Mar 24, 2011 09:02 GMT  ·  By

Acer seems to be playing its world-class supplier of personal computers card, as a certain machine has made it out of its labs and gone straight to Europe, where it hopes to draw consumers in with promises of easy content sharing, among other things.

Acer may have gone through its share of ups and downs over the years, but it never really let go of its status as top-tier maker of PCs, especially laptops.

In fact, it was even known as the prime advocate of netbooks at some point, and even its current activities aren't far from that moniker.

That said, the company has many laptops of all sizes and performance standards running about, and it looks like an extra one has made it to Europe.

The product in question is the Aspire 5750 and, as reported on the web, is powered by Intel's Huron River platform.

Essentially, the 5750 is a 15.6-inch notebook with a second generation Core i2, i5 or i7 central processing unit at its heart.

Whichever chip is selected can be complemented by 4 GB or 8 GB of RAM (random access memory), while the Intel GMA HD integrated graphics can be supplemented by an AMD Radeon HD 6650 discrete GPU.

What's more, instead of an AMD board, users can go for a GeForce GT 530M or 540M from NVIDIA.

As for the screen itself, it is a LED-backlit, HD LCD (liquid crystal display), meaning that its native resolution is 1,366 x 768 pixels.

Needless to say, the newcomer has all the necessary connectivity and I/O options, like HDMI, Bluetooth, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, USB 3.0 and a multi-gesture touchpad Dolby Audio, plus a webcam.

As for the aforementioned easy content sharing, it is enabled by the clear.fi software. Sales should already be underway, for the starting price of 549 Euro.