Mar 24, 2011 09:31 GMT  ·  By

It appears that Acer didn't want to send the HD 5750 out in the world alone, so it put together a sort of elder sibling called Aspire 7750 and which shares some of its specifications, though it still has the advantage of size and image quality, among other things.

It looks like, now that the supply of fixed Intel chipsets is mostly back to normal, the various PC makers are back to unleashing newer and better machines on a regular basis.

One of the newest laptop to grace the market with its presence, at least in Europe, is Acer's Aspire 5750.

That particular machine was actually unleashed alongside the Aspire 7750, essentially a larger format version of the former.

The 7750 has, at its heart, a second generation Intel Core i3, Core i5 or Core i7 central processing unit, while 4 or 8 GB of RAM back it.

With this to ensure a high level of ability, Acer went ahead an allowed the inclusion of a discrete graphics card, since the integrated Intel GMA HD isn't able to cope with serious games.

Unlike the Aspire 5750, however, which allows users to select between both NVIDIA and AMD solutions, the 7750 can only go for the Radeon HD 6650 or HD 6850.

On the other hand, the product wins in terms of size, having a display diagonal length of 17.3 inches (the other notebook is a 15.6-incher).

What's more, the LCD used here has a native resolution of 1,600 x 900, putting it above the HD (1,366 x 768 pixels) of the other one.

The rest of the specs are unchanged, meaning that the company threw in USB 3.0, a CrystalEye webcam, Bluetooth, Dolby Advanced Audio v2, HDMI, Gigabit Ethernet and 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, plus a multi-gesture touchpad.

Finally, the Aspire 7750 has a 750 GB HDD and a DVD writer or Blu-ray combo. Online vendors in Europe should already have it up for shipment, at 599 Euro.