Acer Swift 7 review
Acer has held the title of the ‘world’s thinnest laptop’ for a while now, and it continues this trend into 2018 with the new Acer Swift 7. This time around, though, Acer has beefed up the display to 14 inches without increasing the device’s overall footprint, and has introduced a fingerprint sensor for added security.
In order to maintain its ‘thin laptop’ crown, though, Acer had to remove the clicking functionality from the touchpad. Now, this is a change that we can live with, but it’s sure to be controversial with some users.
Price and availability
The Acer Swift 7 launched earlier this year in the US for $1,699 (£1,599, about AU$2,159) to start, which is certainly nothing to sneeze at for even an hyper-premium Ultrabook. What that steep price nets you is a 7th-generation Intel Core i7 processor backed by 8GB of DDR3 memory and a 256GB solid-state drive (SSD).
All of these guts sit underneath a newly-widened, 14-inch Full HD (1,920 x 1,080) display that can bend back 180 degrees and a fingerprint reader on the keyboard rest for secure Windows Hello login.
That’s kind of a high asking price for a laptop that, while within some luxurious casing, houses last-generation hardware. With that, the Swift 7 rides even harder on the feeling and experience it delivers than before.
However, that’s not to say you can’t find a deal. For instance, right now you can pick it up on Acer’s website for just $899 (about £678, AU$1,203) in the US.
Design
Luckily, the Swift 7 is a sublime laptop to pick up and hold, measuring just 0.35 inches (8.98mm) thin and feeling lighter than even perhaps the latest Apple Macbook, Call it a weapon of slim destruction. Acer is clearly winning the fight for the thinnest notebook. Weighing 2.6 pounds and measuring 12.9 x 9.3 x 0.35 inches, the Swift 7 makes the HP Spectre 13 (2.4 pounds, 12 x 8.8 x 0.4 inches), LG Gram (2.2 pounds, 12.7 x 8.3 x 0.6 inches) and Huawei MateBook X Pro (2.9 pounds, 12 x 8.5 x 0.6 inches) look thick around the middle. However, when it comes to weight, the Swift 7 is a middleweight compared to its competitors.
The Swift 7's design is a marvel. Made of black CNC aluminum, the laptop is not only sleek but also surprisingly substantial. I spent a significant amount of time admiring the exterior, with its nearly seamless construction.
Thanks to its fanless design, the notebook looks like a single piece of metal, with the exception of the rear hinges and the glittering chrome Acer logo on the lid. Speaking of those hinges, they enable the display to lie flat at a 180-degree angle.
Display
The Swift 7's svelteness doesn't stop at the chassis. The 14-inch IPS panel is only 0.8 inches thick, and it's topped with a 0.02-inch-thick pane of Corning Gorilla Glass. Acer has reduced the size of the top (0.38 inches) and side (0.36 inches) bezels, though they're not as thin as the Dell XPS 13's barely-there InfinityEdge bezels (0.2 inches). Still, I'm a fan of the vanishing-bezel trend.
Bezels aside, the Swift 7's 1920 x 1080 screen is bright and bursting with color. When I watched the Support the Girls trailer, Regina Hall's honey-brown skin glowed against her magenta top, while the sun played up the golden highlights in her hair. Details were crisp enough that I could make out individual strands of hair cascading in the sunlight.
The Swift 7's display can reproduce a whopping 143 percent of the sRGB color gamut. That's more vivid than the 111 percent produced by the HP Spectre 13, the 128 percent from the LG Gram and the 124 percent from the Huawei MateBook X Pro , and also better than the premium-laptop average.
When used as a touch screen, the Swift 7's 10-finger capacitive panel is quick and responsive.
Audio
A thin chassis doesn't typically make for big sound, and the Swift is no exception. Mounted at the bottom of the notebook, toward the back, the Swift 7's pair of speakers are weak. So make sure you have a pair of headphones or a Bluetooth speaker handy when you're listening to music or watching movies on the Swift 7.
Ports: Welcome to the dongle life
When you're working with a laptop as thin as the Swift 7, you're going to take a hit in the ports department. The Swift 7 has a pair of USB Type-C ports and a headset jack on its left side. On the right, there's a power button and the nano SIM slot.
So what does that mean for folks looking to connect a mouse or an external hard drive? Dongles, dongles and more dongles. In addition to its power cord, the Swift 7 ships with a multi use dongle that has a USB 3.1 port, a USB Type-C port and HDMI.
Keyboard, Touchpad and Fingerprint Scanner
Considering that the Swift 7 is so thin, I was expecting a rather uncomfortable typing experience, but I was pleasantly surprised. Despite the keys' 1 millimeter of key travel (1.5 to 2 mm is the minimum), their 71 grams of required actuation force (we consider 60 grams the minimum) helped to create a bouncy typing experience on the island-style keyboard. The white backlighting made typing in the dark pretty easy, since it sufficiently illuminated the text on the keys.
