Skip to main content

AMD is about to upend the Chromebook market just like it did for PCs

Acer is doing Ryzen right with its new Chromebook Spin 514.

It's the middle of the afternoon on a Friday and I'm typing this out on my back deck using a Chromebook. I love the darn things and any time I can get away from a desk during the workday I try to do it, and always with a Chromebook in tow. To me, a really well-built mid-range Chromebook with plenty of power and plenty of storage is just right.

No one Chromebook is perfect for everyone.

Of course, the best Chromebook for me might not be the best Chromebook for you. But if you're like me and want a modestly priced Chromebook that outperforms and out delivers, I think Acer has just what you're looking for in 2021 with the new Chromebook Spin 514.

It's not sleek and light as a feather. Not all of them have a backlit keyboard, nor do any have a glass-covered trackpad. But what it does have makes up for it — a beautiful 14-inch display, a very tough build of anodized aluminum, the best hinge system you'll find on any model, user expandable storage, and a new AMD Ryzen 3 CPU.

The durable build quality and amazing set of hinges aren't new. Acer has used basically the same design language for its premium Spin series of Chromebooks for a few years now. That doesn't take away from them, though, because the thing is super tough and the hinges are light as a feather until they lock into position. It's hard to describe, but trust me, it works. Other companies need to copy it.

Acer isn't the first company to offer expandable storage in a Chromebook, either. But the Spin 514 does it the right way, with an empty M.2 slot so you can hit up Amazon or Newegg or wherever and grab a terabyte of storage and drop it right in without voiding any warranties.

And of course, Acer's Spin 514 isn't the first Chromebook to use an AMD chip or even the first to use an AMD Ryzen chip. But from what I've seen and heard during the product briefing, and from what Ara Wagoner tells me as I bug her to try different things with the review model she has, Acer is doing it right.

Mobile Ryzen chips share one thing with their bigger brethren — they can get hot.

AMD Ryzen mobile APUs aren't the same Ryzen chips you find in a desktop, but they tend to use the same principle when it comes to power. The Ryzen 3 3250 inside the Spin 514 is a dual-core chip with two virtual cores clocked up to 3.5GHz and it's own tri-core 1200MHz Radeon GPU. It's the cost of a cheap dual-core Intel Celeron that so many Chromebooks have under the hood, but it performs like the Intel Core i3 Chromebooks so many of us didn't want to spend the extra money on.

The issue with a mobile Ryzen chip is the same as it is with a desktop chip — these things get hot. That means the 15 watts of power going through the chip can potentially crank the heat up to 95-degrees Celcius before it's throttled down, and that's going to quickly happen unless the company building a laptop using one knows what it's doing. Acer seems to know exactly what it's doing.

I spy with my little eye half of the ventilation slots an efficient cooling system needs.

What you don't notice much in the few photos of the 514 are all the vents that supply air to a powerful but quiet cooling fan. In case you've never built a PC or opened one up, the right cooling makes all the difference when it comes to performance. We do know (Thanks, Ara!) that you can really use it without it burning your lap or getting sluggish. The cooling system works.

From what we already can see, Acer did it right when it comes to the cooling system. It's game on now!

The heat coming off the top of that Ryzen chip — and there will be plenty of it when you're only talking two physical cores — can be efficiently pulled away by using a fan that's not starved for ambient air. This doesn't just give you more time before your CPU will reach a point where it slows down because of thermal throttling, it means your CPU will never reach a temperature where it's forced to lower the clock speed because things are too hot.

The Ryzen chip will run in its normal low-power state most of the time, but when you need the power, like when playing a game or watching a full-screen HD video, the boost clock will kick in and crank it all up to 11. This is going to eat away at your battery faster, but with that right fan and plenty of ventilation, your temperatures will never climb high enough to slow everything down and make your game or video choppy and make you hate it.

This is probably a vision of things to come and we'll see plenty of Ryzen powered Chromebooks with beefy cooling solutions in 2021. But as of right now, if you're in the market for a high-end Chromebook at a mid-range price, Acer has your back coming this February.

