Acer - Swift Edge 16 - 16" 3.2K 120Hz OLED Laptop – AMD Ryzen 7 7840U with 16GB LPDDR5 memory– 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD - Olivine Black
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Description
Features
Windows 11 Home
Windows 11 operating system was designed with you at the center - to make life easier, more creative, secure, connected and fun! It's also faster with new features to help you get more done.
16.0" OLED Display
A standout 16” 3.2K OLED display, with cinema-grade 100% DCI-P3 color gamut support, 120Hz refresh, 0.2ms response time & brilliant 400nits peak brightness, providing a sensational range of lifelike colors. Certified True Black HDR500 display offers deeper blacks & brighter whites.
AMD Ryzen 7 7840U Octa-Core
Experience unparalleled performance with AMD Ryzen 7 7840U processor, featuring Ryzen AI and up to 8 cores and 16 threads. Delivering exceptional capability in an ultrathin OLED laptop.
AMD RadeonGgraphics
AMD Radeon 780M Graphics supporting Microsoft DirectX 12
16GB Onboard LPDDR5 Memory
Smoothly run numerous programs, video-editing, and browser tabs at the same time
1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD
Maximum speed and massive storage with 1TB of PCIe Gen 4 SSD
The Smarts
The QHD front-facing camera uses Acer’s TNR (Temporal Noise Reduction) technology for high-quality imagery in low-light conditions while the blue glass lens reduces ghosting and flares. And with Acer PurifiedVoice technology with AI Noise Reduction video calling has never been so good.
The Design
The 16-inch lightweight laptop boasts a simple yet sleek design. Weighing only 1.24 kg (2.73 lbs.) and measuring 12.95 mm (0.51 inches) in height, the Acer Swift Edge sports an ultra-slim magnesium-aluminum (Mg-Al alloy) chassis, making it significantly more portable and durable.
TwinAir Cooling
The Smarts Experience high-performing thermal efficiency with TwinAir cooling—supporting multiple cooling modes—a wider air vent, and an air inlet keyboard expelling up to 10% more heat than a standard keyboard.
Better for Your Eyes
Eyesafe Display brings first to market innovation with protection for your eyes from high-energy visible (HEV) blue light maintain the vivid color of your screen. Established through years of research and designed with eye doctors.
What's in the Box
Laptop, USB Type-C AC Adapter & Power Cord, Sleeve
Key Specs
- Screen Size16 inches
- Screen Resolution3200 x 2000
- Touch ScreenNo
- Refresh Rate120Hz
- Brightness400 nits
- Processor ModelAMD Ryzen 7 7000 Series
- CPU Base Clock Frequency5.1 gigahertz
- Storage TypeSSD
- Total Storage Capacity1000 gigabytes
- System Memory (RAM)16 gigabytes
- GraphicsAMD Radeon
- Display Connector(s)1 x HDMI 2.1
- Battery Life (up to)8.5 hours
- Battery TypeLithium-ion
- Backlit KeyboardYes
General
- Product NameSwift Edge 16 - 16" 3.2K 120Hz OLED Laptop – AMD Ryzen 7 7840U with 16GB LPDDR5 memory– 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD
- BrandAcer
- Model NumberSFE16-43-R98R
- Year of Release2023
- ColorOlivine Black
- Color CategoryBlack
Display
- Display TypeOLED
- Screen Size16 inches
- Screen Resolution3200 x 2000
- Touch ScreenNo
- Refresh Rate120Hz
- Brightness400 nits
Processor
- Processor BrandAMD
- Processor ModelAMD Ryzen 7 7000 Series
- Processor Model Number7840U
- CPU Base Clock Frequency5.1 gigahertz
- Number of CPU Cores8-core
Storage
- Storage TypeSSD
- Total Storage Capacity1000 gigabytes
- Solid State Drive Capacity1000 gigabytes
- Solid State Drive InterfacePCIe 4.0
Memory
- System Memory (RAM)16 gigabytes
- Type of Memory (RAM)LPDDR5
Graphics
- Graphics TypeIntegrated
- GPU BrandAMD Radeon
- GraphicsAMD Radeon
Compatibility
- Operating SystemWindows 11 Home
Connectivity
- Display Connector(s)1 x HDMI 2.1
- Number of HDMI Outputs (Total)1
- USB Ports2 x USB-A 3.2, 2 x USB-C 4
- Number of USB Ports (Total)4
- Headphone JackYes
- Wireless ConnectivityBluetooth, Wi-Fi
- Wireless StandardAX
Cooling
- CPU Cooling SystemAir
Power
- Battery Life (up to)8.5 hours
- Battery TypeLithium-ion
Camera
- Front-Facing CameraYes
- Built-In MicrophoneYes
Features
- Backlit KeyboardYes
- Touchpad TypeMulti-gesture
- Media Card ReaderYes
- Audio TechnologyDTS Audio
- Security FeaturesCable lock slot
- Cable Lock SlotNoble Wedge Security Slot
- Casing MaterialMagnesium alloy
Dimensions
- Product Height0.51 inches
- Product Width14.08 inches
- Product Depth9.68 inches
- Product Weight2.73 pounds
Certifications & Listings
- ENERGY STAR CertifiedNo
- EPEAT QualifiedNo
Included
- Optical Drive TypeNone
Warranty
- Manufacturer's Warranty - Parts1 year
- Manufacturer's Warranty - Labor1 year
Other
- UPC195133204583
Customer reviews
Rating 3.7 out of 5 stars with 39 reviews
(39 customer reviews)Rating by feature
- Battery Life3.4
Rating 3.4 out of 5 stars
- Speed4.5
Rating 4.5 out of 5 stars
- Display4.7
Rating 4.7 out of 5 stars
Customers are saying
Customers express satisfaction with the Swift Edge 16's OLED screen, describing it as excellent. The laptop's lightweight design and ample ports are also well-received. While some users find the battery life to be lacking and the fans to be noisy, others appreciate the performance, keyboard, price, and storage.