The most polarizing aspect of the Swift 7 is its Precision Touchpad. The 4.8 x 2.5-inch pad is pretty big and made of Gorilla Glass. My fingers had plenty of space to perform Windows multi-touch gestures such as pinch to zoom and three- and four-finger swipe, and presses on the superwide space delivered a speedy, accurate response.
Positioned along the left side of the keyboard, the fingerprint scanner lets you unlock your laptop using Windows Hello. Setup takes about a minute after you create a traditional password, and consists of repeatedly placing and lifting your finger on the scanner for approximately a minute.
Performance
As modern as the Swift 7's design is, its 7th Gen 1.3-GHz Intel Core i7-7Y75 processor is a little behind the times. Intel's Y-series chips are specifically built to accommodate fanless designs, but they tend to lack the power of regular U-series chips. It's a decision that puts this ultraportable at a disadvantage compared to its peers.
The performance deficiency showed as soon as we began running synthetic benchmark tests. On Geekbench 4, which measures overall CPU performance, the Swift 7 scored 6,011, which is far below the 10,946 premium-laptop average. Armed with their 8th Gen 1.8-GHz Intel Core i7-8550U processors, the HP Spectre 13, the Huawei MateBook X Pro and the LG Gram achieved 13,090, 13,018 and 11,154, respectively. The Core i5 version of the Dell XPS 13 scored 13,254.
As modern as the Swift 7's design is, its 7th Gen 1.3-GHz Intel Core i7-7Y75 processor is a little behind the times.
During the File Transfer test, the Swift 7's 256GB NVMe SSD copied 4.97GB of mixed-media content in 19 seconds, for a speed of 267.9 megabytes per second. That's somewhat short of the 280.6-MBps average but still better than the Gram's (512GB M.2 SATA drive) 169.6 MBps. However, the MateBook and its 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD was faster, with a rate of 282.7 MBps. The XPS 13 hit 339.2 MBps, nearly tying the Spectre 13's 339.3 MBps.
Armed with an integrated Intel HD Graphics 615 GPU, the Swift 7 can play older titles such as BioShock Infinite. You can even play some Overwatch, but more graphically demanding titles, like The Witcher 3, are out of the system's reach. The svelte device delivered 31 frames per second on the Dirt 3 test, which is slightly above our 30-fps playability average but a long way from the 70-fps average as well as the frame rates from the Gram, the Spectre 13 (Intel HD Graphics 620) and the MateBook (Nvidia GeForce GTX MX140), which hit 50, 57 and 117 fps, respectively.
4G LTE
Ever been on a business trip when you needed to shoot off an important email, and the internet connection was incredibly spotty or nonexistent? Acer hopes to alleviate that pain point by adding a nano SIM slot so that the Swift 7 can have 4G LTE. And if you don't have a nano SIM card handy, you can use the laptop's embedded eSIM technology to get service via software.
Battery Life
Because of the Swift 7's tiny dimensions, I wasn't expecting it to have good battery life, especially once I learned that the two-cell lithium-ion battery is 23-percent slimmer than standard laptop batteries. But the system lasted 9 hours and 4 minutes on the Laptop Mag Battery Test, which consists of continuous web surfing over Wi-Fi at 150 nits of brightness.
The Acer outlasted the 8:41 premium-laptop average and the HP Spectre 13's 5:16, but both the Huawei MateBook X Pro and the LG Gram lasted longer, with runtimes of 9:55 and 10:46, respectively The Core i5-powered Dell XPS 13 lasted 12:37 with its 1080p non touch screen and 8:53 with its 4K display and Core i7 CPU.
Heat
No fan, no problem. Thanks to Intel's ultra-low-power processor, the Swift 7 doesn't get particularly hot. In fact, after 15 minutes of streaming a full-screen HD video, the laptop was well within our 95-degree-Fahrenheit comfort threshold. The touchpad measured 79 degrees, while the middle of the keyboard and bottom registered 80 and 84 degrees, respectively.
Webcam
I can't even call the Swift 7's 720p integrated webcam a "nose cam," since it lacks the strategic angling of webcams on similarly skinny systems like the Dell XPS 13. Rather, the Swift has a torso cam, which cut my face out of the picture when I was sitting down but was positioned perfectly when I was lying down and typing in bed.
Software and Warranty
Acer preinstalled its usual suite of branded software, including Care Center, which lets you check system diagnostics and create and manage backups. You also get Quick Access, where you can enable or disable Bluelight Shield, which reduces blue light to protect your eyes, and Color Intelligence, which automatically optimizes the image quality based on what's displayed.
Thanks to Windows 10, there is a bit of bloatware on board here, such as Drawboard PDF, Candy Crush Soda Saga, Bubble Witch 3 Saga, Hidden City: Hidden Object Adventure and Dolby Access, which can enhance your headphone listening experience.
Acer has the industry's number in the battle for slim laptop supremacy, The Swift 7 offers a stunning touch-screen display, a comfortable typing experience and over 9 hours of battery life in a shockingly thin design that's lovely to behold and hold. However, for $1,699, I wish Acer had offered more performance oomph, as Intel's ultra-low-power Core i7-7Y75 CPU isn't as swift as the latest 8th Gen Kaby Lake processors.
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