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29/8/2016 - ASUS Eee PC 1201PN Battery

There’s a solid "click" when you dock the tablet section with the keyboard, and both sections feel sturdy enough.The tablet section snaps to the dock via a long magnetic strip at the base of the connector on the rear of the keyboard/dock, meaning there's no additional button or unlock switch on the base.The magnets are strong enough to ensure that the clasp is held firmly in position, unlikely to separate should you pick up the Switch either by the tablet or the keyboard section.However, I was pleased to see that the two parts of the device are physically connected via a raised 10-pin slot in the centre of the magnetic strip. This is a far better option than a Bluetooth connection, and allows for a better transfer between the single USB 3.0 port located to one side of the keyboard.

In addition to accessing the USB port, the model I tested featured a 500GB hard drive built directly into the keyboard/dock section, activated when you snap the two sections together.The keyboard/dock section is pleasant to type on. In general, Acer laptops have great keyboards – and this remains true of the Switch 11 V. Keys are generously sized and well spaced, and the trackpad is accurate.When it comes to connectivity, the tablet section includes a micro-USB port, micro-HDMI port, a headset jack, and a microSD card reader; all to the left of the screen.The power button with a small LED indicating power/charge, volume rocker and a Windows Home button sit on the tablet’s right-hand side.

The 11.6-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 IPS panel on the Switch 11 V isn’t too bad, at least for everyday use. It’s clear and has a good level of brightness. Colours are rich, and with this being an IPS panel, viewing angles are inherently good.I’m not a big fan of the glossy Gorilla Glass screen that’s fitted over the actual panel, however. Acer claims it’s there to help reduce reflections and smudges. In reality it does a reasonable job, but only in darker environments. Should you end up sitting under the office light, you’ll soon find yourself having to deal with significant glare.What’s more, the glossy pane tends to attract dust, cat hair and fingerprints aplenty – make sure you have a cloth handy to wipe over the surface.The Acer Aspire Switch 11 V is ahead of most of the competition in that it comes with Windows 10 Home edition preinstalled. This will save you from having to go through Microsoft’s laborious upgrade process.

The company has loaded the OS with its usual assortment of software, which includes abDocs, abPhoto and abFiles. These tools will help you to backup, share and organise your content between devices, and with friends and family.You also get the Acer Care Centre, Acer Portal, Acer Hover Access, Acer Explorer and countless other desktop apps.Acer has also bundled in a copy of McAfee LiveSafe Internet Security and the Avast SecureLine VPN program. Finally, there’s a set of desktop shortcuts to Amazon, eBay and Booking.com.Generally speaking, the Acer apps do little than provide another layer from which to access an already easily accessible Windows function. I’d prefer they weren’t installed, but that’s a matter of personal preference.

The P37X is being marketed as one of Gigabyte’s thinnest and most powerful gaming notebooks to date, and features some top-end specs to back up this claim. It's loaded with 8GB of VRAM, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 980M GPU and an Intel Core i7-4727HQ processor.The Gigabyte P37X has a pleasingly understated design. Its completely functional black frame is, thankfully, free of the gimmicky red plastic trimming and needless LED lights seen on many competing Asus and Alienware laptops.By gaming laptop standards the Gigabyte P37X is also reasonably thin, measuring in at 417 x 287 x 22.5mm. By comparison the 17-inch Asus G751JL is a massive 43mm thick and the MSI GE72 is 27mm.The P37X is still far from travel friendly, though, with its 2.7kg weight making it too heavy to comfortably lug around in a satchel for prolonged periods.Though, if you’re just planning to carry it to a friend's LAN party every now and then, or take it on holiday with you, it’s one of the better gaming laptop options.

Gigabyte’s managed to load the P37X with an impressive array of ports that will meet most gamers’ needs. Along its right and left sides the P37X houses two USB 3.0 ports, two USB 2.0 ports, an HDMI input, D-sub, RJ45, mic in, headphones out, SD card slot, DC power, and a Mini DisplayPort.The P37X has also been designed to be an outright beast when it comes to storage. The model I reviewed came with a 1TB hard disk and an optical drive in place. Those who want more can swap out the optical drive for a 2.5-inch HDD/SDD.If you pop off the P37X’s back there’s space inside for two mSATA drives to further bolster its storage. The configuration means, if you wanted to, you could have up to 5TB of space on the P37X – which is pretty damned impressive.

I’m a little less enamoured about the Gigabyte P37X’s keyboard and trackpad. The keyboard on paper looks great. It’s backlit, has a full numberpad and six customisable macro keys along its left side.These should make it ideal for people who play games such as League of Legends, World of Warcraft or Call of Duty competitively online. But the keys are too squished together and the entire keyboard feels too small.Trying to play a bit of old school Diablo III, I found myself regularly hitting the wrong key. Eventually I was so fed up with the keyboard I ended up plugging in an Xbox One controller to finish the level.Yes, I was so annoyed I actually forwent the precision and customisability of a gaming mouse and physical keyboard – it was that frustrating.With time I got more used to the keyboard’s size. But with it taking up less than half the space it could have on the Gigabyte’s surface, it feels like a serious design flaw that could easily have been avoided.

