Typical price: £1,850
What is it: Powerful 15-inch laptop with a Blu-ray drive and Intel Core 2 Duo processor
What we think: You're paying a lot of money for Blu-ray support, but you do get an extremely capable and versatile laptop
Acer TravelMate 8215WLMi Review
Reviewed on: 11 December 2006
The 15.4-inch WSXGA+ LCD is capable of 1,680x1,050-pixel resolution, which is good enough to get some pretty good results from DVD movies but not quite up to the job when it comes to watching 1080p Blu-ray flicks. This is a shame, especially considering Sony's excellent 17-inch Vaio VGN-AR11S is 1080p-capable. To get the most of Blu-ray you'll need to connect the laptop to an external display with a DVI input port.

Acer has missed a trick by using Windows XP Professional Edition instead of the more suitable Windows XP Media Center Edition (MCE). They have pretty-much identical features, but MCE would have enabled users to get easier access to their multimedia files. However, there is some consolation in the fact you get a free upgrade to Windows Vista Business when it becomes available.
Other notable features include a bundled VoIP phone. This is tucked away inside the ExpressCard slot on the laptop's left side and can either be removed and used just like an ordinary handset, or act as a speakerphone for conference calling. With it, you can make free or super-cheap voice calls via the Internet -- a nice touch.

Performance
The most important question people are probably asking here is 'what's the Blu-ray performance like?' Since you're spending £300 for the technology it's a perfectly fair question -- and the answer is... not bad. But it's not perfect either. Our review sample seemed to struggle, occasionally dropping frames. Acer says this shouldn't happen, and it'll be sending us a replacement 8215WLMi for evaluation. We'll update this review as soon as we complete secondary tests.
Elsewhere it's worth noting that the combination of a power processor combined with a mid-range graphics card did rear its head with the benchmarking. The 8215WLMi scored just 2,058 in 3DMark 2006 at 1,280x1,024-pixel resolution, which is nearly 30 per cent slower than Sony's VGN-AR11S. PC Mark 05 hit a very respectable 4,630 though, so you'll have few worries about feeding the laptop complicated (non-gaming) tasks.
It's worth noting here that the PCMark component scores confirmed that the rip-roaring CPU was more than holding up to its end of the bargain, supported ably by the memory, but unfortunately let down primarily by the graphics card and a rather average hard drive speed.
Edited by Rory Reid
Additional editing by Nick Hide
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Acer TravelMate 8215WLMi
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?

Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Laptop Reviews
Acer Aspire One D250 Android
Pretty average netbook, and the Android OS is more of a hindrance than a help
Samsung R520
Not a bad budget laptop, but the bigger R720 is a much better option if portability isn't a prime concern
on Laptops
3 to let mobile-broadband punters cancel contracts over poor 3G coverage
The mobile operator has said customers whose local 3G service is too poor to support basic Web browsing and email will be able to cancel their contract or get a discount
More:









