The Acer Revo - tiny, low power, pretty cheap and still can play full HD video.
At a recent press launch in London we confirmed that Acer's upcoming Revo, which is based on Nvidia's Ion platform, should be easily upgradable. How did we confirm this exactly? By taking it apart, naturally.
The Revo "Nettop" is based on Intel Atom technology, but combines it with an Nvidia 9400M MCP instead of the usual, more limited Intel 945GC and ICH7 chipset. As
we previously discovered, Acer is launching three models - the first just £180 and which runs Linux, but only comes with a very basic 1GB of memory and 8GB SSD, but does manage to cram in 802.11g Wireless, and hard wired connectivity like eSATA, HDMI, VGA and plenty of USB 2.0 ports.
While a little short changed, we expect this inexpensive model will be the perfect base for a media centre - drop on the latest XBMC with Nvidia' most recent 182.xx linux drivers and you should get GPU acceleration to take advantage of the more powerful 9400M GPU for all HD media. Acer demonstrated a Blu-ray disk being played back over USB 2.0 at an impressive 40MBit/s and, while we respect this is just one example, the playback software and OS are two other limiting factors worth keeping in mind. The example set-up we saw was using Vista and Cyberlink PowerDVD 9, so hardly a "slim client" though.
The two other models come with 2GB of memory and a much larger 160GB hard drive, as well as the option for a Wiimote-like wireless gaming "mouse". Acer are promoting the Revo as a nettop-meets-games-console, however while the media playback potential, sleek looks and HDMI are suitable for sitting by the TV, we doubt very much whether you'll play
Peggle or
World of Warcraft on it. The Wii exclusively dominates it's own hand-wavey-mote niche.
What is neat is that Acer ships the VESA mount in the box too so you can easily strap it to the back of your TFT. The mount bracket allows the Revo to clip in and out too, so it can be moved around easily and Acer cleverly even puts a couple of USB 2.0 ports in the top by the power button, so they're easy to access.
Now - upgradability. Getting into it is easy - one screw in the side, then a flat head screwdriver to carefully jimmy off the sides. Inside, the SO-DIMM DDR2 memory is upgradable to 4GB max, and the 2.5" hard drive whatever you want to fill the single slot. If you don't need WiFi or want 802.11n, the mini PCI-Express slot is ultimately upgradable too. Don't worry about power use - it ships with a 65W power brick that makes this Energy Star 5.0 compliant.
Interested in a Revo? Let us know in
the forums.
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34 Comments
Discuss in the forums Replymum's xmas present sorted
Is it possible to hook up a Blue ray SATA drive to the e-sata port? i have only just had the thought, so forgive me if its a simple question.
If its possible then a little modding could see an internal BD slimline drive installed!
Acer stand to make alot of money on this, especially if the retail on the motherboards is going to be very high. The revo is extremely good valve for money.
If nicely priced this'd come very handy for Christmas indeed.
Super quiet from what I could tell. Much quieter than the Asus EeeBox
E-sata BD yes, but mucho money
http://www.kikatek.com/product_info.php?products_id=86986&source=froogle
i think i could do it cheaper than that. even if it means using a convential BD-ROM drive and a modded 3.5in caddy. As i dont think e-sata has come to 5.25in caddies yet.
Do it, sounds like a good mod:)
It's just me or this thing is ugly as hell??
It is but who's going to notice when it's stuck to the back of a TV / monitor...
http://www.trustedreviews.com/pcs/news/2009/04/27/Acer-Confirms-Aspire-Revo-Price---Release-Date/p1
Personally im eyeballing the £149 version with the £50 remote as an extra and Windows 7 beta, would make an awesome HTPC with my external HD and also using a DVB-S USB hub for Freesat TV. Only issue I can see is that the atom cpu is supposed to be useless at Flash ect, so iPlayer and the other catch-up channels online wouldnt work properly, hoopefully nvidiea can fix this issue by letting the 9400 GPU step in...
EDIT:
awwright
In short: WANT!!!
It'll easily fit a nix distro and XBMC - then just pull the media from the network or use the eSATA port. :)
nope, but what did you expect from a cheap atom/nvidia based system?
Uhhm, dunno...didn't think something so basic was too much to ask. Based on the 1080p hype I didn't think they could/would miss the other half of the HTPC equation (ie, sound).
You can always use a USB sound device like the cool little Turtle Beach Audio Advantage Micro to output to S/PDIF, but these types of USB devices by nature use CPU resources which the Atom has little to spare.
True.
I bet they make a revision of the revo after 6 months or so, adding more features.
I dont want a mouse or a keyboard and im thinking of doing the xbmc jobby connecting to my nas?
is it possible to change the cpu or are they integrated
appoligize for noob question
Cheers D
IIRC, Atom CPUs are only available as BGA components, which means they have to be soldered onto the motherboard.
"Integrated" would be the best answer.
http://forum.xbmc.org/showthread.php?t=67420
esata casing
http://www.ebuyer.com/product/198213
liteon bd player
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Liteon-IHOS104-37-Internal-Blu-ray-Software/dp/B002BAT1GQ/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top
and an esata->esata cable
http://www.amazon.co.uk/1m-eSATA-to-Cable/dp/B000SKN8VK/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1269689983&sr=1-1
£70 ish
any one had luck with any bd setup like this.
I will probably get this in a paydays worth of time and feedback, much cheaper than the other options.
However, what I really like about Revo is that it produces extremely good price per performance ratio. Unfortunately, I am still missing the IR receiver which I would really need as a built in feature.