimal storage make the Acer Swift 1 suitable for only light jobs like writing documents, surfing the web and streaming video.

However, given the price, its impersonat­ion of a £700to £1,000 slim and light laptop is almost convincing.

Price

Our review unit, priced £329, has an Intel Pentium CPU, 4GB RAM and 64GB storage. Shop around and you’ll also find a version with a much better 128GB SSD, for around £415. Rarer still is a Core i3 model (£580) with 8GB RAM and a 128GB SSD. A £250 hike may seem steep, but in the jump up to an i3 CPU, the Swift 1 becomes a very different laptop on the inside.

Design

If a laptop costs £350 or less, we normally expect to see a somewhat thick plastic shell. The aim should be a solid, practical laptop, not a flashy one, right?

The Acer Swift 1 is nothing like that. It’s affordable, but still has a full aluminium shell. Its lid, the keyboard surround and the underside all use plates of real

aluminium. This is the sort of look that makes you expect a £650-plus price tag, not a £350 one.

Acer has a history of providing that expensive aluminium look and feel at a low price, having used the same tactic (and a similar shell) in its 13in Chromebook.

For the price, the Swift 1 looks and feels lovely, and there’s no obvious sign Acer has done the job on the cheap. The panels don’t flex like cardboard at the first sign of pressure and the aluminium has an anodized finish just like several of the popular expensive alternativ­es. It’s a brighter, shinier finish than some, but still looks great.

Let’s not just gush, though. There are a few signs the Swift 1 isn’t really an expensive laptop. The display has a black border around it, which isn’t the prettiest look. And the display surround is that of a classic laptop. Many new models (including some cheaper ones) only have a few millimetre­s of redundant border around them. This one has – shock, horror – about an inch to the left and right.

Its thickness and weight let it easily slide into the ‘thin and light’ category, though. The Swift 1 weighs 1.3kg and is just under 15mm thick.

Connectivi­ty

The Swift 1 also has all the main connection­s we like to see in a laptop, including some you’ll miss by choosing a much more expensive model. There are two USB 3.0 ports – great for the price – and one USB 2.0 socket. A USB-C port complement­s these, although it’s predictabl­y only specified to the 3.1 standard, not the much faster Thunderbol­t 3.0. A full-size HDMI and

full-size SD card slot finish off what is a connection­s array fit for a more powerful laptop than the Swift 1.

Keyboard and trackpad

There are also no nasty surprises in the keyboard and trackpad either. Some super-affordable laptops have keys that feel cheap, often with hollow-feeling feedback or too much wobble. There’s none of this in the Swift 1. This is a rock-solid semi-shallow chiclet design. Buying this entry-level model, you benefit from the fact there are significan­tly pricier models with the same shell and keyboard. Acer couldn’t afford to cheap out too much.

We used the Swift 1 as our main work computer for a while, and came across no issues. There is, and this came as no surprise, no keyboard backlight. While some surprising­ly affordable laptops have backlit keyboards, we don’t expect one in a £350 laptop that already has budget siphoned off to accommodat­e an aluminium shell.

The trackpad is similar: not high-end but great for the price. Its surface is plastic rather than textured glass, but then some laptops twice the price still use plastic. Swipes are relatively smooth and the click action is solid. It’s not too stiff, not too deep, not too loud and not broken. As in so many other aspects, the Swift 1 trackpad doesn’t seem like a melted Madame Tussauds mock-up even when stacked up against ‘real deal’ £1,000 laptops.

Acer has – although we’re not entirely sure why – also crammed in a fingerprin­t scanner to the right of the trackpad. This is a little mad in a £350 laptop. It’s a little fiddly compared to that of high-end laptops, but

does let you login with your finger as promised. It just may take a couple of attempts.

Display

If the scanner is a case of Acer showing off unnecessar­ily, the screen is the sort of grandstand­ing we’re a sucker for. The Swift 1 may be cheap, but it still packs in a perfectly respectabl­e 1080p IPS LCD display, one 13.3in across.

At first it might seem the ‘1080p’ part is most important, but ‘IPS’ is. Plenty of cheap laptops still use ‘TN’ screens that look bad from even a slight angle, while even an entry-level IPS panel like this looks good from almost any angle.

Not every aspect of the Swift 1 is amazing, of course. Colour is visibly a little undersatur­ated, covering just 61.2 percent of the sRGB colour gamut. Tones don’t pop off the screen as they might in a £350 tablet,

but this is undoubtedl­y among the best laptop displays at the price. Solid contrast of 985:1 also helps makes the most of this colour capability. For a £350 laptop, the display looks very good to us.

It’s a matte screen too, which is better if you’re going to use the Swift 1 out in daylight, or on a train with light streaming right through a window onto your Excel spreadshee­t. However, brightness is only just good enough to reach an acceptable level for any sort of outdoor use. The Swift 1’s maximum brightness is 266cd/m2. You’ll really want to see 350cd/m2 or above for best results on a sunny day. But just by saying that we’re (once again) comparing the Swift 1 to laptops twice the price.

