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  (Source: Dell)

  (Source: Dell)
Dell's first entry into the Tablet PC market will command big bucks

Nearly seven months after the Latitude XT was first shown to the world, Dell is finally making its first Tablet PC available to consumers. Dell says that its new 3.53-pound Latitude XT is a ground-breaking device and is among the thinnest and lightest in its class.

The 12.1" Latitude XT has both pen and capacitive touch technology. Capacitive touch allows users to manipulate items on the screen without the need to apply pressure directly to the display.

"Until now, customers have been forced to make tradeoffs in tablet functionality to have usable systems," said Dell Product Group Director Margaret Franco. "With Capacitive touch technology, the Latitude XT will revolutionize the way customers interact with their systems, allow customers to take full advantage of tablet technology and enables customers to get more done with greater speed and precision."

Dell is taking direct aim at the leaders in the Tablet PC arena and claims that touch response times for its new Latitude are better than the competing Lenovo X61T. The Latitude XT also features advanced digital palm rejection technology for those that regularly write on the screen and uses a digitizer that is ten times more durable than competing solutions.

The Latitude XT is built around Intel's Core 2 Solo and Core 2 Duo ULV processor and comes equipped with a Radeon X1250 graphics core. The Tablet PC also incorporates a full-size keyboard with dual pointers and can accommodate a 64GB solid-state drive or up to a 120GB hard drive.

As previously reported, the display will be available with a traditional CCFL or LED-backlit WXGA display. As is the case with most high-end notebooks and Tablet PCs, the Energy Star 4.0-compliant Latitude XT comes equipped with 802.11n, Bluetooth 2.0+EDR, HSDPA or EVDO Rev A WAN options, biometric fingerprint reader and three USB 2.0 ports. Dell also gives users the option of a 4-cell, 6-cell or 9-cell battery back (the batteries feature a touch-sensitive power meter to report battery life at any given time).

All of the Latitude XT's Tablet PC goodness comes at a price -- the system features a base price of $2,499. Dell will take orders for the system and begin shipments before year's end.

DailyTech first brought you news of the device in late May when Dell announced to the world that it would enter the Tablet PC market. In October, LesDeLLiens.com leaked the specs of the device along with detailed pictures of the device from multiple angles.



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I gotta admit
By Sylar on 12/11/2007 1:06:13 AM , Rating: 1
It's one sexy device but with an ugly price.




RE: I gotta admit
By jconan on 12/11/2007 2:04:16 AM , Rating: 2
(for some reason) It looks so much like the Thinkpad X61 tablet? http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/controller/e/we...


RE: I gotta admit
By wwwebsurfer on 12/11/2007 9:54:49 AM , Rating: 2
if you can't beat 'em, copy 'em


RE: I gotta admit
By amanojaku on 12/11/2007 4:05:49 AM , Rating: 5
Sexy? Maybe I need my eyes checked, but this thing looks butt-ugly. And at that price dell could have worked on the aesthetics a bit.


RE: I gotta admit
By FITCamaro on 12/11/2007 9:44:55 AM , Rating: 1
It's designed to be used by professionals, not geeky gamer kids who want skulls or whatnot on it. It looks as such. Plain and durable.


RE: I gotta admit
By jtemplin on 12/11/2007 9:54:16 AM , Rating: 1
FIT is totally right. Just go to dell's website yourself and look first at the computers for Home&Home Office and then look at Small & Medium Business. You should see a trend. The business models are designed to have very reserved looks.


RE: I gotta admit
By Jedi2155 on 12/11/2007 10:05:37 AM , Rating: 2
I find any piece of technology sexy....but that price is just out of my reach sadly...I've been wanting a tablet PC for a while (waiting for this Dell) and now I sorta wished I picked up that $700 HP set after seeing this price.....


RE: I gotta admit
By Quiescent on 12/11/2007 10:16:11 AM , Rating: 2
I guarantee you that the dell will probably be less of a pain in the ass.

My aunt got a gateway tablet PC and it really sucked. It was slow. It no longer responded to the pen hardly anymore.

Some else also got an HP. It wasn't great at all.

Now for Dell, I can trust their quality with laptops. They make pretty good laptops. Maybe if we wait we can figure out why it's so pricey.


RE: I gotta admit
By deeznuts on 12/11/2007 1:16:49 PM , Rating: 3
Did Dell change their quality? Serious question. When I bought my first Dell lappie in 2000, it was flimsy and broke like 6 times within 3 years. Service was great, but the consensus was, cheap laptop good for hte price (my price was $2,000 though for entry level).

