Acer Iconia Tab A100
Especificaciones de Portátil(es)
Price comparison
Promedio de 16 puntuaciones (de 20 análisis)
Análisis para el Acer Iconia Tab A100
Little brother. Acer's tablet family has a new, little member. The Iconia Tab A100 offers you a 7 inch touchscreen and can be taken along everywhere thanks to its compact build. The Honeycomb tablet (Android 3.2) is price-tagged at 299€ in the wifi-only version and 399€ in the wifi + 3G version.
Origen: T Break EN→ES Archive.org version
Acer’s Iconia Tab A500 was one of the first tablets we tested early last year, which came with the then brand new Honeycomb OS. And while the Tab’s 10.1-inch size was considerable, and the innards equally decent, its overall performance left much to be desired. Today I’ll be looking at the Iconia Tab A100 to see how well the little brother performs in the popular 7-inch tablets market.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 02/28/2012
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: T3 EN→ES Archive.org version
If you need something tiny and light to carry around, and don’t mind the short battery life, the Iconia Tab is a worthy entertainment device.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 10/20/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: Tech Advisor EN→ES Archive.org version
The Acer Iconia A100 aims to provide all the features and benefits of an Android tablet in a compact design focussing on portability. However, despite the Iconia A100's decent performance, it's ultimately crippled by a poor quality display, mediocre battery life and a chunky design. If you're looking for the ideal 7in Android tablet, the Acer Iconia A100 is not it. Keep looking.
Único Análisis, disponible online, corto, Fecha: 10/07/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 50%
Origen: Reg Hardware EN→ES Archive.org version
Despite the tablet’s display and battery life failing to reach my high expectations, I enjoyed using it during my week-long test. Sure, the 7in screen’s resolution of 1024 x 600 pixels is barely more than an iPhone 4’s 960 x 640, but the Iconia Tab A100’s physical size makes just about everything easier to do, especially typing, without the dinner-plate juggling demanded by 10in tablets.
Único Análisis, disponible online, corto, Fecha: 09/23/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 80%
Origen: Computer Active EN→ES Archive.org version
It performs well and isn't expensive, but the A100 is a little too bulky to make it good value
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 09/19/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: Trusted Reviews EN→ES Archive.org version
On paper the Acer Iconia A100 sounds great. It's a sub-£300 Android Honeycomb tablet using the still-fairly-rare 7in form factor that has all the power of the top tabs in town. But a few serious problems blow its chances. The display quality is poor, battery life is half of what an iPad achieves and the design inspires indifference rather than desire.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Mediano, Fecha: 09/16/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60% precio: 70% rendimiento: 80% características: 80% movilidad: 60% ergonomía: 60%
Origen: Stuff TV EN→ES Archive.org version
Where the Acer lets itself down is the viewing angles of the screen. Place it on a table, spin it round and you'll notice it has one good side, one unviewable side and two portrait views that will just about do. Not ideal, and depending on how you use it this can be incredibly annoying. Hand-held it's fine, but problems can arise if you prop it up beside you. So hardware connections and viewing angles aside, this is a great tablet, and for this sort of money it's just about unbeatable.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 09/15/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 80%
Origen: V3.co.uk EN→ES Archive.org version
With an initial retail price around £300, the Acer A100 represents reasonable value for money. The device is cheaper than the entry-level HTC Flyer (£330) and BlackBerry PlayBook (£340), but more expensive than the Wi-Fi Galaxy Tab (£250). Despite offering reasonably good performance and some unique connectivity, the battery life on the A100 is a major letdown and makes it very difficult to recommend.
Único Análisis, disponible online, corto, Fecha: 09/09/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: Techradar EN→ES Archive.org version
Somewhere, there's a niche for this tablet. It's mostly for folks who want a smaller tablet, but then they could just select a smartphone with a large screen, such as the HTC Evo 3D. Ebook reading worked well, if you can live with the somewhat glossy screen. To say the Acer Iconia Tab A100 is the best 7-inch Android tablet is a bit misleading. But we do prefer it over the HTC Flyer, due to the included Android 3.2 operating system. In some ways, the BlackBerry PlayBook is better in a technical sense – at least it does real multitasking – but it has too few apps. We like the A100 for an express purpose: greater mobility and book reading. For most tasks, a 10-inch tablet is a wiser bet.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy largo, Fecha: 09/06/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: PC Pro EN→ES Archive.org version
This isn’t the perfect tablet, then, not by a long chalk. And with average screen quality, below par battery life and a poor camera, you’d think we’d be ready to stick the boot in. But the Acer A100 is actually a rather likeable device. It’s nice to use, snappy and responsive, and looks even more attractive when you put it in context of the immediate competition. It costs £300 inc VAT, the same as the ageing 7in Samsung Galaxy Tab, and a massive £180 cheaper than the 16GB HTC Flyer. If a 10in tablet doesn’t appeal, this little alternative just might.
