Gateway netbooks

Acer has sold several lines of netbooks under its Gateway brand.

AMD-based

LT31

Gateway netbooks
Operating systemWindows Vista Home Basic
CPU1.2 GHz AMD Athlon 64
Memory2GB RAM, 250GB HDD
Display11.6 in (29 cm)
Camera0.3 megapixel integrated webcam
Connectivity3 USB 2.0 ports
Power6-cell lithium ion
DimensionsW×D×H 1.03 in × 11.26 in × 7.99 in (2.6 cm × 28.6 cm × 20.3 cm)
Mass3.04 lb (1.38 kg)
WebsiteLT31 support

The LT31 was released in mid-2009. Employing an AMD Athlon L110 processor and having a Radeon X1270 GPU (M690T chipset) powering its 11.6" display (1,366x768), the system was praised by reviewers as a faster and more "grown-up" alternative to a standard netbook (which typically contain slower Intel Atom processors and reduced specifications throughout). On the other hand, it had worse battery life than Atom-based products.[1][2][3]

Its US launch price of $399 was judged "a whopping $100 less than the average netbook" by Computer Shopper US, which gave it its "Editor's Choice" award.[4] At the time of the launch, AMD was however unhappy with one its products being used in a netbook, still claiming they had no interest in the netbook market.[5]

LT22

Launched in the spring of 2010, the LT22 (together with its very similar brother Acer Aspire One 521) were AMD's entry into the 10-inch netbook field with the Athlon II Neo V105 processor (single core running at 1.2 GHz).[6][7] Although the Gateway site doesn't list this variant, press reports indicate that the Canadian version of the LT22, launched in August together with the LT32, was powered by the more powerful K125 processor (1.7Ghz) just like its bigger brother.[8][9]

LT32

Launched in mid-2010, the LT32 was a series of "premium netbooks" with 11.6 inch display and powered by an AMD Athlon II Neo K125 processor with an MSRP of $449 in the United States.[10] Engadget described it as "pretty much a rebadge of the Acer Aspire One 721,"[11] while a CNET review declared it to be reminiscent of Acer Ferrari One in design.[12]

Atom-based

LT10

Launched in early 2009, the LT10 was only stylistically different from the 8.9-inch Acer Aspire One.[13][14]

LT20

Launched in Fall 2009, the LT-20 was a 10.1-in netbook series (1024 x 600 screen resolution) powered by Intel Atom N270 or N280 processors. It was basically a rebadged Acer Aspire One D250. The LT2016u model had 3G capability and was the 2nd netbook (after the HP 1151NR) to be made available with a Verizon Wireless contract with a launch price of $149 with a two-year contract.[15] A PCWorld reviewer described the Verizon offering as "no deal at all" because of its hidden costs.[16]

LT21

Launched at CES 2010,[17] the LT21 was described as a "shrunken version" of the LT31 by a PCWorld India reviewer, although its specifications were quite different, being a 10.1-inch device powered by an Atom N450 ("Pine Trail"). It was an unremarkable netbook.[18] Anandtech described the LT21 as identical internally with the simultaneously launched Aspire One 532h, itself a complete redesign.[19]

LT23

Previewed at Computex 2010 and officially launched in June, the LT23 was slight improvement over the LT21, featuring an N455 Atom processor with DDR3 support and more styling options for the cover.[20][21][22]

LT28

The LT28 series was an updated 10.1-inch Atom series launched in mid-2011. It included slightly more powerful processors, up to the N570.[23] Amid a struggling genre by then, it was heavily discounted down to $149.99 on Black Friday 2011.[24]

LT40

Launched in February 2012, the LT40 series had a 10.1-inch screen (1024 x 600) and was powered by an Atom N2600 or N2800 "Cedar Trail" processor.[25]

gollark: There's no real standard for "right" we can use, which is harder.
gollark: Maybe a third factor governs rule strictness *and* people-intelligence.
gollark: Maybe smart-people-containing servers accrete fewer rules.
gollark: > servers with lax rules attract smarter peopleI haven't observed that, but even if you've seen "places with lax rules *have* smarter people", you do not know which way the causality runs.
gollark: Politicians are susceptible to lobbying and stuff, but bees are NOT.

References

  1. Gateway LT3103u review, CNET
  2. Gateway LT3103u Review by Michael A. Prospero on August 19, 2009, Laptopmag
  3. Gateway LT3103u review, by Cisco Cheng, PC Magazine
  4. Gateway LT3103u Review By Catharine Smith, reviewed August 26, 2009, Computer Shopper US
  5. Acer Pushes AMD Into Netbook Space, PCWorld
  6. Here Come the AMD Netbooks: Hands-on with Acer Aspire One 521 and Gateway LT2203, Laptop mag
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-12-27. Retrieved 2012-09-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. AMD-Powered Gateway LT22 Introduced in Canada
  9. Gateway LT22 functional and affordable, The Globe and Mail
  10. "Gateway LT32 Netbooks".
  11. "Gateway LT32 to hit retailers soon for $450".
  12. Hands-on with Gateway's LT32 premium Netbook, CNET
  13. "Office Depot Reluctantly Selling Gateway LT1004U Netbook".
  14. "Gateway's LT1004U netbook lands domestically, at Office Depot of all places".
  15. Gateway LT2016u Review, Laptop mag.
  16. Verizon's $150 Netbook Deal Is No Deal at All "no deal at all".
  17. "CES 2010: Gateway introduces $299 LT21 netbook; Intel Atom N450, 802.11n".
  18. Gateway LT21 Full Review Archived 2012-10-14 at the Wayback Machine by Jayesh Shinde 2010-09-03, PCWorld India.
  19. Gateway and Acer Netbooks: Wonder Twin Powers, Activate! Acer 532h and Gateway LT2120u
  20. "Gateway LT23 Review: Efficient performance bundled into a snazzy exterior - TechGadgets".
  21. "Stylin' Gateway LT23 Netbook Starts at Just $329".
  22. Gateway LT23 Archived 2011-09-18 at the Wayback Machine, PCWorld New Zealand
  23. Gateway LT28: Cutting-edge, travel-ready, The Philippine Star
  24. Best Buy chimes in with MacBook, laptop deals, CNET
  25. "Gateway Releases the LT4004U Cedar Trail-Based Netbook".
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