This summary was generated by AI based on customer reviews.
- Pros mentioned:Oled screen, Performance, WeightCons mentioned:Fan noise
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Acer Audio BEAST vs M2 Mac AIR - Dead Heat Tie!
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.FIRST: Best Buy is the ONLY place to get this in the US and it's the best bargain laptop ANYWHERE!!! I was shocked they had it. I went from a solid Ryzen AMD 12 core Desktop to this system. This one runs Ableton with huge sessions at the same level of efficiency. This runs UAD Audio Hardware perfectly FINE of the USB4 port BTW and connects to everything through my Satechi USB4/TB4 UB. I guess there's just some sort of TB emulation going on. I ALSO have a Macbook AIR m2 with 32GB of RAM and it runs Ableton ALSO at the SAME level of CPU usage. The Air cost over 2X as I got this one for a $200 discount @ $1099. WOW The value was insane. See photos of both machines. The disk speeds are insane on the internal drive, like 4K read write. The ONLY drawback which is every Win Laptop is that crazy CPU stuff does drive the fan. I'm gonna try a cooler and play with it. See my journey below. I am using my Mac mostly for audio, but have a ton of Ableton sessions on WIN desktop. Being remote mostly, I rolled the dice on this. I cloned the desktop drive from Win 10 there using Macrium reflect imaging (not clone) and upgraded to Win 11 here on this box. Go to Toms guide for some Github installers to upgrade as it was giving me fits with TPM2. (and still doesn't recognize. See below). I purchased a Win11Pro key online from the gamer site and it worked perfectly. (The purchased machine was authed for Home. Blah!) Device encryption on the System info tab says TPM not usable. Go figure. It's enabled in the bios and everything, but I'm winning big time anyway. Once upgraded I installed every acer driver from their site manually as the Acer care did squat. That's a bit strange. But alas, a few tweaks, re-authorizing Brainworks and Native plugs and others to this machine, plugging in Ilok, which is way easier for most of my plugs, and everything runs perfectly! The screen is AMAZING It's soooooooooo light! PIX: Mac and Acer together Acer with Ableton Zoomed in on 168 tracks in my session with a zillion plugs that aren't UAD accelerated. My estimate is about 100 in the session. Don't worry about memory. The drive is so fast that the machine is spunky multitasking with
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:WeightCons mentioned:Battery life
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Incredible laptop with a few shortcomings
||Posted . Owned for less than 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Many great aspects of this laptop, with a few shortcomings that could be an issue if it matters. lets start with the pros: - incredibly light. This thing is lighter than lots of 14-inch laptops, making it easy to carry around. The weight really helps it be very portable and easy to carry around. -Generous port selection. They definitely did not compromise on port selection on both sides, especially the 2 USB-A ports so you can connect both a mouse and a keyboard if you'd like. Also, it's nice that most of the ports are on the left side, so if you're right-handed your mouse does not interfere with cables. -the display is truly incredible. If you enjoy watching movies, this laptop screen is phenomenal for it. high resolution and high refresh rate also means it's a pleasure to use daily. (The screen is set to 60hz out of the box, so make sure to go into settings and change that.) -the processor is powerful and modern, which will help with the longevity of the laptop. -the color is black, but in some lights it's a very dark shade of green. (Hence the name Olivine Black) Now onto the cons: -the keyboard and trackpad are fine, but not great. They definitely work, but if you really care about keyboards then this might disappoint. the trackpad is also fine, but not stellar. -the battery life, as mentioned in other reviews, is not good. It's the consequence of having such a thin and light laptop with an OLED screen as well. Make sure you're near an outlet if you get this. Thankfully, in this day and age, outlets are plentiful. Expect 4-6 hours of normal use, and more if you set it at lower brightness, and refresh rate, and do lighter tasks. Overall, if you're looking for a large laptop with a beautiful screen and excellent portability and you're not particularly concerned about super long battery life, this thing is a fantastic option. Especially on sale.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Weight
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
4 stars because of minor defect, otherwise 5 stars