Único Análisis, disponible online, corto, Fecha: 08/26/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 67% precio: 83% rendimiento: 67% características: 67% ergonomía: 67%
Origen: Pocket Lint EN→ES Archive.org version
From our short time with Acer Iconia A100, we're pleased. The build quality and hardware specification show a lot of promise and we think the 7-inch form factor will appeal to lots of people too.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 08/24/2011
Origen: Slashgear EN→ES Archive.org version
This tablet is good for a lot of things. Wrapping up the awesome power of the NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual-core processor in a medium-sized package, one that’s not a smartphone yet not quite a full-sized tablet makes this device good for some slightly more hardcore on-the-go games than you’re used to on your Motorola ATRIX 4G or Motorola Photon 4G. On the other hand, it’s thicker than the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, a 10-inch tablet, yet just about the same size as the original Galaxy Tab 7-inch, a tablet which does not yet feature the tablet-centric Google mobile OS Android 3.2 Honeycomb – this tablet has the right to boast itself up as the first and only tablet to currently be featuring Android 3.2 Honeycomb, again the first tablet-based Google-made mobile OS to be optimized for tablets smaller than 10-inches.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Mediano, Fecha: 08/17/2011
Origen: PC Mag EN→ES Archive.org version
One thing falls flat here: The Iconia A100 doesn't have a traditional USB mass storage mode, and it's totally incompatible with Macs. To plug it into a Windows PC, you have to download Acer's clunky Acer Sync software, after which the Tab appears as a drive you can drag and drop to. Acer Sync also purports to sync your Outlook data with your tablet, but I couldn't get that part of the software to find my tablet.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 08/12/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 80%
Origen: It Pro EN→ES Archive.org version
The Iconia 100 is the smaller of the family with a seven inch (1024 x 600 resolution) screen. It runs Nvidia’s Tegra 2 dual-core processor and has a mini HDMI output, along with its mini USB port. The Iconia A500 comes in at a much more sizeable 10.1in with a 1280 x 800 resolution screen. It does make it heftier though, weighing in at 700g. It runs on the same Nvidia Tegra 2 dual core chip as its little brother, the A100, and has the same sized cameras. However, the incorporation of a full size HDMI to stream content to your TV is a definite improvement.
Comparación, disponible online, Muy corto, Fecha: 02/16/2011
Origen: Chip.de - 5/12
Único Análisis, , Muy corto, Fecha: 04/01/2012
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 86%
Origen: Computerbild - 24/11
Comparación, , Mediano, Fecha: 11/01/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 82% características: 82% pantalla: 83% movilidad: 77% ergonomía: 77%
Origen: Connect - 11/11
Comparación, , corto, Fecha: 10/01/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 100% características: 100% ergonomía: 100%
Origen: Connect - 5/11
Comparación, , Mediano, Fecha: 04/01/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 100% características: 80% ergonomía: 100%
Comentario
NVIDIA GeForce ULP (Tegra 2): GPU de ultra bajo voltaje integrada en el SoC Tegra 3. Dependiendo del modelo, tiene una frecuencia de 300 a 400 MHz.
Muchos juegos son difícilmente ejecutables con estos adaptadores gráficos o se ejecutan de manera muy lenta.
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra comparación de tarjetas gráficas moviles y la lista de benchmarks.
2 (250): SoC (System on a Chip) con una Corex A9 Dual-Core integrada, GeForce ULP y otros subprocesadores dedicados (Audio, Vídeo).
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra comparación de procesadores móviles.
7.00": Solo algunos smartphones tienen pantallas más grandes.
Grandes tamaños de pantalla permiten resoluciones más altas. Por tanto, los detalles como letras son más grandes. Por otro lado, el consumo de energía es más bajo con diagonales de pantalla más pequeñas y los aparatos son más pequeños, más livianos y más económicos.
>> Para averiguar cual fina es una pantalla, vea nuestra lista de DPI.
Acer:
En 1976, la empresa se fundó en Taiwán con el nombre de Multitech y pasó a denominarse Acer o Acer Group en 1987. La gama de productos incluye, por ejemplo, portátiles, tabletas, smartphones, ordenadores de sobremesa, monitores, televisores y periféricos informáticos. Desde 2007, el grupo se ha fusionado con Gateway Inc. y Packard Bell, que también comercializan sus propias líneas de portátiles.
Los ordenadores Acer están diseñados para una gran variedad de propósitos, incluidos ultrabooks para uso móvil, portátiles para juegos, opciones asequibles para tareas cotidianas y portátiles convertibles 2 en 1 para mayor versatilidad. La cartera de productos de Acer también incluye tabletas que ofrecen capacidades informáticas y multimedia portátiles.
73.13%: Esta evaluación es mala. La mayoría de las portátiles son mejor evaluadas. Esta no es una recomendación para compra.
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra Guia de compra de portátiles.