Acer Aspire One D250 Series

Graphics Adapter: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950
Display: 10.10 inch
Weight: 1.3kg
Price: 250 euro
Average of 11 scores (from 14 reviews)
Acer Aspire One D250-1958
Specifications

Processor: Intel Atom N270
Graphics Adapter: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950
Display: 10.10 inch, 16:9, 1366 x 768 pixels
Weight: 1.3kg
Price: 250 euro
Links: Acer homepage Acer notebook section
Pricecompare
Average Score:
Source: Reg Hardware

Installing a second operating system on a PC is nothing new. Plenty of manufacturers have done so before, building a slimline Linux distro into their machines to provide a much more rapid start-up than Windows can manage: full access to the internet within seconds of pressing on power key. This is a nice netbook, and having a quick-boot alternative to Windows is nice to have. But it's far from essential and neither is it a full OS. The true Android netbook, it ain't.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 11/14/2009
Rating: Total score: 75%
Source: It Pro

Judged on its own, the Aspire One is a decent netbook, with a great screen, and with a 6-cell battery as standard, it offers reasonable battery life. However, Android proves to be a somewhat disappointing experience, while Windows 7 feels a tad sluggish, leaving this as an interesting machine but not one we'd rush to recommend.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 11/13/2009
Rating: Total score: 50%
Source: PC Pro

The first time we laid our hands on Acer's Aspire One D250, we were quietly impressed. A slimline netbook with some nice design touches, it was only the stiff competition that left it floundering. Now, however, the D250 can lay claim to one feat none of its competitors can. Not only does it have Windows 7 Starter Edition installed, it's also the first Android netbook.
Google's Android OS provides a disappointing distraction from an otherwise average netbook.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 10/22/2009
Rating: Total score: 50% price: 67% performance: 33% features: 67%
Source: PC Mag

The Aspire One is one of many netbooks under Acer's arsenal and has had a huge hand in helping the company rise to the number two spot in PC shipments worldwide, according to IDC. But with plenty of newcomers entering the netbook market with systems featuring bigger keyboards, larger screens and more features, the Aspire One model is starting to look, well, dated. The Acer Aspire One (D250-1958) is sure to be a best-selling netbook because it's cheap, but the typing and navigating experience needs a drastic overhaul.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 10/22/2009
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: PC Mag

The Aspire One is one of many netbooks under Acer's arsenal and has had a huge hand in helping the company rise to the number two spot in PC shipments worldwide, according to IDC. But with plenty of newcomers entering the netbook market with systems featuring bigger keyboards, larger screens and more features, the Aspire One model is starting to look, well, dated. The Acer Aspire One (D250-1958) is sure to be a best-selling netbook because it's cheap, but the typing and navigating experience needs a drastic overhaul.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 10/22/2009
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: PC Mag

Netbook sales have helped catapult Acer to second place in PC shipments worldwide, according to IDC. And the Aspire One AOD250 is easily one of Acer's best selling netbooks to date. It's hardly the ideal netbook, though, as plenty of others have caused it to lose some momentum by promising—and delivering—bigger keyboards, larger screens, and a bevy of other features. Well, this little netbook is about to push back. Despite booting both XP and Android in one netbook, the Acer Aspire One AOD250 (Android) falls short in terms of features and design.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 10/15/2009
Rating: Total score: 60%
Foreign Reviews
Source: Connect - 6/10

Comparison, , Medium, Date: 05/01/2010
Rating: Total score: 77% performance: 58% features: 73% mobility: 98% ergonomy: 79%
Source: c't - 7/10

Single Review, , Medium, Date: 02/01/2010
Rating: display: 50% mobility: 80% ergonomy: 50%
Source: PC Praxis - 1/2010

Comparison, , Length Unknown, Date: 12/01/2009
Rating: Total score: 84% price: 80%
Source: Jambitz

Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 12/31/2009
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: CHW

Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 10/27/2009
Rating: price: 80% performance: 40% mobility: 70% workmanship: 80%
Source: Techno Zoom

Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 12/13/2009
Rating: Total score: 70% price: 70% performance: 80% mobility: 75% workmanship: 70%
Acer Aspire One D250-1613
Specifications

Processor: Intel Atom N280
Graphics Adapter: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950
Display: 10.10 inch, 10:6, 1024 x 600 pixels
Weight: 1.3kg
Price: 250 euro
Links: Acer homepage Acer notebook section
Pricecompare
Average Score:
Source: PC World

The latest model in the Aspire One netbook line is fairly nondescript. The D250-1613 has the same 1.6GHz Intel Atom CPU, plus 1GB of RAM, a 160GB hard drive, a tiny keyboard, and a microscopic multitouch pad. With its cookie-cutter netbook design, it fits into the crowd somewhere between the Fujitsu LifeBook M2010 and, say, the Lenovo S10. Acer adds a second OS to its Aspire One D250 without adding to the price--but that still doesn't feel like enough.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 10/27/2009
Rating: Total score: 60%
Comment
Acer: The company was founded under the name of Multitech in Taiwan in 1976 and renamed to Acer or Acer Group in 1987. The product range includes, for example, laptops, tablets, smartphones, desktops, monitors and televisions. Gateway Inc. and Packard Bell also belong to the Group and sell their own laptops.
While Acer still had the third largest global market share in the notebook segment in 2008, it ranked 6th in 2016 with a market share of 6% after they had continuously lost market shares.
There are dozens of Acer laptop reviews per month, the ratings are average (as of 2016). Gateway, which has an own laptop line-up, has also belonged to the Acer Group since 2007.
These graphics cards are not suited for Windows 3D games. Office and Internet surfing however is possible.
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950 is an integrated (onboard) graphic chip on Mobile Intel 945GM chipset. It is a faster clocked version of the GMA 900 and supports no hardware T&L (Transform & Lightning) accelleration (which is required for some games).
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
Intel Atom: The Intel Atom series is a 64-Bit (not every model supports 64bit) microprocessor for cheap and small notebooks (so called netbooks), MIDs, or UMPCs. The speciality of the new architecture is the "in order" execution (instead of the usual and faster "out of order" execution). Therefore, the transistor count of the Atom series is much lower and, thus, cheaper to produce. Furthermore, the power consumption is very low. The performance per Megahertz is therfore worse than the old Pentium 3M (1,2 GHz on par with a 1.6 GHz Atom).
N270:
Power efficient, cheap and slow Netbook single core CPU. Because of the in-order execution, the performance per MHz is worse than Core Solo or Celeron M processors.
N280:
Power efficient, cheap and slow Netbook single core CPU. Because of the in-order execution, the performance per MHz is worse than Core Solo or Celeron M processors. Compared to the N270, the N280 is only minimally higher clocked and offers a higher FSB.
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.
» To find out how fine a display is, see our DPI List.
1.3 kg:
In former time,s this weight was typical for big tablets, small subnotebooks, ultrabooks and convertibles with a 10-11 inch display-diagonal. Nowadays, often 15 inch laptops weigh as much.
1.3 kg:
64.18%: Such a bad rating is rare. There exist hardly any notebooks, which are rated worse.
» Further information can be found in our Notebook Purchase Guide.