||Posted . Owned for less than 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.My thoughts (have had the laptop for 4 days now): Good------------------- BIG SCREEN HUGE yet laptop is light AF. 16:10 great for viewing documents/office work. Build quality seems pretty great, feels solid, like a quality/premium product. Performance for daily/office tasks seems totally OK (not sure how the 16 gb RAM will fare in the long run though, I would've gotten the 32 GB if it was available in the US). I ultimately opted to get this because of the 999 USD sale + my state's tax free weekend. So i really did just pay 999 USD for this! The Love how the laptop has the Ryzen 7840U for the great iGPU (40-50% better, in some cases, than Intel IIRC?) I love having the numpad. There's a neat battery maintenance option with the Acer care center for having the battery charge to 80% only. Battery life is not that great but I knew that going in and wanted a laptop that maximized weight savings over everything else (I usually have the laptop plugged in so it's no issue for me, I just need to be able to bring it around the place). I LOVE knowing (and feeling) that this is a laptop that's specialized towards weight savings. It's also really thin. Keyboard seems totally fine for me - i wish the keys were spaced closer together (i don't like chiclet keyboards) but it seems to be the case for many keyboards nowadays. Webcam is OK, supposedly has a 1440p one but it doesn't seem all that special to me, I might be spoiled because I've been using Droidcam to make my smartphone's camera my webcam Bad-------------------- I've heard reports of the touchpad rattling. Mine seems OK but when I double tap to left click I feel/hear a slight rattle. Wish there was Windows Hello. Speakers are eh but I use this for work so in the office I just have headphones in. The fans are LOUD when at full speed - generally the laptop doesn't spin it up to full speed though. However, I might have a defective laptop - I actually don't mind the loud fan noise, but mine seems to have a faint, but piercing and annoying high pitched noise when at full speed. Going to see if it goes away if I exchange the laptop. This is an Achillies heel issue that really stops me from being super happy with the product/device. Overall thought/TLDR---------------------- LOVE going all in on the lightweight aspect (sacrificing battery size, having loud fans, eh speakers), but am getting a high pitched sound that I'm thinking of exchanging for/just getting used to. Nabbing the laptop new for 999 USD makes the downsides totally acceptable :p
I would recommend this to a friend - Cons mentioned:Battery life
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Very good for school average for games performance
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.I would give this a 5 star review if the battery life was better and the keyboard bends really easily
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Oled screen, PerformanceCons mentioned:Battery life, Fan noise, Speakers
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Acer Swift Edge Great Specs with Nice Performance
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.This Acer Swift Edge 16 3.2K 120Hz OLED laptop with an AMD Ryzen 7 (7840U) with 16GB of RAM and a 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD obviously has a lot going for it. It’s razor thin at .60” and weighs just about 2.7 lbs. You won’t have any trouble taking it with you on the go with those measurements and includes a laptop protective sleeve. I also liked the backlit keyboard, sensitive touchpad, Bluetooth 5.1, WiFi 6, a sharp picture with the 1440p webcam, all using Windows 11 Home. Just as there are positives here, there are a few components lacking in the Acer Swift Edge 16. The composite makeup of the laptop is light because of the Magnesium keyboard top but it still feels a little flimsy because of a plastic underside. The battery life is short life at 6-8 hours depending on graphics or word processing. There are two speakers that seemed like an afterthought. I am realistic about laptop speakers, but these fell below what I consider good while listening to music or light gaming. For some reason, the laptop fans came on a lot without using highly complex or graphics consumption. I found this to be a bit annoying. Lastly the keyboard lacked that “pop up” feel and I was able to flex the laptop when typing. No laptop is perfect, but these were some of the good things and short comings on this laptop. One the best feature on this Acer Swift Edge, is the 16” OLED screen at 120Hz. The OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) screens show some of the best visuals on computers and TVs because each pixel produces its own light in over a billion colors. This is in contrast to previous screens iterations that used backlighting to project images on the screen that you see. Often times this led to dark or dim spots on the panel (screen). This particular OLED is almost at 4K with 3.2K lines of clarity at 120Hz. This produces realistic pictures that run smooth (120Hz). Light images pop with color while true black fades into the background. Another component of the OLED screen is the HDR (High Dynamic Range) running at peak of “500 nits of screen illumination.” This vivid process provides a contrast ratio of 1,000,000:1 which is incredible for eye popping life like visuals. Within the color spectrum, the Acer Swift Edge 16 has a large area of the “color gamut rating with of 100% of DCI-P3.” This feature means fantastic and well-cut color on the OLED screen. The ultra small bezel also gives you the most visible screen on the Acer Swift Edge 16. Powered by the AMD Ryzen 7 processor, “8 cores and 16 threads” of computing power keep this laptop running programs, documents, moving files, handling graphics. Of course, it also keeps the OLED screen, as well, with