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Acer L100 Small Form Factor AMD Sempron 3500 160GB 1024MB DDR DVDRW Keyboard, Mouse MS Works Vista Home Premium Acer 19" Wide TFT Monitor | 
enlarge | Brand: Acer Category: CE
Buy Refurbished: £273.00
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 20098
Media: Electronics Shipping Weight (lbs): 19.5 Dimensions (in): 21.4 x 18.7 x 9.6
MPN: Aspire L100 Model: Aspire L100 EAN: 4718235869786 ASIN: B000P1Q19S
Release Date: May 1, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Me too... October 25, 2008 owevakas (UK) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I've also had problems with both screen flicker and overheating. The screen flicker was solved by replacing the monitor cable. The overheating caused the motherboard to fail after just over a year. It was replaced and, just a few months later, the second one seems to be going too. The technician said he'd repaired quite a few of these and predicted I'd continue to have problems with it. This PC is nice looking but clearly has design faults. I don't think I'll be buying Acer again.
Fried, flickered and finished with Acer September 24, 2008 Ed McBain (Stoke-on-Trent) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
We bought four of these for our office. Apart from the horrible overhead of Vista they seemed pretty good and the small form factor was really useful for desk space, so we got another six. It's now just over a year since we got the first batch and three of the first four have failed catastrophically after the motherboards fried. Most screens are afflicted by a ceaseless flicker and one of the second batch has failed. We noticed that the second batch we bought have upgraded cooling systems and despite putting it to Acer that there must be a recognised problem with the early ones which caused them to change the design they don't want to know. I would put this down as one of the the worst product choices we have made and if you google Acer for overheating or screen flicker you'll see there's loads of listings across their product range. It's a brand we'll be avoiding like the plague in the future.
Fried after 7 months! July 23, 2008 Razorbroon 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I bought one of these around seven months ago. For one thing it looks amazing, really compact and stylish and fits in really nicely beside your t.v. The shiny case looks the part and it is quiet as a mouse in your living room. Now the down side! The thing runs hotter than the sun and the loveliness of Vista is spoiled due to the flickering screen. I have read elsewhere that by upgrading the RAM this is solved, but why should i have to! Anyway seven months in and mine is going back, after having to get all my data backed up (twice) due to it not booting up i had to do the system restore (twice). This time though the hard disc is well and truly fried and has turned into a clunker. If i had the choice again i would probably pick the living room pc by Philips, surely more reliable?
Overheated! December 19, 2007 ~*Cara*~ (London) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Overall this is a great PC, however, they are known to overheat quickly. I got an Acer L100 for myself and was very pleased with it, untill i left it on over night to come back to it overheated and not being able to turn back on. I have tryed to fix it but it can not be easily fixed. Just a small problem to look out for b4 splashing out on this desktop. :)
Great value but let down by Vista October 5, 2007 Tghu Verd 29 out of 29 found this review helpful
I'll do the highlights first... Pro - Tiny PC, great styling, easy to get going, pretty much everything you need is included, fantastic value. Con - Windows Vista, it's still noiser than your average hi-fi components, 19" 'widescreen' LCD needs Viagra to extend its vertical size. So, on to the detail... It is amazing what can be packed in a box - in this case I'm talking about the actual packaging that arrived at my door 4 days before Amazon's expected delivery date (and in the middle of **another** UK mail strike to boot). Acer has managed to pack the PC, LCD, keyboard, mouse, speakers, power pack and assorted CDs and manuals into a box about the size that your average VCR might arrive in. It's neat and clean and very professional looking. Physically setting the unit up is a breeze for anyone who has seen the back of a PC before. And if you haven't but can figure things out with a bit of trial and error then the one-page install diagram should be sufficient. Basically, this is as no-brainer a PC installation as you can get. The PC itself is like a wannbe laptop - think about the size of your typical leather-bound Bible and you get the idea. It really is as cute as Acer make out and won't embarrass you if you do decide to set it up in your family room. However, it's obvious from the one-page install diagram that for some reason these L100's are not fully kitted out with all the interface options. Not that you aren't getting what you paid for, but I at least looked longingly at the S-Video and SPDIF icons and wondered why they are missing (OK, I know the most likely answer - PRICE). However, one ommission that's harder to understand is WiFi. There **seems** to be a socket for an antenna on teh back immediately under the headphone socket. But the one-page install diagram had nothing connecting to it and I could not find any mention of WiFi in the Windows Devices table, so I'm guessing it's one of those 'too hard to remove at the factory' things that leaves you teased but unsatisfied. Perhap's it is there, but Amazon tend to trumpet such features in the PCs they sell and it's not mentioned so I'm thinking bye-bye integrated WiFi. The rear of the