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In a nutshell: The recent IFA event in Berlin featured new product launches and announcements from various companies. Acer seized the opportunity to unveil several new PCs across multiple hardware tiers, including a behemoth desktop powered by Intel's upcoming Arrow Lake CPU architecture and Acer's first entry into the rapidly growing handheld gaming PC market.

Acer's showcase featured an upcoming gaming desktop, two mainstream laptops, and the company's first handheld gaming PC. Although Acer's branding attempts to align these new products with the emerging AI PC trend, they primarily feature relatively mature processors.

The new Predator Orion 7000 desktop, equipped with unspecified "next-gen Arrow Lake" chips, is the flagship of the lineup and the only model to include CPUs that meet Microsoft's "AI PC" specifications. Intel has not yet fully unveiled Arrow Lake, but this series, which succeeds the 14th-generation Raptor Lake Refresh, will be the company's first desktop CPU lineup to incorporate powerful neural processing units (NPUs). Intel's laptop Meteor Lake and Lunar Lake series also use NPUs to enhance onboard generative AI workloads.

Pricing for the Orion 7000 isn't available yet, but its remaining system specs suggest a high-end rig. It includes an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090, up to 32 GB of DDR5 memory, up to 6 TB of NVMe SSD storage, a Thunderbolt 4 port, Wi-Fi 7 support, and a 1200W power supply.

Acer also announced new 14-inch and 16-inch Nitro V laptops, starting at $1,100 and $1,300, respectively. The two variants are broadly similar, offering options for high-refresh-rate 1200p or 1600p displays, up to 32 GB of DDR5 RAM, and up to 2 TB of SSD storage.

However, the Nitro V 16 features an Intel i5 or i7 Raptor Lake Refresh CPU, while the V 14 includes an AMD Ryzen 5 or Ryzen 7 8040HS processor. Both laptops offer entry-level RTX 3050 and 4050 graphics options, but customers can upgrade the 16-inch variant to an RTX 4060, whereas the cheapest 14-inch model uses the aging RTX 2050.

Acer is marketing these GPUs as part of its "AI PC" branding, echoing Nvidia's claim that RTX cards can easily outperform Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm APUs in onboard generative AI tasks.

Finally, Acer is entering the handheld gaming PC market with the Nitro Blaze 7. It features AMD's Ryzen 7 8840HS processor paired with a Radeon 780M GPU, likely offering performance similar to competitors from Asus, Antec, Zotac, and Ayaneo. The Nitro 7's display supports 1080p resolution at 144Hz with 500 nits of brightness and AMD FreeSync. Internal SSD storage is available up to 2 TB.

Looking further into the future, Acer also revealed a concept for a gaming laptop with a detachable wireless controller. By pressing two fingers on the release button at the top of the keyboard, users can remove the touchpad, which transforms into an oddly shaped gamepad.

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More garbage...
 
I will sidestepping all of this NPU nonsense.
Wasted die space.
 
Acer came a long way from it's humble beginnings. Just like I predicted a few years back ( when the handheld space was $1500 premium) is tapering to a converging commodity in what once was a niche market.
At this rate the Steam deck 2.0 will probably be 10 x improvement due to a saturation of competition/hardware improvement.

*in my outlook.
 
And Acer Nitro gaming monitors up to 600Hz!

Acer making moves for sure.
 
Acer came a long way from it's humble beginnings. Just like I predicted a few years back ( when the handheld space was $1500 premium) is tapering to a converging commodity in what once was a niche market.
At this rate the Steam deck 2.0 will probably be 10 x improvement due to a saturation of competition/hardware improvement.

*in my outlook.
Doubt it'll be 10x, but it'll be nice to see an 890m in the next one. They are still dealing with power constraints and the cooling capabilites of the device itself.
 
Doubt it'll be 10x, but it'll be nice to see an 890m in the next one. They are still dealing with power constraints and the cooling capabilites of the device itself.
According to leaks from Chiphell, Valve is aiming for a release date of Q3 or Q4 2026 for the Steam Deck 2. While x86 is gaining significant ground on efficiency. Arm is gaining performance on X86. 10x is probably optimistic on my part on performance but not on features, like upscaling, frame gen, vrr, screen resolution, , storage, memory, software, etc etc.
Sony and Microsoft haven't even entered the race.
If we look at bandwidth alone from 800p at 60hz to 1080p 144hz is 10x in bandwidth at 0.66 Gbps to 8.96 Gbps.
Also Valves revenue model for hardware is often a break even/ 25 to 30% revenue from game sales model. If Valve doesn't offer 10x scaling in performance from original Deck the competition will surely will within a year due to their hardware premium model of revenue.
 
According to leaks from Chiphell, Valve is aiming for a release date of Q3 or Q4 2026 for the Steam Deck 2. While x86 is gaining significant ground on efficiency. Arm is gaining performance on X86. 10x is probably optimistic on my part on performance but not on features, like upscaling, frame gen, vrr, screen resolution, , storage, memory, software, etc etc.
Sony and Microsoft haven't even entered the race.
If we look at bandwidth alone from 800p at 60hz to 1080p 144hz is 10x in bandwidth at 0.66 Gbps to 8.96 Gbps.
Also Valves revenue model for hardware is often a break even/ 25 to 30% revenue from game sales model. If Valve doesn't offer 10x scaling in performance from original Deck the competition will surely will within a year due to their hardware premium model of revenue.
The problem with ARM isn't speed, it's compatibility. Essentially, if it can't be done in a browser it isn't worth trying on an ARM PC.
 

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