a platform of high-speed processing and entertainment. Along with the AMD Ryzen chip, the Acer Swift Edge 16 has 16 GB of Memory. It allows you to multi-task many operations on the laptop with graphics, workstation computing and even some older games. Despite the 16 GB of Memory, I felt the laptop could have moved a little faster than it did for a short period of time. Not to worry, but unfortunately you cannot upgrade the 16 GB of Memory because it’s part of the motherboard. The reason why this could have occurred is the AMD Radeon graphics chip is shared with the motherboard. Shared graphics are not a new thing. It should not affect the workstation part of the computer, but occasionally if there are a multitude of graphics, the laptop could slow. I experienced this occasionally with games that had complex newer graphics. The Acer Swift Edge 16 is really catered to high end processing of typical computing with numbers, paperwork and file transfers using the Microsoft suite. The hard drive, next to the OLED screen, is next in line as a preferred part of this laptop. The 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD, has plenty of space for large files or gaming files. The SSD has no moving parts so you can safely and quickly access your files faster. I really enjoyed this feature. I was definitely more productive by quickly calling up workstation projects and some gaming. You need connections; this Acer Swift Edge 16 has them: Two Type C supporting USB4 ports; Two USB 3.2 Gen 1 type A ports; HDMI 2.1 port; microSD Card Reader slot. All these of these high-end ports mean fast transfers. I moved around over 500 music files (combo of FLAC/MP3) in a matter of less than 40 secs. This is light years faster than I am used to. The USB ports are backward compatible, so I had no trouble with other USB drives. Along with all the other testing I have done on the Acer Swift Edge 16, I thought I would checkout some games. I know this is not a gaming laptop, but I am interested to gain more insight with the OLED Screen, Ryzen 7 chip and the 16GB of Memory. I decided to play “Tekken 7,” “Burnout Paradise” and “Steam World Heist.” I had great success with the Steam World Heist as it is not complicated running it on the laptop. Next up, I thought I would try Tekken 7. This Acer Swift Edge 16 really surprised me. It performed like a champ with 55-60 FPS and didn’t flinch at the daunting graphics. Burnout Paradise which I played last had some lag, and really difficult complex parts that just didn’t perform as well as the other games. In my opinion, although not a “gaming” laptop, it performed well on the games I played. All in all, the Acer Swift Edge is a nice laptop. I am giving it 3 stars for the areas lacking that I mentioned earlier in this review. I am giving 5 stars for the specs of an OLED screen, 16 GB Memory and Ryzen 7 chip. 4 Stars overall….
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Lightweight, Oled screenCons mentioned:Battery life
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Light on Weight, but Not on Performance
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.UNBOXING: Acer kept the unboxing experience very minimalist. You get a very basic box with two smaller boxes within it—one with the laptop and small 65W USB-C PD charger, and another with the carrying sleeve (which is really nothing fancy). The packaging is super minimal without any fancy marketing, and it’s largely recyclable outside the occasional plastic. BUILD: My first impression of the Swift Edge 16 is that it is quite lightweight thanks to the magnesium aluminum alloy chassis. In terms of the texture, it doesn’t feel premium, but it’s also hard to fault it considering it’s a larger 16” laptop weighing in at only 2.73lbs. Because the chassis is using such thin material, that means the overall chassis has quite a bit of flex on the keyboard, but in all honesty, it’s not something I notice day to day without intentionally pressing on the center of the keyboard. But it’s certainly not going to be as durable as heavier options, but that’s the tradeoff you make when trying to get down to this weight. The Swift Edge 16 is only 12.95mm thick which is really quite thin, making this very easy to slide into a bag that’s already packed pretty full. Sometimes I pack a pretty full backpack and my normal thicker 16” laptop can sometimes be a bit difficult to pack, but the Swift Edge 16” slides right in. PORTS: The Swift Edge 16 has a surprising number of ports for a thin and light laptop. It has 2x USB4 Type C ports, 2x USB 3 Type A ports, 1x HDMI 2.1 port, a microSD card slot, and a Kensington lock. I very frequently use a Thunderbolt 4 dock at home, and the Swift Edge 16 had zero issues connecting to my dock. My dock is hooked up to my 2.4GHz wireless peripherals, 4K webcam, 165Hz 1440p ultrawide gaming monitor, and my 120Hz 1600p portable monitor, and the Swift Edge 16 had zero issues with all of these devices connected. It should be mentioned that since there is no DC barrel jack on the Swift Edge 16, you’ll need to rely on USB-C Power Delivery to charge the laptop. EXPANSION & UPGRADES: In terms of expansion, you can only really upgrade a few things—the m.