Saturday, August 2, 2014

The Acer Aspire Switch 10 A unique hybrid with less hassle

The Good - The Acer Aspire Switch 10 has a hybrid mechanism that actually works, and it has a decent keyboard and touchpad for such a small body.
The Bad - The component-filled top half makes the system top heavy and prone to tipping over backwards. Performance feels sluggish for all-day use, and the default 32GB SSD will be too small for many.

The Bottom Line - The Acer Aspire Switch 10 is a budget hybrid that skips the more-common fold-back or button-clasp hinges and instead attaches its screen via a magnetic connection. It shares the same hardware limitations as other small hybrids, but can be easier to use.

There are many 10-inch and 11-inch hybrids to choose from right now if you've got about $400 to spend and realistic expectations of performance and storage capacity. Recent versions from Lenovo, Dell, and HP all offer Atom or Pentium-powered ultraportable bodies that convert to Windows 8 tablets, although none are ready to take the place of your all-day, every day PC.

Acer says its Switch 10 hybrid is especially flexible and built to work in four distinct modes. That may be a somewhat generous description, but it's similar to what other detachable or Yoga-style hybrids can do. There's the traditional clamshell mode, then the screen pops off and can be replaced facing outwards, forming a kind of kiosk mode, which Acer calls "display" mode. The kiosk shape can be flipped upside down to form a table tent, a form commonly cited by PC makers, but one that I've never seen a hybrid owner use in real life. Finally, the screen can detach as a full standalone slate-style tablet.

The 10.1-inch screen attaches via something Acer calls the Snap Hinge. It's essentially the same two-pronged connector found on many detachable hybrids, but instead of snapping together with a physical switch, powerful magnets pull the two halves together and keep them attached, a connection that held even when I picked up the system by the screen and shook it.

Being a smaller hybrid, the Switch 10 has similar components to what we've seen in recent 8-inch and 10-inch Windows 8 tablets. In this case, that's an Intel Atom CPU, 2GB of RAM, and up to a 64GB SSD for storage. For the base price of $380 (also available for about £300, and AU$700), however, you only get a 32GB SSD, and once you account for the actual footprint of Windows 8, that doesn't leave much room for anything else. The 64GB version is listed on Acer's website for $429, but I've seen it, and the 32GB version on sale at $400/$350 respectively.

At $400 for the 64GB version, I'm willing to consider the performance tradeoffs demanded of the Switch 10 and its Atom processor versus the slightly zipper (and more expensive) Yoga 2 11 and HP Pavilion x360 hybrids, in return for what I consider a more functional hybrid design, which kept me coming back to the Switch 10 day after day, even with more powerful hardware at hand.

Design and features

In the hand, the Switch 10 feels solid, with less of the plastic flimsy feel of so many low-cost Windows systems. But its design is also boxy and squared off, and a more tapered shape might help it feel even thinner.

As with nearly all two-in-one systems, what you're getting is a base with a keyboard and touchpad, plus in this case, a single USB 2.0 port; and a tablet screen that packs all the internal components inside. That means the CPU, RAM, SSD, and motherboard are all crammed behind the 10.1-inch screen, which makes it heavier than the base. When connected in clamshell form, it made the entire thing prone to tipping over backward. It's not an uncommon problem with hybrids, but it feels especially unbalanced here.

It's the actual method of connecting the two halves that strikes me as the big talking point of the Switch 10. Some hybrids use Yoga-style fold-back hinges that keep the base and screen permanently connected -- those are generally well-engineered, but you're always stuck with a keyboard behind a bulky tablet. Others have physical switches for releasing a latch holding the two halves together. I've found those models to be clunky, with big, ugly release buttons that are hard to hit cleanly.
In contrast, the Switch 10 uses a powerful magnetic catch that connects two prongs on the top of the hinge to two openings on the bottom edge of the tablet screen. A small connective strip between the prongs forms the electrical connection between the keyboard and the screen -- unlike some hybrids with a Bluetooth connection, the screen and dock need to be physically connected to work together.

I found this method of connecting the two halves of a two-in-one hybrid to be one of my favorites to date, mostly because you're not asked to fumble with a big ugly physical button and hook-style catches that often take two hands and several tries to connect properly. In the case of the Switch 10, I still didn't score a 100-percent success rate, but it was easier, thanks to the magnetic connection. I still needed two hands to pull the halves apart, but replacing the screen usually worked on the first try, except when the very strong magnetic connection pulled the screen down too quickly, missing one of the prongs.

The keyboard feels more cramped than some other small-screen hybrids, because this is a 10.1-inch system, while most of the competition is using 11.6-inch displays. Still, the thick, chunky island-style keys are easy to hit, and important keys such as Enter, Shift, and Tab are large. The touchpad is a good size for an ultraportable, and works well enough with multitouch gestures such as two-finger scrolling, but no one will confuse it with glass-topped models found in more premium laptops.
The 10.1-inch display has a 1,366x768 native resolution. Once the standard on laptops from ultraportable to midsize, it's now mostly restricted to systems that both have smaller screens and budget prices. For the size, it's perfectly usable, but some low-cost tablets running other operating systems (Android, iOS) are getting consumers accustomed to higher resolutions. Off-axis viewing wasn't great, but it was better than the HP x360, an otherwise excellent hybrid held back by a poor display.

Connections, performance, and battery
The Switch 10 offers a fairly minimal set of ports and connections, perhaps because of its diminutive size. Except for connecting an external mouse, these systems are usually very self-contained, but if you do want to use most of the micro-style connections, you'll need an adapter or dongle.

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