Final Words

Summing up the Acer Aspire S7 shows a mix of things done well and things that need work. The design of the Acer S7 is strong, with it being one of the thinnest and lightest Ultrabooks around that are powered by a Broadwell-U processor. The glass cover on the top of the display is a premium touch, and the aluminum keyboard deck feels excellent like only a metal can reproduce. Acer also has a great thing going with their dual-torque hinges, even though the one on the S7 is not quite as easy to use as the R 13 model, but I think this is only the case because of how light the S7 is. It is kind of amazing that this notebook is really already three years old. The design has held up well.

There is not much more to say about Broadwell-U at this point. Skylake is literally already announced. Acer sent me this notebook a couple of months ago, but it was still going to be tight with the release of Skylake. We are still waiting on devices to arrive with the 15 Watt Skylake parts, but the battery life gains and performance jump of Broadwell over Haswell is still impressive. The Core i7-5500U that Acer sent in this laptop is no slouch. On the rest of the specifications, it is also right out of the Ultrabook play book, with 8 GB of DDR3L and a 256 GB SSD. I’ve already harped on it a few times, but Acer needs to ditch the RAID 0 and go with a single faster SSD, preferably PCIe, in the next refresh.

Performance is good, and styling is good. That is a great start for the S7, and I can see why this is a notebook I have heard others recommend over the years. For me, there has yet to be a perfect laptop, and the S7 is certainly not there either.

What needs some work is, for starters, the keyboard. Silver keys with a light colored font is already a challenge to read, but once you turn on the light green backlighting it is pretty much impossible to read the keys unless you are in a completely dark room. Maybe I am in a minority here, but I feel that backlighting should improve the visibility, and not hinder it. The Acer S7 is certainly not the only device to fall into this trap, but that doesn’t change the fact that it did. The keys themselves could also use some work, but it is difficult when notebooks are this thin. The lack of a fifth row of function keys also makes it awkward to do standard tasks which would normally be done with those keys.

The display is also sub-par for 2015. When the Aspire S7 first launched in 2013, even having an IPS offering instantly made the display a lot better than many being sold at that time. In the last two years though, we have seen a big swing in display performance and accuracy, and the S7 simply falls short of the bar for this year.

The software situation is also a bad one, and one that I wish all companies would abandon especially on the higher priced devices like this one. I understand margins are thin when you are selling a notebook for a couple of hundred dollars, but once you get into the mid-thousands I find that hard to accept. Acer gets paid to put links to eBay and Dropbox onto this machine. Do I really need a shortcut on my taskbar to Amazon? Likely not. I can usually find my way there myself.

Getting back to the positives, Acer has done a decent job on battery life. If you exclude the Dell XPS 13, it lands right near the top of devices sold this year, despite having a smaller than average battery inside. That is a net win, since it can keep its svelte form factor and still deliver in mobility, which is kind of the idea of an Ultrabook. It is not class leading here, but it handles itself well. Even more interesting is how much of a jump the Acer S7 has seen in the last two generations with the move from Ivy Bridge in 2013 to Haswell in 2014, and now Broadwell. We have to thank Acer for letting us review the same basic model over the last three years.

All in all, the Acer Aspire S7 is a stylish, thin, and light Ultrabook, which packs in good performance without having to ramp up the cooling fans. It has some issues that need to be addressed in future generations, but if an outright accurate display is not at the top of your list of requirements, it may not matter, just like the keyboard which is certainly serviceable and really only at a disadvantage because of the thin profile of this notebook. Yes, Broadwell is near the end of its reign, but it was a good reign.

Wireless, Speakers, Noise, and Software
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  • webby7 - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link

    Any chance of a HP Spectre x360 review? That along with the XPS 13 seem to be the ultrabooks to beat.
  • MykeM - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link

    I can understand picking an Acer 2 or 3 years ago but now Dell presents a much more compelling choice if you're looking for Windows premium sub-notebook. Is there a reason to pick this over the XPS 13?
  • Michael Bay - Tuesday, October 6, 2015 - link

    XPS has been reviewed to death already.
  • Ethos Evoss - Wednesday, October 7, 2015 - link

    anandatech woke up just now tho
  • johnny_boy - Tuesday, October 6, 2015 - link

    Not surprised by the crappy display. My budget S3-391 ultrabook has one of the worst displays I've seen, though obviously good enough for what I use it for--word processing, pdf viewing, and web browsing. I wish it was easy to test battery longevity. My Acer's battery ended up at 33% of its capacity after just under two years. I've since dropped in a new battery, but who knows how long it'll last. Also surprised by noise, since my machine howls during even light activity. Then again, I paid a fraction of what the S7 costs, but it's not instilled much confidence in me as regards Acer products.
  • sharath.naik - Tuesday, October 6, 2015 - link

    Not sure if its only me but that silver keys on a silver body annoys me to no end.
  • sibuna - Friday, October 9, 2015 - link

    I actually have one of the earlier models of these, its not a bad ultrabook but the keyboard is fing horrid. I also have a Samsung ATIV book and its keyboard is worlds better then the on on the acer
  • flyingpants - Monday, October 12, 2015 - link

    Cool. Why isn't the keyboard as large as the new Macbook?
  • Mr. Pedantic - Tuesday, October 27, 2015 - link

    I bought the 392, and the things that annoyed me the most when I bought it are things like the keyboard, but also that the power cable connects to the laptop very flimsily and at times can just fall out. I am very happy with the performance, and I never expected it to be a powerful machine given that it weighs so little, but the things that make me think I should have bought a different Ultrabook are things that can't easily be measured.
  • Ethos Evoss - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Best looking ultrabook on the planet

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