Acer Aspire One D250
in Laptops
Verdict
Google's Android OS provides a disappointing distraction from an otherwise average netbook
Review Date: 22 Oct 2009
Price when reviewed: £260 (£299 inc VAT)
Buy it now for: £222.29
Overall Rating

Features & Design

Value for Money

Performance

The burning question, though, is why anyone would opt against booting into Windows 7 in the first place. Cold booting does admittedly take about three times as long as Android - about 45 seconds or so before a usable desktop appears - but waking from hibernation takes a mere 20 seconds, just five seconds longer than the quick OS.
Windows 7 might feel a touch more sluggish than XP Home - the Acer scored just 0.30 in our benchmarks - but its refinement and ease of use come as ample reward, and importantly it suffers none of the aggravating limitations of its Google-powered rival.
Physically, very little has changed. The D250's figure is as slim as ever, and our review unit came finished in a two-tone combination of gloss white and textured matte black, the hinges enlivened with a silver flourish and a lime-green Aspire logo.
We still haven't warmed to its looks, though, and for all Acer's efforts it still looks a touch plain next to the likes of the Samsung N110.
Build quality is the same as ever, too - that's to say, not quite up with the best in its class. The D250's slim base is impressively stiff, but both the lid and the hinges beneath it feel too flexible and insubstantial to truly inspire confidence.
It has put on a few grams and now weighs in at 1.24kg, thanks to the six-cell battery jutting out at its rear. That battery is a welcome sight and, where the original D250 expired after less than three hours of light use, it now keeps going for a far more substantial 7hrs 57mins.
Ergonomically, though, the Acer Aspire D250 trails the best the netbook crop has to offer. The keyboard is quite usable, but the light-feeling keys and small trackpad aren't great. The display also fails to excel. Despite reasonable brightness and passable colour reproduction, like many of its netbook ilk it finds itself let down by poor contrast. Only the loud, competent speakers (in netbook terms) really impress.
It's a classic case of missed opportunities. If the Aspire D250 was as physically accomplished as some of its competitors, the presence of Google's Android, despite its flaws, might have been a selling point.
As it stands, the novelty merely serves as a brief distraction from the D250's competent, but unremarkable charms. We still hope future updates will reinstate the marketplace and make more of Android's obvious potential, but there are much better netbooks available for less.
Author: Sasha Muller
Market isn't the end of the world..
There are plenty of alternatives, like AndAppStore.com, which can provide apps for Android.
I'm guessing that Acer see Android as a cheaper alternative to splashtop, hence why it's a little feature light.
By Al_Sutton on 24 Oct 2009 
Save 25%! Buy Acer Aspire One d250 Battery
Buy Acer Aspire One d250 notebook battery,Save 25%!
http://www.my-batteries.co.uk/laptop-batteries/ace
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By batteries99 on 11 Nov 2009 
They added Insyde Market
Well seeing that lots of people here are caring about the fact that Android Market was not added, i am glad to say that the developers did slap up a new app website JUST for this netbook.
Google Search "INSYDE MARKET" and you'll see it. first result.
ALL free apps working on the ANdroid Netbook.
By milkmandan on 17 Dec 2009 
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