Pros: Relatively light for 15-inch laptop; Strong graphics scores; Excellent battery life; Good audio quality
Cons: Low screen resolution; All ports on back; No backlit keyboard
The Verdict: The first Ultrabook with discrete graphics and a 15-inch screen, the Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M3 will appeal to gamers on the go.
Design


With a footprint of 14.75 x 10 inches, the M3 is definitely the largest Ultrabook we've seen, rivaling the Sony VAIO SE (14.9 x 10.1 inches) for desk space. At 0.78 inches, the M3 is a hair thinner than the VAIO SE but at 4.5 pounds, is slightly heavier. Still, it beats out the15-inch MacBook Pro (14.4 x 9.8 x 1 inches, 5.6 pounds) in both categories.
Keyboard and Touchpad

While the Timeline Ultra M3's trackpad is centered under the G and H keys, in this case, we wish Acer had shifted it slightly to the right. There's so little room on the left palm rest that our thumb was always on the touchpad.
As far as the Elan trackpad itself, we were fairly impressed. For one, it was a spacious 4.2 x 3.1 inches--even larger than on the MacBook Pro--and, for the most part, performed most multitouch gestures as smoothly and accurately as anything on an Apple product. However, from time to time, the system would accidentally select text when we were trying to scroll.
Heat
Despite its thin profile, the M3 manages to stay cool. After streaming a Hulu video at full screen for 15 minutes, the middle of the underside was just 82 degrees Fahrenheit. On the top of the system, the touchpad was an even cooler 76 degrees, and the space between the G and H keys was 83 degrees.
Display and Audio

The M3's speakers are located under the front lip of the notebook. They cranked out loud and authoritative sound, whether watching movies, listening to music, or playing games. While somewhat hollow, and bass a little on the shallow side, the Dolby Home Theater v4 software went a long way toward improving sound overall.
Ports and Webcam

We're not thrilled that all the ports are on the back of the Timeline Ultra M3; it makes it more difficult to pop in USB sticks, for instance.
The 1.3-MP webcam provided average images; colors were accurate, and we could make out a fair amount of detail.
Performance
Packing a 1.7-GHZ Intel Core i7-2637M processor, 4GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, our M3 came ready to rock. On PCMark07, this Ultrabook scored 3,474, which is about 1,200 points above the category average, 1,100 points higher than the HP Envy 15, and 1,400 points higher than the VAIO SE. In everyday use as well as when gaming, the M3 was quick to open apps and responded at a moment's notice.
The M3 duplicated a 4.97GB folder of multimedia in 31 seconds, a rate of 164 MBps, easily trouncing the category average of 31 MBps. That crushes the current Ultrabook leader, the ASUS Zenbook UX31, whose 128GB SSD notched 98 MBps.
During the OpenOffice Spreadsheet test, the M3 took 5 minutes and 44 seconds to match 20,000 names with their corresponding addresses. That's about 30 seconds faster than category average, but 22 seconds slower than the VAIO SE. The Envy 15 took 6:31 to complete the task.
Boot and Wake Times
The M3's 256GB SSD was simply blazing. It booted Windows 7 Home Premium in a fast 23 seconds, a third of the time it takes the average mainstream notebook. That's even faster than the ASUS UX31 (29 seconds), theToshiba Z835 (26 seconds), and the 15-inch MacBook Pro (44 seconds). The M3 was also quick to wake from sleep, popping back to life in less than a second after we lifted the lid. Acer calls this feature Green Instant-On, but it's a required feature for Ultrabooks.
While it lacks the Smart Connect feature as seen on the Dell XPS 13--which lets the notebook remain connected to the Internet even in sleep mode--the M3 has what Acer calls Instant Connect, which allows it to connect to the Internet in 2.5 seconds. In our testing, it took around that time after we woke the notebook from sleep.
Graphics Performance
The Timeline Ultra M3 is the first Ultrabook with discrete graphics--Nvidia's new GeForce GT 640M, which uses its new Kepler architecture (more on that soon)--the M3 has some serious gaming chops. While it's not going to compete with dedicated gaming rigs, it will more than handle its own on the latest titles.
On 3DMark06, the M3 scored 11,173, more than double the category average (5,059), and blowing past the VAIO SE (6,839), which has an AMD Radeon HD 6470M GPU. It even beat out the MacBook Pro, whose AMD Radeon HD 6750M GPU scored 10,359.
Gaming Results
On our "World of Warcraft" test, the Timeline Ultra M3 averaged 155 fps with the graphics set to good and the resolution at 1366 x 768. That's three times the category average, and miles better than the VAIO SE, which only managed 36 fps. To be fair, the VAIO has a higher resolution of 1080p, but that alone wouldn't account for the difference. The M3 also bested the MacBook Pro (63 fps), the HP Envy 15 (43 fps), and the Dell XPS 15z(59 fps).
When we maxed out the settings, the story was pretty much the same. The M3 averaged 80 fps, well above the average (27 fps), the VAIO SE (29 fps), the XPS 15z (35 fps) and the Envy 15 (27 fps).
How much of a difference does a discrete GPU make in an Ultrabook? We re-ran the "World of Warcraft" test using the M3's integrated Intel HD Graphics 3000 GPU, and it averaged 35 and 16 fps, respectively, on autodetect and max settings.
But WOW is one thing; Nvidia claims that its new GPU can play the latest titles at their highest settings. We first put the M3 to the test with Far Cry 2, where the M3 averaged 61 fps with the settings on autodetect, and 59 fps with the effects set to Ultra.
Other more recent games proved more demanding, but still playable. On "World of Tanks," we set the effects to Very High, turned on antialiasing to the max, and set the screen resolution to native. The Timeline Ultra M3 averaged 44 fps on these settins. On "Crysis 2," we again cranked the effects to max, turned DX11 off, and were able to average a respectable 30 fps. We saw a little bit of tearing, but nothing too distracting.
Battery Life
Thanks to Nvidia's Optimus technology, which switches automatically between the discrete and integrated GPUs, Acer claims that the M3 will get up to eight hours of battery life. On the LAPTOP Battery Test (Web surfing via Wi-Fi), the M3 lasted 7 hours and 4 minutes. Not only is that two hours better than the mainstream category average, but it's 20 minutes longer than the ultraportable average. By comparison, the VAIO SE lasted just 4:18 without its sheet battery, but the MacBook Pro lasted an even longer 8:23.
Software

The system also comes with a 30-day trial of McAffee Internet Security and Microsoft Office 2010 Starter.
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