The $2599 Acer Aspire 8920 is a  whole lotta laptop, crammed with so many features that we kept checking  for a kitchen sink. It has a humongous screen,  a Blu-ray drive, six speakers, a giant hard drive, a top-flight  processor, and a gadget-laden keyboard. You won't skip the light  fandango while carrying this 9-pound monstrosity, but you will get  awesome performance (and anemic battery life). In other words, it's a  powerful desktop replacement laptop that will take up most of your desktop.
The 18.4-inch screen, with a fully HD-capable 1920-by-1080-pixel  resolution, makes the 8920 good for creative types or for a family room.  It's a dream screen for watching movies, editing graphics, or engaging  in other highly detailed work. The screen is so surreally large that  complaining about anything hardly seems fair, but we do wish that it was  a little brighter.
Acer offers two fixed configurations of the 8920; we reviewed the  beefier AS8920-6671, which includes a 2.6-GHz T9500 Core 2 Duo processor  and 4GB of main memory. Given its power, we weren't too surprised when  it smoked our performance tests with a score of 97, just one point shy  of the Montevina-equipped    HP Pavilion dv7t.  The 512MB nVidia GeForce 9650M GS graphics card turned in solid gaming  scores of 127 frames per second in Doom 3 and 162 fps in Far Cry with  antialiasing turned off. One drawback of the 8920: The 2.6-hour battery  life will give you more than enough time to move this beast to another  room and find a new outlet, but not much else.


Acer switched to a richer-looking, dark-metallic-blue lid and a  shiny piano-black keyboard for the 8920, ditching the light case colors  of its older Gemstone notebooks. The keyboard has a nice layout,  including a dedicated number pad and tons of shortcuts for you to get  all sorts of things done with the press of a button. The most  conspicuous is Acer's giant 'E' shortcut key in the upper right of the  keyboard, shaped and colored like a big fake jewel, which launches  Empowering Technology on-screen shortcuts, a drop-down menu for setting  sound effects, power management controls, security (file encryption)  settings, and Acer eRecovery Management for making full or partial  backups to the D: drive. Four long, skinny silver buttons lined up  vertically underneath the 'E' handle Wi-Fi and Bluetooth combination  power/indicator controls, always welcome conveniences.


To the left of the keyboard is the CineDash Media Console, a large  touch-sensitive control pad that resembles a seating chart for a  concert hall: The round "stage" area is Enter, the semicircular parts  that look like rows are the volume swipe, and so on. It's easy to use  once you get your bearings, though it does take some getting accustomed  to. (Is that a concession stand or the Pause button?) Too bad the  laptop's speakers don't sound better; the bass was so timid that we  didn't even know a subwoofer existed until we looked underneath. Still,  the speakers are loud and pleasing enough for you to listen to music or  watch a movie without headphones.
The 8920 is nearly 2 inches thick, with lots of case space for  connections--and this laptop mostly delivers on ports. The stylish  dropped hinges leave a clean, port-free rear. A six-in-one card reader  and an infrared receiver that works with the included entertainment  remote control sit conveniently on the front. The machine has four USB  ports--two on each side--and on the left side are an HDMI port and extra  audio line-in. Somewhat surprising, though, is this laptop's complete  lack of FireWire or eSATA ports.
The 320GB hard drive should be storage nirvana for video fiends.  Acer rounds out the package with a set of basic productivity  applications, including Microsoft Works 8.5.
If you need a basic, workhorse desktop replacement, you have  cheaper, more sensible choices than the Acer Aspire 8920. But if flashy  looks and big-screen entertainment are your goals, the 8920 deserves a  spot on your short list.
Overall Performance
| WorldBench 6 Score | 97 | 
| WorldBench 6 Rating | Superior | 
Battery
| Battery Life (Video Playback & Typing) | 2:38:57 AM (hh:mm) | 
Office Productivity
| Web Browsing | 306 seconds (lower is better) | 
| Office Suite Use | 357 seconds (lower is better) | 
| File Compression | 215 seconds (lower is better) | 
Content Creation
| Image Editing | 374 seconds (lower is better) | 
| GPU Graphics Rendering | 341 seconds (lower is better) | 
| CPU Graphics Rendering | 616 seconds (lower is better) | 
| Video Encoding | 214 seconds (lower is better) | 
| DVD Burning | 565 seconds (lower is better) | 
| Video Editing | 213 seconds (lower is better) | 
Gaming
| Far Cry, 1024 by 768, 32-Bit | 162.52 Frames per second (higher is better) | 
| Doom 3, 1024 by 768, 32-Bit | 127.53 Frames per second (higher is better) | 
Performance
| World Bench 5 Multitasking | 377 | 
| Number of Included Batteries | 1 | 
thank's to pcworld.com for the review
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