Has this changed? I did have a Vostro 1400 for about a week and it felt great really good build quality. But it's after two years I'm interested.

Regarding this: it better be much much much better than the Thinkpad to even warrant consideration.


RE: I gotta admit
By Quiescent on 12/11/2007 2:52:43 PM , Rating: 2
Yeah. Even the dells at my school are better than anything else they have. (You know computers get bogged down with all those profile BS that is saved)

They bought Alienware which might explain a change in quality as well. However the price is practically the same it was before they bought the company, so quality is just where it needs to be now.


RE: I gotta admit
By FITCamaro on 12/11/2007 4:37:48 PM , Rating: 2
Any OEMs consumer level notebooks are pieces of sh*t. Business notebooks are another matter. Both Dell's and HP's business notebooks are far better than the crap they sell ignorant consumers. With a business notebook, it has to be made better otherwise IT departments won't buy them anymore.

Same goes for support. Consumer level support sucks royal nuts. Business level support is totally different. But still sucks in my opinion.


RE: I gotta admit
By noxipoo on 12/11/2007 10:47:44 PM , Rating: 2
their enterprise support doesn't suck at all. no idea where you get the their business support sucks from, hell, i can even start with their sales staff and they will get an engineer for me quickly.


RE: I gotta admit
By Jedi2155 on 12/11/2007 7:52:07 PM , Rating: 2
My brother still has his Inspiron 8200 he got in 2002, still running strong and he's going to give it to me after he finally gets a new one. That experience cemented my trust with Dell machines.


RE: I gotta admit
By retrospooty on 12/11/2007 10:06:51 AM , Rating: 3
It never ceases to amaze me how people always bulk when they see a high initial retail price. As if they think the initial retail price means anything on PC parts. That initial price means very little - there are sales, coupons and the natural price reductions once the first few months of sales is over and the stock levels are built up.

This happens with any PC or PC part, and most other electronics as well - always has, always will. Lets not get worked up about it. I bet you in 4 months time you will see this for $1500 easily.


RE: I gotta admit
By Pandamonium on 12/12/2007 2:12:31 AM , Rating: 2
I'd agree if it weren't an ultraportable tablet. Ultraportables in general don't have the swiftest or steepest discount rates.


hp 2710p
By davepermen on 12/11/2007 4:51:41 AM , Rating: 2
Can do everything this device can, and looks actually beautiful.

I have it since some months and it's awesome. Nothing revolutionary from dell here, just a catch-up to other vendors.




RE: hp 2710p
By estarkey7 on 12/11/2007 8:36:00 AM , Rating: 2
It was between the 2710P and the T2010 and Fujitsu won out because of the styling (I wanted all black). Other than that the HP is a lovely machine. For the life of me, I don't know how they intend to sell something for $1k more than the same offering from several competitors. The only difference is the separate graphics processor, but for $2500, I don't know if the lowest configuration (which probably comes with a core solo processor) is hardly worth it.


RE: hp 2710p
By Quiescent on 12/11/2007 10:19:46 AM , Rating: 2
I seen a lot of scratches on the same thing from other companies. Maybe this technology is meant for not ruining the screen? I still think Dell is pretty decent with their laptops.


RE: hp 2710p
By semler on 12/11/2007 11:29:27 AM , Rating: 2
I looked up the HP 2710p, but it does not seem to have the capacitive touch screen, which is probably why you are seeing such a price delta.

There aren't many tablets with a capacitive touch screen yet as far as I am aware, so I'm not sure if they are really playing catch-up. New technology is generally more expensive than old technology (regardless of if it is better or not usually).

Also, this is Dell. I don't think anyone has ever bought one without some kind of discount. You can't hardly surf the web without seeing an ad for % off deals.


Link to the XT
By HexiumVII on 12/11/2007 9:51:32 AM , Rating: 2
The price is insane. I was preparing to pay maybe $1500. Looks like i'll have to wait for the 40% off coupons. touchpad, touchscreen, active digitizer, and even touchknob input all in one tablet is pretty amazing. Its also a lot thiner/light than anything out there. WIth an ATI chipset though, i don't know how real battery life will be. Maybe i'll try one for 2 weeks. Looks like it will be orderable any hour now. I've been refreshing a lot and just found a direct link playing with the address.
http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetail...




RE: Link to the XT