Acer's latest high-end ultrabook, the Swift 7, is incredibly thin. As Derek Zoolander might say, it's really, really, really, ridiculously ... thin.
As I unboxed the Swift 7, I honestly thought that the little black package inside was the instruction manual. It turned out to be the actual laptop. It really is that thin. At a mere .4 inches thick, 14 inches wide, and 2 pounds, the Swift 7 is a commuter's dream. It easily fits in your bag, and you'll hardly notice it's there—even after lugging it around all day.
Acer didn't cheat on the thinness, either. There's no conspicuous hinge bulge like you find in some thin laptops. In fact, the hinge is so flush it's difficult to see—a step up over the previous Swift 7, which had a noticeable gap between the keyboard and display.
The Swift 7 has an understated matte black shell with a single LED to indicate battery status. The case is a blend of magnesium-lithium and magnesium-aluminum alloys that make it feel more solid than plastic, but less solid than a (albeit heavier) aluminum case on something like the MacBook Air.
I wondered if something so thin would be difficult to open, but thankfully that's not the case. The Swift 7 has a tiny but helpful protrusion on the top edge that helps pry the clamshell open without requiring Howard Hughes–length fingernails. It is definitely a two-handed operation, but that's par for the course with laptops this thin.
Somehow, Acer has managed to cram this tiny package with a 14-inch 1080p screen, a 1.5 GHz Intel Core i7 (i7-8500Y) processor, 16 gigabytes of RAM, and a 512 gigabyte hard drive. Like a MacBook Air, there are two USB-C ports in addition to a headphone jack. Acer also includes a three-port dongle adapter with USB-A, another USB-C, and an HDMI port.
While it's plenty powerful enough for business use, none of the Acer's specs are earth shattering. The i7 Y-series chips are down-stepped to 1.5 GHz to improve battery life and keep temperatures cool, which is important in a machine this thin. What makes the Swift special isn't its raw power but its relative power squeezed into an impossibly thin, light package. The Swift 7 technically weighs in at 1.96 pounds and is small enough to fit in most shoulder bags, or even a large purse.
Once you get past the thin factor, the other standout in the Swift 7 is the very nearly edge-to-edge display. The display is a touchscreen 1080p IPS LCD panel protected by Gorilla Glass. Acer is very proud of the thin bezel, and spends many lines bragging about it in press releases. It may be smaller than bezels on the Dell XPS 13 I normally use, but I fail to see how a slightly thinner bezel really improves the experience—unless you're migrating from a much older laptop.