

Note: I replaced the 8GB SDHC module with a 16GB SDHC module 32GB SDHC is the maxĬard Reader: Multi-in-one card reader ( placed 16GB SDHC module in that slot 32GB SDHC is the max)īattery: 6-cell roughly 5 hours of run time Storage: 24GB (8GB SSD and 16GB SDHC module). Integrated Intel Video Card: 224MB Memory LAN: 10/100 base T (basically an ethernet card)īoot Capability: IDE0 (SSD), IDE1, USB FDD, USB HDD, Network Boot, USB CDROMīattery: 3-cell roughly 2 hours of run time Storage: 16GB (8GB SSD and 8GB SDHC module) LCD: 8.9" CrystalBrite WSVGA (1024 x 600 True Color refresh rate 60Hz) If you are wondering what the power support requirements of this device (or your own device) is in a solar setting, check out the solar calculators. NOTE: A review of the Alienware M11XR2 netbook has been done and you can check it out here when you're done with this review. And to wrap up, I'll go into setting up a limited account (for surfing), securing the Guest Account and changing mobile power settings. The applications and games are not an exhaustive list by any means but can give you an idea of what the Acer Aspire One Netbook can handle. Then I'll cover a set of applications and games that actually run on the Acer Aspire One Netbook as well as a few that don't will be shown. 72GB is the limit because the SDHC standard only supports 32GB for a single SDHC module (SDXC, a new standard coming out in 2010, will support up to 2 Terabytes). You can go as high as 72GB not including what you may plug into one of the three USB 2.0 slots. The purpose of this tutorial is to demonstrate how I changed my Acer Aspire One Netbook (a mere $250USD when I purchased it) to push it beyond the factory defaults such as expanding the integrated graphics card memory from 8MB to 224MB and expanding drive storage from the default 16GB (8GB SSD + 8GB SDHC card) to 40GB.
