


That's about all she wrote for now: Acer says the tablet will arrive in June for $380 but for now, we've added some hands-on photos toward the top of the post. Indeed, the screen held up well in a mix of fluorescent and natural light, though that was all indoors, mind you - none of the press here at Acer's New York City press event had the chance to test it outside. The display, meanwhile, is of IPS quality with Acer's "Zero Gap" bonding technique promising minimal glare. On the outside, you'll notice front-facing speakers - placed so that the sound won't get muffled in any of the four positions. Under the hood, it runs an Intel Atom Z3745 CPU, promising eight hours of battery life - on the low side for a Bay Trail tablet. If the Acer One 10 does not turn on consider charging the battery. After approximately 3 seconds the screen should turn on and start the Acer One 10. As for the dock, it brings a full-sized USB port, microSD slot and a miniature HDMI port, and there will also be another dock with a built-in hard drive - you know, in case the tablet's built-in 32GB/64GB of storage isn't enough. To turn the device back on, you can push and hold down on the small button on the top left side of the tablet on. At the same time, they're easy enough to pull apart when need be. In my brief hands-on with it, I was surprised to find that, despite the otherwise cheap build quality, the tablet and dock do indeed click together seamlessly, with little effort required on the part of the user. Though the dock has a pair of spiky anchors to guide the tablet in, it's mainly magnets holding the two pieces together.