unit has 4 USB ports packed pretty close to each other. I plugged in the mouse, keyboard, a Logitech headset and a Cruzer memory stick and it all fit. But I have some older memory sticks that are less slimline than the Cruzer and they won't fit in at all. The Ethernet port is on the back along with a DVI port, the VGA port and microphone/speaker jack. Oh yeah, and the power plug point as well. That's a barrel connector with the actual transformer as a seperate unit just like a laptop (and no kidding, the plug pack is **almost** as big as the PC itself). The front has another two USB ports hidden behind a sleek cover. The cover also hides another microphone/speaker jack, SD card reader and what looks like a FireWire port. The DVD slot is nice in that it does not pop out a tray - it's more like ones in cars where you push the DVD in a bit and it's neatly sucked in the rest of the way. Very child friendly indeed. Now I get to something of a let down - though I fully admit I am being very fussy with this expectation - being the included 19" widescreen LCD panel. I already have a 19" panel that is not widescreen and the Acer panel **is** wider, no doubt about that. But it is also about 2" smaller in the vertical screen size. So it looks a bit squeezed. Anyway, it performs well, is visually fantastic and for the price it's still a bargain, so don't be put off. Just don't expect to throw out your old TV and use the LCD unless you are planning on viewing things in a smallish room. So, I managed to get the box unpacked, connected and turned on in under 30 minutes without any sparks or smoke. Then I encountered Vista. It's my first play with Microsoft's newest operating system and I have to say, it seems full of gratuitious frills when compared to XP. And either the Acer is slow...or Vista is slow. I **think** it's Vista because with that AMD chip and 1GB of RAM the Acer sure looks good on spec. Plus, in use Vista seems to lag way behind the mouse clicks. Example, I downloaded Skype and clicked the 'Run' button on the IE download dialogue box. Nothing seemed to happen - though I did notice a fancy green slider moving across the top of the dialogue box - so I clicked it again. Result...two instances of the Skype installer asking me to proceed. It's been a common enough occurance with all types of windows that I'm thinking maybe Vista harks back to the hippy culture of the 60's when you could take your time Man, 'cause like, what's the rush?? I don't want to diss on Vista but I find it visually clunky and way too clever for its own good. Oh yeah, expect to go have dinner while all the Windows updates are downloaded and installed the first time around (and that's not Vista's fault...it pulled down about 120 Mbytes of updates spread across 37 programs and they take a while to install). Apart from that, there is some included software that's likely to annoy more experienced PC users than not (and Amazon is on the iffy side of disclosure in the product details on some of this). For example, you get a 90-day trial of Norton, even though Amazon clearly states "Additional Software: Norton AntiVirus 2006". No mention of trial versions. You also get a trial copy of Microsoft Office, though it looks like a student version. Neither of those is a killer (well maybe Norton's is), but it's nice to know in advance what you're going to have to bolt on and what really comes with the price. There was a trial version of eSobi which is a very fancy search engine. Being old school Google I removed it post haste. I also removed the trial version of Norton and installed CAs Security Centre. I can't claim it's better or worse than Norton, but having used the CA product for years I am familiar enough with it to get a new PC secured in short order. Apart from that I installed my Freecom TV tuner, the latest Windows Media Player, Mozilla Firefox, QuickTime, Shockwave and other sundry apps over a period of about four hours. As an aside, the hard drive is set up as two logical drives; each of them are about 70 Gbytes each and one is labelled 'DATA' so there is no mistaking what you are supposed to load up on that baby. The drive itself is probably the noisiest single part of the system - sit close and you can hear it clicking and whirring away. Indeed, in terms of a much vaunted feature - that 28 db noise figure - the L100 is still a PC and it has fans. Two of them in fact that I can see. And they are the kind that spin faster as the PC does more work, which I find a bit annoying to be honest. It is not going to bother you if you are using this just as a PC, as it really is much quieter than your average box (but not as quiet as most laptops). But it might bother you if you install this in the bedroom for watching DVDs and TV (with an additional USB tuner of course) unless your tastes run to James Bond and Jason Bourne-style flicks where it's wall to wall sound. And in that case, the supplied speakers won't float your boat. Full kudos to Acer for putting them in because they will get you going out-of-the-box and are perfect for straightforward PC work. But if you are planning on the L100 being the centrepeice of your audio-visual world you will be shelling out for a serious set of speakers (and if you are that way inclined, you clearly won't mind spending the extra pounds). In summary, the L100 is a great PC at a very good price that sits comfortably on the coffee table or desktop. I recommend it as a great first PC because all the hardware comes in one box...though you'll still have to shell out extra pounds when the trial software comes to an end. I don't recommend it for anyone who wants to open the lid and pack more things inside. Basically, there just aint the room!
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