the recession refers to the V3-111P with Touch / Pentium and 4GB memory.
Vornweg that device / display can of course not keep up with a tablet in the price range from 200 Euro, even at 150 Euro Android Tablets will be difficult in the direct comparison. Nevertheless, this is a nice device and if one has no point of view needs but primarily from a position looking at it, you can certainly live with that. All in all, it is of course highly questionable why such displays at all come into circulation, but hardly anybody until nobody makes the device class netbooks better (
The positive properties:
+ Seems full support Linux from 14:10 (Ubuntu etc)
+ Silent (with optional built-in SSD)
+ Very performant thanks Pentium or Celeron (both nearly equal nimble)
+ Optional up to 8GB memory possible
+ USB3 exist, div. Terminals installed "back" I like that
+ Very appealing look and feel and stability
+ Battery life under Windows 8.1 is enormous (~ 8h with WiFi and ~ 40% brightness)
+ Battery life under Linux is enormous (Update: as the 8h are there when you walk in Power Save)
+ Speedstep works on Linux and Monitoring (clock speed and temperature)
+ The keyboard is really for fast writers and I find them suitable class
+ Huge trackpad which works very precise and if well configured in Linux (see Minus)
+ Good sound (loud, full) is what unfortunately downwards, but goes better than me aloud
Since I am not at all warm with Windows 8 unfortunately flew it down directly and it was the HDD expanded, because I want to not do anything in such devices with HDD's (except as a data grave in the server).
I chose a Ubuntu Linux Mate Stick to tinker with 14:10 and was very surprised that the integrated WLAN card contrary to my expectations when you installed had wireless access. The touch screen worked well right away, and the display scaled after a few seconds as it should be. Mind you that was not yet in a 14:02!
Beautifully.
At the moment I can not find a better netbook (of the performance and the feel) at this price, that's why I give 4.5 stars to Acer. Too bad that in the smaller models (E3) can be retrofitted any SATA HDD, since the I / O shields are missing on the mainboard, who needs no touch would otherwise there become sure to find something for a lot less money. The half star deduction there for the display)
I think if you have to focus on Linux should be something worthwhile as a dual-core version and without touch that are so much cheaper (E3), however, one must unfortunately buy with HDD because the device without HDD have no I / O shield so as missing quasi SATA + power connectors. In what the matte displays are better or worse, I am unable to say, however, believed the reviews are not so great.
As negative points I can see so far
- Display (black level bad viewing angles well, and at all) you can live with it but should not have directly compare or very high demands, in any case there is no blue tint
- WLAN card had better not plug in there, have the 7260 upgraded from Intel
- Touch screen works in the lower part (ie lower margin) rather poor, probably. just not calibrated
- The touchpad will probably work from after standby and no longer (... there's probably already a solution for Linux you can build yourself, I think in newer releases, it is now fixed)