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 drive, the Wi-Fi/Bluetooth combo module, and the battery. Unfortunately, the RAM is soldered with no option for expansion, so you’ll be stuck with 16GB on the Swift Edge 16. KEYBOARD: I typically average 114wpm on a Monkeytype test across my main keyboards and laptop, and on the Swift Edge 16, I feel like I’m making just a few more mistakes than normal. I’m topping out around 106wpm and as low as 93wpm. I think for me, this is because the space between each key is wider than I’m used to. The key travel itself is fine for me, by comparison. With that being said, I do think the Swift Edge 16 has a good keyboard that a lot of people will enjoy. Another important element of the keyboard is that it does have backlit keys, and it also has a numpad for those who need to do number crunching. I don’t typically use a numpad these days, but I think there will be plenty of people who will really appreciate this addition. And lastly, the power button actually doubles as a fingerprint sensor, so you can use it to unlock Windows, authenticate with password apps and more. In my testing, I found it performed very well by quickly authenticating and without failure. TOUCHPAD: The touchpad is good, but also nothing extraordinary. It’s reasonably large, it’s responsive, and the multi-touch gestures work. Honestly, not much to complain about, which is more than I can say about some other laptops I’ve reviewed. DISPLAY: The display on the Swift Edge 16 is the real highlight of this laptop. At this price, you’re getting a 3200x2000@120Hz 10-bit OLED panel with DisplayHDR True Black 500 certification. My unit used a Samsung panel with the hardware ID of SDC418D and manufacturer model of ATNA60BX03-0. While I don’t have the tools to test the accuracy of this panel, I can say that it gets quite bright, the colors are vivid and the blacks are deep thanks to the nature of OLED panels. I really like the 3:2 aspect ratio for productivity purposes, and as a software developer, I can see more lines of code on this display compared to 16:9 displays. And while it would be awesome to have smaller bezels, I really don’t think they’re obnoxiously large like some other laptops I’ve used. The 120Hz refresh rate isn’t enabled by default since it will draw more power, but if you decide to use it for some light gaming or just for a more responsive experience while plugged in, it is delightful to use. However, the display isn’t FreeSync enabled, so you won’t be able to benefit from adaptive refresh rates while doing some light gaming. Since this laptop is designed more for productivity as opposed to gaming, I think this is a pretty fair omission. One downside however is that this display doesn’t seem to have an anti-reflective coating, so you may see reflections in the display. Depending on where you plan to use this laptop, it could be a non-issue or a serious issue. WEBCAM & MICROPHONE: The 1440p webcam is above average—which isn’t to say that it’s good per se, but that it’s better than the typical mediocrity we see in most laptops these days. In well-lit conditions, I think it’ll actually be pretty clear, but in lower light conditions you’ll see more noise within the image. The dual-array microphone was also decent at isolating my voice, and you can configure it for personal or conference calls using the pre-installed Realtek Audio Console app. While I didn’t think the audio quality was particularly notable, I felt it was certainly serviceable, and didn’t have a bunch of noise. If you disable the AI noise reduction within the console, you’ll get more detailed audio, but with a higher noise floor and picking up more background noise. SPEAKERS & HEADPHONE: Just being blunt, the speakers are not good. They’re bottom-firing which means they will sound worse on your lap compared to on a desk, and they’re also very tinny sounding with effectively no bass. They’re also rather quiet, so they’re not going to be great for immersion. Definitely one of the weakest aspects of this laptop. As for the headphone jack, I found that it could definitely push my in-ear headphones to blisteringly loud volumes, but I could tell it was coloring the audio in a way I wasn’t used to. Disabling Audio Effects on the headphone output from the Windows sound panel yielded a more familiar transparent sound profile, but it’s still on the mediocre spectrum. Regardless, if I’m trying to get immersed in music or other content, I’d rather use a pair of wired IEMs or a pair of Bluetooth headphones than rely on the built-in speakers. PERFORMANCE: The AMD Ryzen 7840U in this laptop is a low power 8-core 16-thread beast with a humble Radeon 780M integrated graphics. For a Cinebench R23 test while plugged into power, I was able to get a multi-score score of 12200+ and a single-core score of 1690. However, on battery these scores can drop significantly. In the case of multi-core, I saw the score drop down to 8941. That being said, for productivity-oriented tasks like web browsing, office applications, coding, and light photo editing, these specifications will be plenty sufficient. And with 16GB of RAM, you’ll be able to load numerous applications into memory, but that will certainly have some limits if you are a heavy multi-tasker. For the occasional gaming session while plugged into the wall, I think eSports titles on low settings are achievable for 60fps gameplay, and 2D indie titles will play well on the