ACER REVO BUILD HANDS ON REVIEW
At IFA 2015 in Berlin, Acer announced three new PC’s – a tower, an all-in-one and, most interestingly, a modular Mini PC, the Revo Build M1-601. The modular design was said to allow customers the ability to easily customise their computers for their own needs, and is set to start shipping in October. The magnetic pin design meant that blocks would snap into place, making the process as easy as building a Lego tower (in theory). Is the Acer Revo Build’s modular design the future of Mini PC’s or is it a gimmick? We went hands on at IFA 2015 to find out.
If you want to find out what Revo Build's predecessor was like, read: Revo One RL85 review
ACER REVO BUILD HANDS ON REVIEW: DESIGN AND BUILD
The key selling point of the Acer Revo Build is its modular design. It’s an interesting concept, and depending on how the additional “Blocks” are priced, it could pave the way for a new way for consumers with little to no PC building knowledge to build and customise computers to their own needs. Theoretically, it makes perfect sense because you’ll only buy the features/parts that you need, and you’re not wasting money on additional features that you won’t make the use of.
The Acer Revo Build has a small 1 litre chassis with a 125x125mm footprint, making it small, portable and will fit pretty much anywhere you need it to be. It also makes it the ideal companion for those that travel and rely on a PC for work, as all they’d have to find is a TV screen (hotel room?) and they’d have a full PC with all their documents and programs at their fingertips. We were surprised at just how lightweight each component was, and even with three external hard drives and an external graphics card stacked up with the base unit, it’s nowhere as big as a standard PC tower.
So, how easy is it to add and remove Blocks from the Revo Build? A lot easier than we thought, actually. The beauty of the design means that there are no loose cables that you have to plug in, and the system uses a magnetic pin design that allows the block to snap into place securely and not move. There’s even a lid for the top Block to hide the exposed magnetic pin, which both protects the Block itself and makes the modular PC look more like a standard Mini PC.
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