Acer's new 15.6-inch Chromebook will be the first to use the AMD A-series of Chromebook APUs.
Acer has a new Chromebook to show at CES, and this addition to the company's 15-inch line has something all-new under the hood — an AMD APU.
The new Chromebook 315 will be the first Chromebook to use AMD's newest A-series of mobile chips, which are designed to use less power while still delivering the performance you expect to see from a premium laptop. Coupled with Acer's good looks and quality materials, premium features like a backlit keyboard and up to 8GB of memory, and a very friendly operating system in Chrome OS. This is a product to get excited about.
AMD power
Acer makes Chromebooks that look good and feel solid. The company has long dominated the larger 15-inch Chromebook market because of well-built models that have a great display and a palatable price tag. But AMD brings something all-new and potentially groundbreaking to the table when it comes to Chromebooks.
The Chromebook 315 will come in two flavors; one without a touch display and an AMD A4-9120C APU, and a fully touch-enabled model with an AMD A6-9220C APU. The term APU stands for Advanced Processing Unit and is a brand-specific marketing term for a chip that includes a central processing unit and a graphics processing unit on a single die. Unlike other chips we see that include a CPU with integrated GPU, like Intel's models, AMD's APUs also offer what's known as Heterogeneous System Architecture (HSA).
HSA is a set of specifications that allow the CPU and a GPU to reside on the same bus and share memory and a task queue. That equates to more streamlined processing, faster computations, and less power used — exactly what you want to see in a device that is powered by a battery. Which is why the SoC (System on a Chip) inside your phone works exactly the same way.
You're already familiar with an APU, even if you didn't know it. The PlayStation 4 and Xbox One both use a custom APU in order to get quality graphics and relatively fast compute time from a very inexpensive chip. And if you happen to have spent any time with the ill-fated SteamBox you know an AMD APU can get the job done when and where it counts.
The specs of the touch-enabled Chromebox 315-2HT:
Category | Spec |
---|---|
Operating system | Chrome OS |
Display | 15.6-inch Acer CineCrystal LED-backlit TFT LCD 1920x1080 resolution 170 degrees viewing angle |
APU | 7th Generation AMD A-Series dual-core A6-9220C 1.8GHz with Turbo Core Technology up to 2.7GHz 1MB L2 cache AMD Radeon R5 Graphics H.265 4K decode, H264 1080p60 encode OpenCL 2.0 OpenGL 4.4 Microsoft DirectX 12 |
Memory | 4GB or 8GB dual-channel DDR4 SDRAM |
Storage | 32GB or 64GB |
Connectivity | 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac Dual-channel 2.4GHz and 5GHz support 2x2 MU-MIMO Bluetooth 4.2 |
Security | Discrete H1 TPM for Chromebooks |
Camera | 720p video recording with HDR 88-degree wide angle lens includes support for Android Runtime for Chrome |
Audio | HD-audio support Two upwards firing stereo speakers built-in microphone 3.5 combo jack |
Keyboard | 74/75/78 key Acer FineTip backlit keyboard (key count varies by language support) |
Trackpad | Fully clickable with gesture support |
Ports | 2 USB 3.0 ports microSD card reader 2 USB Type C 3.1 ports DisplayPort over USB-C |
Battery | 54Wh (4670mAh) USB PD charging plus DC input port (20 volt) |
Dimensions | 14.98 x 10.09 x 0.79 inches |
Weight | 3.97 lbs |
Acer intends to bring the Chromebook 315 worldwide, with an expected February release in North America starting at $279. Models for EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Asia) are expected in April starting at €349. Should the AMD APU prove to be as capable with Chrome as it is for other operating systems, this might be the start of something very big.
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