CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 04/04/2002
- Updated on: 11/07/2009
Elbowroom
The Veriton's beige and blue case recalls the Baby AT style of yesteryear, though it's not quite small enough to qualify as a true compact PC. The Veriton is designed to sit on a desk beneath a monitor, or it can stand sideways like a tower. A pair of captive thumbscrews allow for easy access to the interior. IT departments and desktop users who feel constrained by the near lack of expandability in true compact desktops such as the cheaper Compaq Evo D500 or the more powerful HP e-PC 42 will appreciate the extra elbowroom in the Veriton; three PCI slots, one memory socket, and one drive bay are free. Rear expansion ports are basic: parallel, two serial, and two USB, the last of which are occupied by the keyboard and the Logitech optical mouse. Two additional USB ports adorn the front of the case alongside headphone and microphone jacks.
Acer skimps a bit on the peripherals that come with the Veriton. The AC701 monitor offers sharp text and a bright picture at 800x600, but with the resolution cranked up to 1,024x768, images and text become noticeably fuzzy--and that's at a resolution far short of the monitor's max of 1,280x1,024. In addition to quick-launch and CD-playback buttons, the multimedia keyboard sports a terrific volume-control dial that doubles as a Mute button. Too bad there's no volume to control; no speakers come with the system. Also, the Mute button won't work on the 52X CD-ROM drive, which (typical for its speed) creates quite a din while spinning.
Free to choose
The Veriton offers one more flexible feature, but it has a trade-off. When you first boot the system, you can install either Windows 2000 or Windows XP Professional. The Veriton loads your choice from an image on the hard drive. While IT departments are sure to appreciate the initial convenience, the extra time (roughly 10 to 15 minutes) needed to install the OS could hold up the deployment of multiple systems.
The Veriton's biggest problem lies in its overall performance. Acer stocked the system with a 1.7GHz Pentium 4 processor and 128MB of DDR SDRAM, but a slower 5,400rpm, 40GB hard drive, and an aged Nvidia Riva TNT2 AGP video card stranded the system at the bottom of the curve. The Veriton could probably handle a mainstream application or two without difficulty, but multiple office-suite apps and other resource-hogging software would do much better with a faster processor, more memory, and a 7,200rpm hard drive. Ironically, the Veriton's gaming performance, though still abysmally slow, is better than that of many other corporate systems with integrated chips. Continue reading
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