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Saturday, August 24th, 2013

    Time Event
    12:00a
    Acer V7-482PG-9884 Review: Everything You Need

    There’s a careful balancing act that needs to be maintained when putting together any system. Cooling requirements need to be kept in check by size constraints, performance ties into both of those as well, and let’s never forget the almighty dollar. Various other elements are also at play like build quality, aesthetics, and other extras. Generally speaking, it’s impossible to build a single product that will get every area right for every person out there, and so we end up with the usual give and take. Acer’s Aspire V7 laptop is an interesting mainstream offering that won’t be the fastest system out there, and it’s not the lightest laptop you’ll find either; in fact, the list of what it’s not is almost as long as the list of what it is. The sum however ends up being greater than the value of the parts, and overall it’s a good laptop. Read on to find out what we like, as well as what areas Acer intentionally chose to deemphasize in their pursuit of a well-rounded mainstream Ultrabook.

    7:31a
    GIGABYTE Launch H81 Series Motherboards

    When it comes to our motherboard reviews, we typically attempt to focus on the high sellers with distinguishing features - this normally means chipsets aimed at the mainstream to high end with more capabilities.  Every so often we touch on something aimed more at the entry level or a cheaper chipset, and today GIGABYTE are launching their H81 series motherboards - entry level for Haswell.

    To put H81 into perspective, the chipset offers two SATA 6 Gbps ports, two USB 3.0 ports, no RAID, no Smart Response Technology, a single PCIe 2.0 x16 from the CPU and six PCIe 2.0 lanes from the chipset.

    GIGABYTE's H81 range covers both thinner ATX and micro-ATX motherboards, where PCIe 2.0 x1 and PCI ports occupy the extra slots down the motherboard.  The range will have seven SKUs, four of which are available online:

    GA-H81-D3

    GA-H81M-S2PV

    GA-H81M-S2PH

    GA-H81M-DS2

    GA-H81M-HD3

    H81M-H

    H81.AMP-UP

     

    All the motherboards will feature Ultra Durable 4 PLUS, which means 40A IR3550 ICs in the power delivery (all boards seem to feature a 2+1 VRM arrangement), as well as the new HD BIOS and GIGABYTE App Center which we examined on Z87. GIGABYTE state that some models will also be equipped with a USB 3.0 hub to increase USB 3.0 ports up to six, although none of the four models currently online do so, thus it seems reserved for the H/HD versions.  All the online models contain Realtek NICs and audio codecs, as well as either a serial or a parallel port or both:

    No word on pricing or which regions these motherboards will be aimed for.  The interesting part from this PR is the H81.AMP-UP model, which would suggest that some of the G1.Sniper Z87 or A88X features are coming to H81: either the OP-AMP (adjustable amplifier) or USB DAC-UP (cleaner USB power for DACs) or both.  This could potentially be good news, as typically entry-level chipsets are paired with ALC887 codecs or similar.

    I rarely (once or twice a year) get requests to review motherboards based on entry-level chipsets - there is not much to test and rarely anything new for comparison or explanation.  However this PR gives an opportunity to ask our readers if you would be interested in such a review?

    Update 08/25: Since the initial PR, GIGABYTE have upped the number of H81 motherboards to 10:

    GA-H81-D3

    GA-H81M-HD3

    GA-H81M-D2V

    GA-H81M-S2PV

    GA-H81M-D3V

    GA-H81M-S2PH

    GA-H81M-DS2

    H81M-DS2V

    H81-D3P

    H81.AMP-UP

    This list now includes access to the HD3, the D2V, and D3V, all of which feature the USB 3.0 hub as mentioned in the original PR.   

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