Swift Edge 16—especially on the OLED display. You can also tap into the AMD Software: Adrenaline Edition app that is pre-installed to change various characteristics to improve fidelity or performance within games. And since you have 1TB of fast PCIe 4.0 NVMe storage onboard, loading up Windows and apps is a very fast process. BATTERY: The battery life of the Swift Edge 16 is decent but not really competitive with other offerings. Even on power-efficiency settings, I’m not seeing myself getting 8 hours of mixed use. Perhaps I could achieve that by also enabling the battery saver mode, but in the age when laptops are getting well over 10 hours, I think this is one downside that might be a stronger dealbreaker for some. Of course, more demanding workloads will only drain the battery faster, so it’s also important to consider that in your purchase decision. So while these Ryzen processors are more efficient, you can still put all the cores to work and you can also crank the brightness—both of which will drastically impact how much time you’ll have before you’ll be searching for a wall to plug into. One issue I also encountered is that the fans wouldn’t turn off when I put the laptop into sleep mode, so it seems like this is another laptop experiencing issues with Windows Modern Standby. As an alternative, I configured the power options such that closing the lid or pressing the power button would put the laptop into Hibernate mode so that it doesn’t drain the battery while idling. But that comes with the tradeoff of not being able to resume as quickly. CONCLUSION: So who is this laptop really for? I think the Swift Edge 16 is a decent pick-up for someone who is looking for a lightweight computer with a bright, vivid high-resolution 16” display and wants a machine that can handle some heavier workloads while plugged in. It relinquishes some durability in order to be lightweight, but that could be a tradeoff work making if you travel a lot and need something that isn’t going to weigh you down in your bag. And while performance will be best while plugged into the wall, its performance is decent enough on battery for many tasks. But it simply doesn’t have the battery stamina of some competitors.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Keyboard, Oled screen, Performance
Rated 3 out of 5 stars
All good except sound
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Two of my favorite things are great big 16" OLED display and ultra light weight (somewhere around 2,5lb). Specs: Computer has great performance thanks to Ryzen 7 cpu, 16gb of RAM and 1tb SSD drive. Also lets not forget amd graphic card which I will mention later. Screen: This is the best thing about this laptop. Large 16" OLED display will give you great pleasure of watching movies and other videos in 4k format. Very good lighting and no noticeable screen glare so it's absolutely beautiful. Graphics are supported by AMD Radeon 780M graphic card and everything looks clear to the maximum. Keyboard: Very nice backlit chicklet style full keyboard with numberic keypad in the side is firm to type but comfortable to use. Sound: This is something that could be better and my biggest complaintabout this device. I understand that thin design comes with limitation because of tight space but this computer is not loud enugh and that is the minus I got for swift edge 16. Also speakers seems to be positioned on the bottom (facing down) and while on hard surface it gets some decent sounds, but when kept on the lap sounds seems to get much weaker and spreading everywhere. Inputs: Two usb type C ports, HDMI output, two USB 3.0 inputs (one on each side), headset jack and micro SD card slot seem to be about standard these days so no complaints there. Battery: I have no correct actual battery time but it seems to be ok while watching clips on YouTube. I got about 4 hours. Network: No RJ45 port but it does have AX wifi. I got 473mbps on my comcast 500mb package so it seems to be good. OS: Even that Windows 11 is standard for new devices I am not a big fan of it. Still trying to get used to it. Built: This is where I would give another important plus. Thin design compared to similar davices, strong built (feels like aluminum) and no cracking or squeaking while opened, typed on or used in any way. Also I noticed that if pressed directly fingerprints would fade away itself. Pros: Beautiful OLED display Big 4k screen Fast performance Plenty of storage Solid materials Cons: Audio not loud enough
No, I would not recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Lightweight, Oled screen
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Lightweight with nice display for non gamers
|Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Let me start this review by stating if you're looking for a traditional gaming laptop, the Acer Swift Edge 16 is not for you so you will need to look elsewhere. It does not pack a discrete GPU and while the integrated graphics have grown more powerful, the shared memory design does not leave a lot of resources for modern games. If you purchase this thinking you're going to be playing modern games in any meaningful way, you will most likely be disappointed as this laptop is really not designed for games but CAN do some limited light gaming in a pinch. Acer does offer many other laptops that are designed and geared towards gamers. With that out of the way.... I picked this up as a replacement for my Acer Swift 3 14" which I thought was a pretty fabulous every day travel laptop with good battery life and a great display. I am pleased to say that the Acer Swift Edge 16 is better in every way imaginable and then some. This is my fifth Acer laptop and I am sure it won't be my last. They continue to deliver the perfect punch of day to day functionality needed in minimal style at great pricing. My primary reasons for upgrading from my Acer Swift 3 are the Swift Edge 16 has 2x the memory (16GB vs 8GB) and if it is possible, an even bigger and better screen with the OLED technology. The upgrade from the 5700U to the 7840U also packs quite a bit more of a punch both CPU and GPU wise. My Acer shipped with BIOS 1.04. There is an update available on Acer's support website. What you will receive: I have always loved and appreciated Acer's compact, simple and eco friendly packaging for their everyday use laptops. No frills and inside you will find the Swift Edge 16, 65w USB-C PSU and paperwork. Unpacking is quick and to the point. You also receive a simple carrying folio which is nice for quick carries or slipping the entire thing into a larger transport case. First impressions: Holding the laptop, I am amazed at how Acer managed to make it even lighter than my Acer Swift 3 which was already small. The display real estate is well used leaving a thin bezel around the display and the unit feels solid. The unit itself weights ~ 2lbs 11.5oz. Toss in the 65w PSU and the carrying folio and it still is just under 4lbs for everything. Acer has also refined and upgraded their PSU adapter from their previous gen. Everything is nice and light for transport. The keyboard is solid if not remarkable but gets the job done. When I type, I can feel a bit of "give" in the unit but nothing bad. The backlighting is bright and solid and really shows the keyboard in a good light. I will say the keyboard is a definite upgrade over the Swift 3 in every way and with the larger chassis they managed to squeeze in a small numerical pad which I like. The trackpad is large and expansive and each model will ship with a trackpad either from Synaptics or Elantech. My unit was equipped with the Elantech model and it works well. There is a bit of rattle/looseness along the outside perimeter but I have experienced this in many thin and light laptops and it does not hinder you from properly using it. Port selection is decent with two USB-C 4 (can be used for power too), HDMI and USB-A 3.2 (which doubles as a charging port too) on the right side and a classif headphone jack, another USB-A 3.2 port and a suprising but welcome MicroSD card slot. For those who do a light bit of video editing, the MicroSD card slot is a major plus. This is my first laptop with a full fledge USB-A 3.2 port, so it was nice seeing my external drive reading 900mb+/sec. Wifi is quick and speedy and connected immediately to my home network for a fast setup. CPU: Packing a full Zen4 7840U CPU, the Swift Edge 16 has a lot of power in such a thin and light chassis. Cinebench R23 has scores of 1770 single and 11642 multi showing it is more than up to task to take care of all my daily basic needs.It absolutely crushes my previous AMD 5700u equipped Swift 3. GPU: Equipped with AMD's newest Integrated Graphics the 780m, we are really starting to see even onboard GPU performance become capable for light gaming and some rendering work. While it can not come close to modern discrete graphics, it is amazing to see integrated graphics equal and even best some of the top of the line discrete technologies from less than 10yrs ago. Installing the newest Adrenaline drivers from AMD (23.9.3), the 780m has two modes: Performance/normal mode and Gaming mode. With the standard mode, you have 512MB of Vram at your disposal. With Gaming mode selected, you have 2GB of VRAM at your disposal. This is taken from your total system memory of 16GB. Running Futuremark's Timespy, the 780m GPU scored 2450 making it roughly equal to Nvidia's GTX 970M mobile graphics. Gaming wise, I spent a few hours playing World of Warcraft: Dragonflight and I had to dial down the resolution to the lowest level available (below 1080p), visuals to 5 out of 10 setting and turn Ray Tracing off to achieve 40-90fps depending on location. As stated at the beginning, this laptop will afford you some light gaming selectively but it is by no means a full fledge gaming laptop. Since this is full on Radeon graphics technology, you will have access to FSR/FSR2 when available along with HyprRX. Cooling and fan noise: Overall, Acer did their homework and this system is one cool running notebook in every aspect with zero thermal throttling or overheating anywhere. The CPU is cooled by a single pipe design and two small fans. But be warned the fans are aggressive and active. This is due to the single pipe and small heatsink. With the dual fan setup, heat is quickly carried away and exhausted below the display at a high rate. As a result, the fans are there and front and center when in use. Even when running slower it is still audible. Even on the desktop doing what seems to be not much at all or surfing it is still audible. If you are looking for a quiet computing experience at all times, this