Typical price: £1,399
What is it: Widescreen Media Center laptop
What we think: Provides a good blend of power and features for a reasonable price
Asus A7J Review
Reviewed on: 16 February 2006
Desktop replacement laptops such as the A7J aren't normally based on Intel Centrino technology. They tend to be big, power-hungry brutes that use vast amounts of electrical energy and have a short battery life -- a concept diametrically opposed to the Centrino mantra.
Asus has chosen to buck this trend by incorporating the latest Centrino (codenamed Napa) technology in the A7J -- which is unusual, seeing as many big vendors, Sony included, still churn out new ultraportables with old Centrino chips.
Design
The A7J is a hefty beast. This is all due to its large 17-inch widescreen display, which is a viable alternative to a dedicated desktop monitor, but a hindrance to portability. The rest of the laptop doesn't make a particularly good first impression. Its gunmetal-grey finish is a welcome addition in many small laptops, but it doesn't always work in larger models such as this, which tend to come across as old fashioned.
The laptop's run-of-the-mill aesthetic continues when you open the lid. There's a standard-sized black keyboard sitting proudly in the middle, with good-sized stereo speakers on either side. We've found laptop speakers to be fairly ineffective, no matter what their girth, so we'd prefer to have seen a larger keyboard -- one which also incorporates a dedicated number pad.
Below the main keyboard there is a set of audio buttons for launching and controlling music CDs. Like many multimedia laptops, this feature can be accessed independently of Windows XP, so you can listen to tunes without having to boot the operating system. Just above the keyboard is another set of shortcut keys. One alters the brightness preset of the screen (gamma correction, vivid, theatre, soft and normal modes are available); and another, known as the Power4 Gear Key, cycles the laptop between a set of performance modes.
A DVD rewriter drive can be found on the right side of the AJ7. On the left-hand side, there are LAN and modem ports, a single USB port, line-in, mic and SPDIF audio sockets, a four-pin FireWire port, and a hardware Wi-Fi switch that gives you instant on/off control of the wireless adaptor. You'll also find an ExpressCard slot and a memory card reader that supports MMC/SD/Memory Stick and Memory Stick PRO formats. Plus there's a very intriguing audio/visual port in which you can connect a TV aerial, and RCA-connected devices such as a video recorder via an 1/8-inch RCA adaptor.
Features
Along with its Napa backbone, the A7J uses an Intel Core Duo T2400 CPU, clocked at 1.8GHz. This dual-core chip is reinforced by 1GB of DDR2 533MHz memory, and rather than use the standard integrated Intel graphics chip, Asus has gone for a discrete solution. In this case it's a Radeon X1600 XT chip, ATI's flagship mobile adaptor. While the A7J has a wide aspect ratio mouse touchpad, gamers will be pleased to note the inclusion of a separate USB mouse.
The machine's apparent focus towards visually demanding applications is highlighted further by the inclusion of an integrated 1.3-megapixel camera at the top of the screen. There's a built-in microphone that sits just to the right of this, so the pair are ideally positioned for video conferencing. Asus has also bundled some video security software, which detects movement and makes recordings in your absence -- but this doesn't upload the captured images to a secure Web server, so you'll have no access to the image if someone steals the laptop.
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