

- Acer iconia 6120 erecovery 64 Bit#
- Acer iconia 6120 erecovery portable#
- Acer iconia 6120 erecovery pro#
- Acer iconia 6120 erecovery Bluetooth#
- Acer iconia 6120 erecovery windows 7#
It allows fast access to touch optimized entertainment, social and admin tools. When five fingers are placed on the screen, a kind of main control center opens. The majority of them belong to the " Acer Ring Applications", a five finger circle interface. There are a vast amount of tools on the hard disk.
Acer iconia 6120 erecovery pro#
Aside from that, a cleaning cloth, a USB cardreader (SD, SDHC, miniSD, microSD, MMC, Memory Stick, Memory Stick PRO, Memory Stick PRO Duo, M2) tumble out of the box.
Acer iconia 6120 erecovery 64 Bit#
The buyer has to burn his own recovery DVD for securing Windows Home Premium 64 bit via Acer's eRecovery Management. Merely a quick guide and a warranty card are found. Thus, the Iconia is state of the art in terms of network connections. The Atheros AR8151 PCIe Gigabit Ethernet controller matches perfectly to the home gigabit switch.

Acer iconia 6120 erecovery Bluetooth#
It also includes an integrated Bluetooth module ( 3.0+HS). WLAN in the fastest draft-n standard is supported by the 802.11 b/g/n wireless card from Broadcom. The levers underneath the base plate release the battery for removal. The exchangeable components, such as hard disk, RAM (2 modules) and mini PCIe wireless module, are found underneath. The lock is released by pushing two feet. In view of the stability and weight, this contact point should have been excluded. When the Iconia is held between its hinges during opening the battery and lid's bottom collide with a creaking noise. Since the base unit is very heavy, we only need one hand to open it up to 180 degrees. The tightly pulled hinges make an endurable impression. The aluminum surface of the solid lid and the base plate are of high quality and scratch resistant. We can neither depress the base plate nor the touchscreen even with great force. Base unit and lid are very stable and have a high torsional stiffness. It becomes obvious where the 2.73 kilograms are hidden when handling the Iconia. We would have rather called the Iconia "Dual Screen Notebook" or " Touchbook". Thus, you can't say it's a slim and light device. WeTab 3G, 11.6 inch), and aren't thicker than 15 millimeters ( Toshiba Folio 100, 10.1 inch). Such devices weigh 1000 grams in the heaviest case (e.g. It's brave to speak of a tablet with this background. The base unit has a height of 22 millimeters even without the lid. There is a smartkey correction system that works pretty decent, but by and large you’ll be needing to get it right yourself.Acer's Iconia presents itself in a bulky case of 2730 grams. There is no option for resting your fingers on the screen above the keys, so for the most part you’ll be uncomfortably hovering. You can’t feel where your fingers are going, and of course you can’t always see the back keys with your hands in position. I spent a few hours each day trying to type with it and do everyday functions, and though I got better and more accurate, it simply was not comfortable nor did it amount to a speed beyond pecking. Rest your palms (or your ten digits) on the display and up pops a virtual recreation of a standard laptop keyboard and trackpad. That’s where the bottom screen comes in-or at least, where it should. The keyboard at best amounted to uncomfortable "speed pecking"
Acer iconia 6120 erecovery windows 7#
It hearkens back to one of the (many) problems facing Toshiba’s Libretto W105: there’s just too much of Windows 7 showing, too much that still requires a mouse to use. The top screen should be easy to comprehend-it’s a touchscreen Windows 7 device, meaning one in every three icons will be larger than usual while the rest of the menus will remain tiny as can be. The virtual keyboard is still very usable, but reading text just won’t happen. These are all particularly noticeable on the bottom screen, which won’t be in an optimal viewing position unless you’ve got the device propped on an incline. Worse still, the pair suffers from a trifecta of annoyances: heavy glare, pronounced fingerprint smudging, and bad vertical viewing angles. The two 14-inch, 1366 x 768 touchscreen displays can withstand quite the digit-beating thanks to Gorilla Glass, but at the same time doesn’t always seem to register my clicks.
Acer iconia 6120 erecovery portable#
Making it even less portable is a 4-cell Lithium Ion that in practice lasted just over two hours per charge. The Touchbook, as Acer calls it, weights 6.2 pounds and measures about 1.3 inches thick when closed, which is all just about on par with the Dell XPS 15 equipped with a 9-cell battery.

The Iconia Touchbook is more akin to a proof of concept or a prototype: some great ideas skinned over a platform that can’t handle it (Windows 7) and built into hardware not ready for prime time.