is not it. On the other hand, the fans and entire cooling subsystem are doing their job as the entire system stays relatively cool and doesn't thermal throttle at all under every condition I tested from Cinebench R23 to Timespy to some light gaming with World of Warcraft Dragonflight and Fallout 76. Basically it has three modes: clearly audible, much more audible and blasting audible and it seems to turn in at frequent intervals. If fan noise is of any concern for you or a potential deal breaker, the Acer Swift Edge 16 might present a problem. Memory and Storage: Since this uses the newest AMD processors, DDR5 is now the standard. I like that the onboard LPDDR5 memory is running at 6400mhz which is more than enough for AM5 giving it plenty of bandwidth. What I do not like is the soldered on nature of the memory rendering it unable to upgrade so you're capped with 16GB. I can understand the soldered on memory because of the sheer thinness of the Swift Edge and it more than gets the job done. 16GB is plenty for this laptop and normal day to day usage. For those who monitor such things, the latency is a bit high (~110ns) but does not impede the excellent performance of this laptop. The NVME SSD is a speed demon achieving truly Gen4 speeds of 7000+ read and 6500+ write. It is upgradable but with 1TB of space, it is plenty for most users including myself and plenty fast. Battery Life: Battery life was very good running in balanced mode. Once setup, I decided to use my Swift Edge 16 for the day while collecting and analyzing data for a few robotics (Pi) projects with some custom software I wrote and 5-6hrs later it was still going strong which is good enough for me with ~20% battery life left. Display and speaker quality: To me this is one of the key reasons to buy this notebook. The OLED screen is flat out gorgeous. While it does run an odd resolution of 3200x2000, once you experience the inky blacks and color depth of OLED it really is hard to go back to other screens even mini led displays. The Acer is equipped with a full 10-bit 120hz OLED display and it makes visual usage a joyous experience. Movie and rich multimedia content look fantastic. As for the speakers, luckily there is bluetooth, USB-A ports and a standard headphone jack as the speakers are classic midrange laptop faire and as such will get the job done but that's about it. For any serious audio you will want to get a pair of wired/wireless headphones or external speaker system. Webcam: Like most laptops, the webcam is decent but not remarkable. For basic use, it more than does its job but if you're looking for higher fps and image quality, you will need to pick up an external webcam. Summary: I very much love this laptop as an everyday carry laptop and it is a worthy replacement for my Acer Swift 3. Lightweight with decent battery life coupled with a fantastic screen and solid performance, it provides everything you will need to get the job done outside of heavy gaming, heavy rendering or higher level computationally intensive tasks. Is it a top of the line GPU and CPU performer? No, but it does offer solid above average performance that provides an excellent normal use scenario. If you're sensitive to fan noise, into heavy games, into heavy video editing or run software that is CPU and especially GPU intensive, this laptop might not be for you. On the other hand, if you want a solid and lightweight daily laptop with good battery life, fantastic OLED display, with a solid backlit keyboard, decent trackpad, good port selection, speedy wifi and fast storage that is very lightweight, this will get the job done and then some.
I would recommend this to a friend
Q: QuestionWill there be a 32gb version? 16gb is irresponsible for a platform which shares memory between a powerful CPU's and a powerful GPU. We finally get this amazing platform and it's crippled with 16gb of RAM. This could be the last laptop many people needs.
Asked by Coreyfro.
- A:Answer There is a 32GB version in Swedish stores, so there is definitely one out there.
Answered by Todor
Q: QuestionIs there a fingerprint reader? The Best Buy description doesn't mention one but Acer's website says there's a fingerprint reader in this model.
Asked by Gabriel.
- A:Answer Yes, the SFE16-43-R98R laptop does have a fingerprint reader.
Answered by TeamAcer
Q: QuestionIs the charger included, I don't see that mentioned? How does this charge, is it a type A USB or Type C?
Asked by Huskee.
- A:Answer Charger is included. Type C USB.
Answered by Anonymous
Q: QuestionWhat is the battery size? Is it the same 54Wh as the previous model? Thanks!
Asked by CluelessCuriosity.
- A:Answer Yes
Answered by JAWN
Q: QuestionIs there still a slot to add an additional SSD drive or two SSD drives, like there was previous Swift models?
Asked by Trey.
- A:Answer Yes, this Swift Edge has two M.2 SSD slots.
Answered by TeamAcer
Q: QuestionI probably missed it, but does this have an ethernet port?
Asked by Negatus.
- A:Answer No, but you can use the USB C port, this is the new way to go.
Answered by HermanM
Q: QuestionCan I get this without windows 11? I want to istall ubuntu
Asked by Anonymous.
- A:Answer The laptops ship with Windows installed from factory. If you want to install a different operating system, you will need to do that after purchase.
Answered by TeamAcer