The issue is especially annoying when the keyboards on cheaper £1,000 gaming laptops, such as the MSI GE62, offer a noticeably nicer gaming experience.The trackpad suffers from the same issue and feels too small and fiddly to use. This is slightly more forgivable considering most people will plug in a gaming mouse, but it's still a slight annoyance.Some gaming snobs may turn their nose up at the specifications, feeling in this price point it should have a 4K display, but in general I was seriously impressed with it. Icons are more than sharp enough and the P37X has the best viewing angles I’ve seen on a gaming laptop.Colour balance levels are also great and the screen is nicely unsaturated. Whites appear clean, and blacks, while not the deepest I’ve seen, are good enough. I also didn’t notice any significant backlight bleeding during my two-plus weeks with the Gigabyte P37X. All in all it’s more than good enough for gaming.

The P37X’s Display Port also lets you connect the laptop to a 4K monitor, so those who want to can get hi-res gaming. I didn’t have a 4K monitor to hand while reviewing the P37X, so sadly didn’t get test how it handled 4K gaming, but I'll be sure to do so the moment I get the chance.HP's Elite range usually comprises business laptops, but the Elite x2 1011 G1 marks a change from that particular blueprint. This is a hybrid machine with a detachable screen and a huge slate of business features.No single company has yet nailed the hybrid form factor, especially at the top end of the market. These machines often tend to compromise in important areas, making them a difficult sell compared to more focused tablets and laptops.

The Elite gets off to a good start with its detachable screen. It’s a design decision that leads to a machine that's more manageable than those systems with rotating hinges.The 11.6-inch panel is released via the press of a button that's set into the middle of the keyboard base. It works well, although it lacks finesse. The button itself is a little flimsy, the Windows logo is too close to the hinge, and the speaker grille is mostly blocked.With the tablet plugged into the base, the HP is 21mm thick and has a weight 1.55kg. These are reasonable figures that help the HP duck under Intel’s Ultrabook specification – but they’re less reassuring when compared to rivals.The Microsoft Surface Pro 3 is far thinner and lighter, and there isn't much between the HP and the Dell Latitude 13 7000 – which is just as slender but slightly heavier.

Against proper notebooks, the HP doesn't stack up well either. Windows machines such as the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon and HP EliteBook Folio are more slight, and Apple’s new MacBook and MacBook Pro models are similarly slim and light.It's the same story with tablets. The HP’s screen weighs 780g and is 11mm thick, which is more than both the iPad and the forthcoming iPad Pro.The Elite is made from aluminium, and it looks smart: The lid and keyboard surround are metallic, with black metal coating the screen surround and the base panel. The keyboard tapers to a narrow front edge, and the keys are sunk into the base to provide the buttons with a greater degree of travel.

The rear of the tablet section houses a smart HP logo, a speaker grille, a 5-megapixel webcam and a selection of buttons. On one side sits a power slider and a flap to protect the expansion slots; on the other you'll find a volume rocker and a screen-rotation lock.The Elite x2 1011 G1 is a well-made machine, but it isn't groundbreaking. Unlike the sleek Apple notebooks or the classic looks of Lenovo’s ThinkPads, there's nothing here that sets the Elite apart from the numerous other business devices on the market.This machine is designed as a business hybrid, so it’s crammed with office features. A small recess at the rear of the machine houses a Wacom-compatible stylus that works with the screen’s digitiser – a boon for graphic designers.

That screen doesn’t only impress with its digitiser. It’s an 11.6-inch IPS panel with a Full HD resolution, and it’s protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 3.Connectivity is broad. There’s dual-band 802.11ac wireless and a 4G-ready SIM card slot behind a flap on the rear of the tablet, and you'll find a microSD connector here too. The base and tablet both have USB 3 ports, plus the base unit is also home to an SD card slot, a smart card connector, a full-sized DisplayPort output and a fingerprint reader.The 5-megapixel rear camera is paired with a 2-megapixel front shooter featuring a dual-microphone array with noise-cancelling.My version of the Elite x2 is powered by an Intel Core M-5Y51. It’s one of the more powerful parts from the older Broadwell range of chips. It’s clocked to 1.1GHz with a Turbo peak of 2.6GHz, and it has two cores. Graphics grunt comes courtesy of Intel’s HD Graphics 5300 chipset, which here runs between 300MHz and 900MHz – the most ambitious speed of any Broadwell Core M part.


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