Based out of Taipei, Taiwan, Acer is one of the largest PC makers in the world — and one of the longest tenured. Since the late 1970s, the company has focused on finding the right parts suppliers, finding the right software partners and designing all of its products with its customers in mind. As such, the company’s 35-year history of steady growth can be seen as an ongoing, ever-growing industry dialogue.
Sumit Agnihotry is vice president of product marketing for Acer’s Americas region, covering Canada to Argentina and everything in between. In that role he works to understand new industry trends, find suppliers who offer the best components at the best prices and connect those dots with what people really need their PCs to do.
It’s that last part, he says, that serves as Acer’s compass in designing and building a new product. “It’s critical that consumers are connected to the design,” he says. “Design has become one of the most important factors in the PC industry.”
It’s a factor that Acer’s engineers have taken to heart, and this year, the company might have another winner on their hands, with the new Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra laptops.
The Aspire Timeline Ultra laptops feature a magnesium-alloy, unibody chassis that looks sweet on top, inside and even underneath. Measuring a scant 20 millimeters thick, Acer has managed to squeeze a consistent eight hours of battery life out of a lightweight, high-performing PC that starts up from the press of a button in just five seconds — and awakens from sleep in 1.5 seconds.
Agnihotry says the M series is able to straddle that rare territory between a flagship product that has all the bells and whistles and a product that is accessible for mainstream users. Target customers for the M series are not just the niche or the early adopters, but also those going back to college, going back to school or who are just refreshing their old laptops.
“Today Acer’s fastest system, the S series, is coming in around four seconds, down from about nine seconds as recently as last year. We’re collaborating on the M series to achieve similar results,” Liu says.-
Beyond their work in engineering, Liu says Microsoft and Acer act as a holistic team across the product lifecycle, meaning they also collaborate closely on product marketing and other efforts related to connecting PCs with the consumers and workers who ultimately use them.
“Not only do we need to help with engineering, but collectively we need to make sure our businesses are aligned, and our marketing drives as well,” he says. “Acer and Microsoft are working much more tightly than ever before to deliver the optimal experience for end users.”
In partnership with Microsoft, Acer plans to evolve its product lineup with innovations that build on new Windows 8 capabilities. Agnihotry says that touch is a great example of how Windows 8 innovation is shaping the new Acer lineup.