This isn’t a touchscree­n, but the display folds back almost 180 degrees, rather than the usual 130. It’s not useful in that many situations, but does make sharing what’s on screen easier.

Performanc­e

If you’re waiting for the reason why the Swift 1 is so cheap when we keep comparing it to models twice the price, the best answer is the CPU. Our version of the laptop has an Intel Pentium N4200 processor. This is a quad-core CPU with a clock speed of 1.1GHz and a ‘burst’ of 2.5GHz. However, compared to Core series processors, even the Core i3, this is a bit of a weakling.

Using the Swift 1 as we would any other laptop, we found installing and loading apps took significan­tly longer than with a Core-powered system. And any intense applicatio­ns like video editing or high-level 3D gaming are off the cards. However, with this generation of Pentium CPU, we’re finally past what has put off recommendi­ng most budget Windows laptops in recent years. Until this generation, Atom and Pentiumpow­ered laptops could be borderline painful to use at times even with light duties.

The Swift 1 and its Pentium N4200 feel just fine, with minimal lag when you’re just coasting across the surface of Windows 10 and, say, using the browser or WordPad. This is the level at which the laptop is comfortabl­e. But it’s important as it wrestles away some of the appeal of ‘premium’ Chromebook­s, which we’ve often recommende­d over rock-bottom laptops.

You’ll need a little patience, but not anything like some older entry-level laptops require.

The Swift 1’s benchmark results are, of course, pretty poor, though. It scores 1134 points in PC Mark 10, where a Core i5 will push 2700.

There’s a more telling comparison, though. The Intel Pentium 4450U Lenovo used in its IdeaPad 320S

scores 2295, making it much more like a lower-power alternativ­e to a Core-series computer. Of course, the 320S is more expensive, made of plastic and has a much, much worse screen. Comparing the two on performanc­e is just one side of the story.

Gaming performanc­e is poor, again worse than the IdeaPad 320S, but no worse than we expect from a Pentium CPU, which has a low-end Intel HD 505 GPU. Alien: Isolation runs at an average 9.8fps at 720p, minimum graphics. At 1080p with the settings maxed you’re looking at 3.3fps. We’re miles away from playable speeds.

We couldn’t even try our usual Deus Ex: Mankind Divided as there’s no enough room on the Swift 1’s paltry 64GB solid state storage. But we’d be looking at single figure frame rates no matter the setting.

Gaming is not a total bust, though. The Swift 1 can play Skyrim at 720p resolution, Low settings well.

One benefit of using such a low-end CPU is the Swift 1 doesn’t need fans. It uses passive cooling, like a tablet. It’ll be silent (or near silent) no matter what you do. Putting an ear up to the ports, we can hear a slight almost HDD-like noise from the Swift’s insides. It’s likely to be noise from the power supply or another component. Your Swift 1 may not suffer from it, and in ours it’s only audible if you go listening for it.

Battery life

A CPU that barely uses any power makes you expect a battery that lasts forever. Acer says the 42Wh battery lasts 10 hours, but in our experience it’s not quite as long-lasting.

Playing a 90-minute video on loop at 120cd/m2 brightness, the Swift 1 lasts seven hours 49 minutes. While not a mind-blowing result, it’s very close to what we tend to look for: a full day of work.

The speakers too are sufficient, but not special. While clear and largely undistorte­d at higher output, they don’t have the volume, mid-range bulk or bass of the best laptop speakers.

Verdict

The Acer Swift 1 is perhaps the most expensive-looking and feeling laptop Windows 10 laptop you can get for £350. A metal shell, solid keyboard and trackpad, and a display that simply flattens more at the price in terms of perceptual image quality are all to be celebrated.

There’s only one worry: performanc­e. While the Pentium processor used here is significan­tly better than that of previous generation­s, it’s a low-end chipset that will make more demanding tasks seem a real chore.

However, for light use – emails, browsing, some casual gaming – the Swift 1 performs fine. It’s also a great choice for humanities students, as the sort of essay-making machine you can comfortabl­y carry around all day, every day.

Specificat­ions

• 13.3in (1920x1080) 1080p IPS LCD matt anti-glare display

• 1.1GHz Intel Pentium N4200 (2.5GHz boost) four cores, four threads

• Windows 10 Home (64-bit)

• Intel HD 505 GPU

• 4GB DDR3 RAM

• 64GB solid state memory

• 802.11b/g/n/ac single-band 2x2 MIMO

• Bluetooth 4.1

• 1x USB-C 3.1

• 2x USB 3.0

• 1x USB 2.0

• HDMI

• SDXC card slot

• Stereo speakers

• HD webcam

• Single mic

• 3.5mm headset jack

• UK tiled keyboard with numberpad

• Two-button trackpad

• 57Wh lithium-ion battery, removable

• 319x225x14.9mm

• 1.3kg

• 1-year carry-in warranty

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia