There’s something freeing about having a notebook with ridiculously long battery life. Sure, notebooks with battery life in the 8- to 10-hour range are pretty common these days, but when a laptop can manage upwards of 12 hours on a single charge, well, that’s still a rather impressive feat.
So it is with the Acer Chromebook R 13. This Chromebook promises up to a full 12 hours of battery life — and actually delivers. Although performance is a mixed bag, the Acer Chromebook R 13 is one machine that can get you through a full day or a long flight.
Price, availability and value
Acer sells Chromebook R 13 models starting at $399 (£399, about AU$520), but the model provided to TechRadar for review retails for $429. The only significant difference between the two models is that the base models come with only 32GB of solid-state storage, as compared to the 64GB on the $429 model.
Acer currently offers only one model of the Chromebook R 13 in the UK, which is different from the model we received for review. The R 13 is currently not available through Acer’s Australian website.
By comparison, at $449, the convertible Samsung Chromebook Pro is a little more expensive than the Chromebook R 13 model here, but it includes a stylus. The Samsung is also smaller and lighter than the Chromebook R 13, but it has less onboard storage than the specific Acer model here. Then you have the new Asus Chromebook Flip, which starts the conversation at $499 for a slightly smaller screen and half as much storage as this Acer configuration.
Flexible in good and bad ways
The Acer Chromebook R 13 is a no-frills notebook through and through. It’s perfectly adequate, with a few premium touches. The metal outer shell gives a good first impression when you first pull the R13 out of the box, but open the lid and you’re greeted by a fairly ordinary silver-gray plastic palm rest.
And, despite its reasonably thin and compact size, the R 13 still manages to feel a little ungainly, perhaps thanks to the thick bezel surrounding the screen and the strip of dead space above the keyboard.
Looks aside, the Chromebook R 13 is not particularly sturdy. The bottom case flexes noticeably when you pick it up with one hand or when you push down on the palmrest. It’ll probably hold up OK under light or careful use, but if you’re one to abuse your laptop, you might want to think long and hard before plunking down cash for this Chromebook.
The hinge, on the other hand, feels plenty sturdy, and lets you flip the screen around 180 degrees, allowing you to use the R 13 as a tablet. More on that later.
It may not be the thinnest, lightest or most compact 13-inch notebook out there, but the Acer Chromebook R 13 is still a reasonable travelling companion. Measuring 0.6 inches (1 5mm) thick and weighing in at 3.28 pounds (1.49 kg), this Chromebook is a tenth of an inch (2.5mm) thicker and roughly 0.4 pounds (181 grams) heavier than than the pricier HP Chromebook 13.
Other convertible Chromebooks, like the Asus Chromebook Flip C302 and Samsung Chromebook Pro, are lighter still, weighing in at 2.6 and 2.38 pounds, respectively. Those machines are smaller, however, with 12.5- and 12.3-inch screens.
A good-enough keyboard and trackpad
The Chromebook R 13’s keyboard took a little getting used to after using a late-2016 MacBook Pro as our primary machine. Although you get a decent amount of key travel, key presses feel a little softer than we’d like. So, while it’s perfectly usable, it isn’t our favorite keyboard.
The same goes with the trackpad, really: it’s not great, but it is usable. It’s sufficiently large for tracking around the screen, but the clicking mechanism feels flimsy, You can actually depress the trackpad slightly without the R 13 registering a click – an annoying quirk that took some getting used to.
Chromebooks have earned a bit of a reputation for lacking power compared to their Windows counterparts. And it’s been true to a degree — Chromebooks have traditionally occupied the lower end of the notebook market, and as such, they have tended to use lower-power components.
But, times are changing, and so are Chromebooks. More powerful Pentium- and Core i series-based Chromebooks are becoming more common, and slower machines, like the Chromebook R 13, are getting left behind.
Performance
While the R 13’s Kraken 1.1 score of 3302 milliseconds is an improvement over some older Chromebooks – like last year’s HP Chromebook 14 – it’s significantly slower than the scores put up by the higher priced ($499) Asus Chromebook Flip C302, which completed the benchmark in less than half the time. The same holds true with the Octane and JetStream scores, where the Asus Chromebook Flip performed two to three times faster on the benchmarks.
The R 13 intermittently suffers from choppy interface animations, less-than-smooth scrolling, and sluggish window dragging. Some tasks also caused Spotify streaming music to stutter in my testing. Again, if performance is your number-one priority, you may want to pass on the Chromebook R 13 and instead spend a little more on similar convertible Chromebooks, like the aforementioned Asus Chromebook Flip and Samsung Chromebook Pro ($549).
It’s not all bad, of course: the Chromebook R13 boots up quickly, and handles most web browsing and productivity tasks just fine (most of the time, anyway). Videos also play back smoothly for the most part, even in full 1080p HD resolution. And Chrome OS is as lightweight and responsive as ever, making lackluster raw performance less of an issue.
A battery that keeps going
While the raw performance numbers aren’t remarkable, the battery is impressive. Acer says the Chromebook R 13’s three-cell, 4,670 mAh battery will last for twelve hours. And, in our experience, that’s not much of an exaggeration.
In our video battery test — in which we loop “Guardians of the Galaxy” over and over until the battery dies — the Chromebook R 13 lasted 12 hours and 12 minutes with the screen set to 50% brightness. The Asus Chromebook Flip C302 managed 10 hours and 46 minutes in the same test, while the Samsung Chromebook Pro reported 8 hours and 43 minutes.
In our hands-on time, we never quite got to the 12 hours we saw in the video playback test, but we did manage to eke out over 9 hours in everyday usage — browsing the web, streaming music via Spotify, watching YouTube videos, and writing this review — with the display at 50% brightness. As always, your mileage will vary depending on your usage patterns, but with the Chromebook R 13, you can leave your charger behind and make it through the day.
Sight and sound
The Acer Chromebook R 13 is built around a 13.3-inch IPS LCD screen with a 1,920 x 1,080 resolution. That is pretty much the norm for 13-inch Chromebooks, though some higher-end Chromebooks now feature much higher-resolution screens.
For the most part, it’s a good screen. Text and images appear crisp and clear at both 1,920 x 1,080 and 1,536 x 864 resolutions. Contrast and color saturation are deep, but I did notice that colors were slightly muted compared to how they appear on my trusty, late-2012 13-inch MacBook Air. (We’ve seen this quirk in multiple Chromebooks now, which leads us to believe that this may be a color calibration issue rather than a hardware shortcoming.)
Unless you’re into photography or are comparing one screen to another side-by-side, though, you probably won’t really notice a difference.
The R 13’s stereo speakers are acceptable, if a little tinny (they’re laptop speakers, after all). They’re placed on the bottom of the machine, which means they’ll sound muffled if you have the R 13 on a soft surface. They sound best when you have the notebook on a desk or tabletop, and they’re sufficiently loud.
USB-C is in (and so is USB 3.0)
The Chromebook R 13 features one USB 3.0 port, as well as one USB-C port used for charging and other USB-C devices. You’ll also find an HDMI port, a microSD slot, and a headphone jack.
It’s a decent number of ports, but you’ll need an adapter to use the USB-C port with standard USB peripherals. Also, since you charge using the USB-C port, you’re down to only one USB port while charging.
A Chrome OS tablet, sort of
Like the Samsung Chromebook Pro and Asus Chromebook Flip C302, the Chromebook R 13 has a screen that can flip around 180 degrees, effectively turning it into a tablet (When in tablet mode, the keyboard and trackpad are disabled to prevent accidental trackpad and keyboard input).
It’s not an ideal setup — Chrome OS isn’t really pulling off a touch-friendly operating system just yet –so it can be a little tedious to use. Still, the option is there if you want it, and you may find Google Keep, with its drawing tools, to be a useful app for jotting down quick notes.
We also noticed that the screen was a little slow to respond to touch input such as scrolling and drawing, but this may be related to the overall interface sluggishness noted earlier.
We liked
The Acer Chromebook R 13 is a notebook built to last — at least in terms of battery life — and it outclasses the battery runtime you’ll find in comparable convertible laptop-tablet hybrid Chromebooks from Asus and Samsung. Also, the display, while not perfect, does a good job at rendering text and images.
We disliked
Performance, while acceptable in real-world use, does not quite match up to similar, though more expensive, Intel-based Chromebooks from other vendors. In addition, the Chromebook R 13’s build quality is suspect — the notebook’s case is surprisingly flexible (and no, that isn’t a good thing).
Final verdict
If you’re looking for speed and sizzle, look elsewhere. The Acer Chromebook R 13 is not going to wow you. Its performance leaves something to be desired. It isn’t the sleekest piece of kit around. It isn’t particularly inexpensive. But, it runs for a really long time on a single charge.
For a lot of people, that alone might be enough. If battery life is on the top of your wish list, the Acer Chromebook R 13 is worth a look. Otherwise, it does little to distinguish itself from the pack.
from TechRadar: Technology reviews http://ift.tt/2omv4eB
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