

In fact, the experience feels rather odd.

The keys are well spaced out and you do get an audio feedback for every key you press a key but the experience isn't the same as a regular keyboard.

Typing on the keyboard takes some getting used to. A nifty feature - put all 10 fingers on the display to launch the keyboard, put 5 fingers on the display to launch the Acer ring. Its response is fabulous,much better than expected. The bottom touchscreen, however,is an entirely different story. The overall experience of touching the monitor to launch, close or perform any action feels quite inconvenient and after some time this reviewer's arm started hurting with the effort of keeping it up to use the touchscreen. The close, maximize and minimize icons along with the scrolling bar have been increased in size to make the touch inputs more responsive but it's the little things such as trying to control the volume/navigation on VLC, clicking on File, Menu, etc. The touch response on the upper display is pretty bad. The upper display is a standard touchscreen where as the lower display has gorilla glass making it scratch resistant. An upside - the device houses one USB3.0 port.Īre two 14-inch screens better than one? Well, yes and no.īoth the displays have a resolution of 1366x768. It doesn't even house a card reader, which is an extra accessory available with the device. The device is quite thick and you'd expect such a thick device to house a CD drive at the least but it doesn't. Open the lid and instead of seeing the usual keyboard, you will find two 14-inch HD touchscreens screens. The device is quite heavy, weighing in at over 2.5 kgs.
