144 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
144 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3766
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Title: HPR3766: ACER Nitro 5 laptop review
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3766/hpr3766.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:08:37
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3766 from Monday the 9th of January 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Acer Nitro 5 Laptop Review.
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It is hosted by Bookworm and is about 10 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Acer Nitro 5 Laptop Review.
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Hello, Hacker Public Radio Bookworm reporting.
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Wanted to check in for the first time in a couple of years.
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Been formulating a couple of things to record.
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Never got around to it until now.
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I apologize, I promise to make up the difference.
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So, today's recording is a review of my brand new laptop.
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I have been using an ASUS i3 laptop for many years and it finally decided to give up the ghost.
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So I found myself having been researching laptops and all of a sudden in desperate need of a new laptop.
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So, I went into a Best Buy.
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I know that was a mistake.
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I apologize. I hate Best Buy.
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But I was out of town away from home and I desperately needed something.
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So I go into Best Buy.
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And I ask the sales monkey.
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Monkey, what can you do me for in a good laptop?
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And of course, she starts showing me all the generic garbage, the HP's and the Dell's.
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Now, some Dell's and some HP's are very good laptops.
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And I don't begrudge them that Dell and HP now are selling Linux laptops.
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But not in retail stores like Best Buy.
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So I'm like, well, I do want to record, I do want to play games.
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I do want to do a couple other things on it.
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So let's see what you got for that.
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So, he starts showing me a couple of 15 inch laptops.
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No, I want something just a little larger.
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I like the additional retail or the additional landscape on my screen.
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So he's like, well, we've got these 17s.
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And he said, this one's a particularly nice one and it's on sale right now.
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It's an Acer Nitro 5.
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It comes with a 500 gig solid state drive, an M2 SATA,
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an extremely narrow bezel, of course, Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6 compatible,
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full HDMI port, and DTX audio, Core i5, 10th Gen processor,
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and the discrete Nvidia G4 GTX GPU.
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After looking up some more of the specs online,
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it has two additional spots, one for an SSD and one for hard drive.
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So I went ahead and purchased the laptop.
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$780, $800 and changed out the door.
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My credit card cried for a couple of days after that one,
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but we'll get that taken care of in due time.
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So I get home and I start scavenging pieces and parts out of my old,
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dearly departed I3, including a 500 gig SSD.
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And I had a 120 gig M2 SATA laying around.
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And so I put those in the Nitro 5 and they went in,
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take 12 screws out of the bottom very easily, bottom just pops right off.
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We'll need a guitar pick or some other sort of separator to get the bottom frame to separate.
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But it came off very easily.
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The two new drives slotted in perfectly.
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So now I have 120 gig shared drive between my windows and Linux installs.
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And I have two 500 gig, one M2 and one SSD for my operating systems.
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So the next step was obviously to get the next going.
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So I went to my good old stand by Katie Neon, ran the installer.
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The weird thing was during the install, it did not see the windows hard drive at all.
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Typically in a dual boot situation, you'll have to install a grub in the root or in the boot drive
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so that you can select what operating system you want at boot time.
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It didn't see it, didn't even see the hard drive, didn't even give it as an option.
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So all the other two just fine.
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So I went ahead and installed it onto the 500 gig hard drive,
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reboot the laptop, nothing, right into windows.
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No grub menu, no grub options, nothing.
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So reboot the laptop, go back into the BIOS and make sure that the hotkeys enabled at boot time to select boot device.
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On this laptop it's the F12 button.
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So a reboot again starts spamming F12, come up to a boot menu, the only option is windows boot partitions,
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which is a little curious because I just installed Katie Neon.
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So I'm like well, maybe something didn't go in properly, let's try it again.
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So reboot, back to my Katie Neon boot USB drive, reinstalled Katie Neon, same thing.
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Lather rinse repeat, did not see it under the boot menu or the boot options at all.
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So all right, let's drop back and punt.
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Picked up, downloaded the latest version of Fedora, and I know that it uses the known desktop by default,
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but I'll just have to deal with it for a few minutes until I can get a Katie Neon desktop or Plasma desktop.
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So I installed Fedora, 33, went on just as easy as you please.
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But again, once I rebooted after the installation of the operating system, no grub.
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The installer didn't even see the windows hard drive at all, curiouser and curiouser.
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So I reboot again, spam the F12 to get the boot drive options.
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Ah, I see there's a Linux boot option.
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So I select it, Fedora came up, no problem at all.
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I haven't dug any further to see why the Linux aren't seeing the windows drive and drive partitions at all.
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I suspect it has something to do with the UEFI settings, and I'm not going to change those.
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I'm working in Linux and Fedora, and I have no problems with that.
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I've got my KDE desktop, and I'm happy.
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But other than that, it's been a very good laptop.
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I do plan on at some point probably upgrading the default 8 gigs of RAM to 16,
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and according to manufacturer's spec, it will take up to 32 gigs of RAM.
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So I think no matter what, giant stumpy robot game I want to play,
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this should be sufficient for me for quite some time.
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So if you're in the market for a laptop, and you've got about $800,
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I really recommend this one.
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Performance wise has been very good, no qualms, no issues.
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The only minor issue I have is in the construction.
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The entire case and frame of the laptop is plastic.
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There's no metal reinforcing, except for a frame inside that their motherboard is fixed to.
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So overall, you know, it could be a little sturdier, but it's not so flexible
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that you can bend it with your hands.
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It doesn't bend, it doesn't flex.
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So it's a very sturdy laptop without any metal components in the frame.
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But like I said, that's all I've got for now.
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I'm happy with this laptop, and if you need one, I hope you would be too.
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Thanks again, and have a happy day.
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Hello again, HPR users, Bookworm again.
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I just wanted to give you a brief update on the status of that laptop.
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It's been about two years since that audio was recorded.
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And I've still got that laptop.
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It's still a great little device.
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I've traveled pretty extensively with it at this point.
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I did recommend one to a friend within six months after I got mine.
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When they received theirs, when booting into Windows for the first time,
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it went into an infinite boot loop.
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They were able to get that issue resolved with tech support.
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But within a week, they're developed an issue with the graphics card
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and the graphics drivers.
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And it would just crash every 30 minutes or so.
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So after that many troubles within 30 days, they decided to return it.
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Again, I've had no problems with mine, booting into Windows or Linux,
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but I still do have to use the F12 hotkey in order to be able to select
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the operating system at boot time.
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But I still like mine.
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They moved on to something else.
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So it's just something to keep in mind when picking a laptop.
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Also of note, since it has been two years, the prices dropped pretty dramatically.
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I think by about $250.
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So at this point, it's going into the budget laptop range.
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And so keep that in mind in your options as well.
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Thank you.
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And have a good day.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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That Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, you can click on our contribute link
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to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
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the Internet Archive and our sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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