Acer's Best Chromebook Right Now

Acer Chromebook Spin 713 (CP713-2W)

$629 at Best Buy

Can't wait for the Spin 514? Buy Acer's best today.

There's a lot of reasons to love the Spin 713 — the 2K screen, the ample port selection, the beefy internals — but what I think I adore the most is that while other Project Athena Chromebooks were chasing ultra-thin, ultra-minimal designs, Acer instead focused on providing a complete experience at a reasonable price.


Source: androidcentral

Popular posts from this blog

The hidden cost of food delivery

Noah Lichtenstein Contributor Share on Twitter Noah Lichtenstein is the founder and managing partner of Crossover , a diversified private technology fund backed by institutional investors, technology execs and professional athletes and entertainers. More posts by this contributor What Studying Students Teaches Us About Great Apps I’ll admit it: When it comes to food, I’m lazy. There are dozens of great dining options within a few blocks of my home, yet I still end up ordering food through delivery apps four or five times per week. With the growing coronavirus pandemic closing restaurants and consumers self-isolating, it is likely we will see a spike in food delivery much like the 20% jump China reported during the peak of its crisis. With the food delivery sector rocketing toward a projected $365 billion by the end of the decade, I’m clearly not the only one turning to delivery apps even before the pandemic hit. Thanks to technology (and VC funding) we can get a ri

Cyber Monday Canada: Last-minute deals for everyone on your list

Best Cyber Monday Canada deals: Smart Home Audio Phones, Tablets & Accessories Wearables Laptops & PC Components Amazon products Gaming Televisions Cameras Lifestyle & Kitchen Toys & Kids Cyber Monday Canada is here, and retailers are rolling out the red carpet for customers who want to shop for everything from tech to kitchenware to games and everything in between. Unlike years past, Cyber Monday Canada deals look a bit different than normal. Instead of retailers trying to pack their stores with as many shoppers as possible, we're seeing tons of online deals that you can take advantage of from the comfort of your home. We've rounded up our favorites below, so feel free to browse through the best of what Canada Cyber Monday has to offer! This list is being updated with new Cyber Monday deals all the time, so check back often. Spotlight deals It's a Switch Nintendo Switch Fortnite Edition bundle $399.95 at Amazon It's a Switch.

iPhone 13 Pro vs. iPhone 15 Pro Buyer's Guide: 50+ Differences Compared

The iPhone 15 Pro brings over 50 new features and improvements to Apple's high-end smartphones compared to the iPhone 13 Pro, which was released two years prior. This buyer's guide breaks down every major difference you should be aware of between the two generations and helps you to decide whether it's worth upgrading. The ‌iPhone 13‌ Pro debuted in 2021, introducing a brighter display with ProMotion technology for refresh rates up to 120Hz, the A15 Bionic chip, a telephoto camera with 3x optical zoom, Macro photography and photographic styles, Cinematic mode for recording videos with shallow depth of field, ProRes video recording, a 1TB storage option, and five hours of additional battery life. The ‌iPhone 13‌ Pro was discontinued upon the announcement of the iPhone 14 Pro in 2022, but it is still possible to get hold of it second-hand. Our guide helps to answer the question of how to decide which of these two iPhone models is best for you and serves as a way to c

Slack’s new integration deal with AWS could also be about tweaking Microsoft

Slack and Amazon announced a big integration late yesterday afternoon. As part of the deal, Slack will use Amazon Chime for its call feature, while reiterating its commitment to use AWS as its preferred cloud provider to run its infrastructure. At the same time, AWS has agreed to use Slack for internal communications. Make no mistake, this is a big deal as the SaaS communications tool increases its ties with AWS, but this agreement could also be about slighting Microsoft and its rival Teams product by making a deal with a cloud rival. In the past Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield has had choice words for Microsoft saying the Redmond technology giant sees his company as an “existential threat.” Whether that’s true or not — Teams is but one piece of a huge technology company — it’s impossible not to look at the deal in this context. Aligning more deeply with AWS sends a message to Microsoft, whose Azure infrastructure services compete with AWS. Butterfield didn’t say that of course