backtop


Print E-mail del.icio.us 30 comment(s) - last by aegisofrime.. on Jan 13 at 9:31 AM


Dell Inspiron 15  (Source: Dell)

Dell XPS M1340  (Source: Dell)

Dell XPS M1640  (Source: Dell)
Dell announces its new Inspiron 15, XPS M1340, and XPS M1640 notebooks

Last week at the Consumer Electronics Show 2009 in Las Vegas, Dell kicked things off with the announcement of a new luxury brand, Adamo, and a new desktop the XPS 625, with performance fueled by AMD's Dragon platform.  It also announced a number of key notebooks to flesh out its large lineup which leads sales in the U.S.

First up is the Dell Inspiron 15, Dell's new answer to consumers seeking a budget laptop.  The notebook features a 15.6" display and a 16:9 aspect ratio (1366 x 768 pixels), handy for playing movies on the go.  The machine weighs approximately 5.8 pounds and is available in blue, black, and red later this month, direct from Dell's website.

The notebooks will be priced at around $600 and will feature Intel's Pentium dual core processor on the low end.  However, you can upgrade this to a Core 2 Duo, with up to 4GB of RAM, and up to 320GB of hard drive space.  An upgrade from Windows Vista Home Basic to Windows Vista Home Premium is also available.  Other new optional features are adding a Blu-ray drive, 1.3-MP webcam, and facial recognition software.  The notebook features a VGA port, 3 USB ports, an ExpressCard slot, and a 7-in-1 flash memory reader.  It lacks HDMI or eSATA connectivity.

Moving from the budget realm to the more costly realm, Dell announced two new XPS studio notebooks, which refresh the series.  Dell announced the new XPS M1640 16" laptop and the XPS M1340 13" models, which are packed with lots of performance in a small package.

The M1640, Dell's first 16" XPS laptop, kicks things off with a technology called RGBLED, which offers one hundred percent of the color gamut (many laptops offer 40 to 60 percent).  The display is 1080p and offers an 8 ms response time, 130-degree viewing angles, and 300 nits of brightness.

The M1640 will feature Intel Core 2 Duo processors, ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3670 graphics (with 512MB of video memory), and up to 4 GB of RAM.  Buyers can pick between three hard drive options:  a 500GB disk drive at 5,400 rpm, a 320GB disk drive at 7,200 rpm, or a 128GB SSD.  All the expected ports are present, with the inclusion of HDMI, DisplayPort, and eSATA connectors.  The notebook features a subwoofer and speakers with 5.1 Dolby Digital output.

The M1340 is lightweight, weighing only 4.9 pounds.  It has Intel Core 2 Duo Processors (a P8400 on the base model), NVIDIA GeForce 9400M integrated graphics, and otherwise similar options for memory and storage to the M1640.  An upgrade to a discrete NVIDIA GeForce 9500M graphics card is offered.  For users selecting the upgrade, they will be able to easily toggle between the cards, for power savings outside of gaming or other graphically intensive operations.  Users can select between two displays on the M1340 -- a LED-backlit 13.3-inch WXGA panel paired with a 1.3-MP webcam, or a traditional CCFL screen with a sharper 2-MP webcam.

Both the XPS M1340 and M1640 will start at $1,199.  Dell is looking to continue its new focus on design and style by offering glossy black finishes, leather accents, aluminum body work, and backlit keyboards and touchpads on the new models.  While not as colorful as Dell's customizable laptop shells, it has a refined stylish look to it.

All of the new models should be available later this month.



Comments     Threshold


This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

M1640
By FITCamaro on 1/12/2009 10:33:34 AM , Rating: 2
If the M1640 offers a 1080p screen, C2D processor, even 2GB of RAM, 500GB hard drive, and a 3670 GPU for $1200, that's actually a great deal.




RE: M1640
By Tsuwamono on 1/12/09, Rating: -1
RE: M1640
By FITCamaro on 1/12/2009 10:58:12 AM , Rating: 2
I meant at the $1200 price even 2GB would be acceptable. Especially considering the screen and GPU you're getting.


RE: M1640
By StevoLincolnite on 1/12/2009 3:42:18 PM , Rating: 2
Plus it's not like SoDimm DDR2 modules are that expensive anymore, the Screen has picked my interest though... However my notebook upgrade wont happen for another 5-6 months.


RE: M1640
By Eomer of Aldburg on 1/12/2009 10:48:48 PM , Rating: 2
Actually the base price for the 16 inch one comes with a 1366 x 768 resolution screen, you have to pay 250$ to upgrade it.


RE: M1640
By quiksilvr on 1/13/2009 12:21:49 AM , Rating: 2
I give their 16 inch laptop plus points on the new C2D processors, LED displays, and DDR3 memory. I give their laptop minus points on not fitting a full keyboard, only offering a 6 cell battery, and the insane upgrade price for going up from 768p to 1080p.


RE: M1640
By regnez on 1/12/2009 11:32:35 AM , Rating: 2
While that may be true, anyone who pays full-price for a Dell notebook is a very dim bulb. There is almost always a 20% off coupon at least, coupled with free shipping, 3% more with a DPA, etc. These are just base XPS launch prices; the notebooks are not going to actually cost that much.

Also, C2Ds are a lot better than X2s, and RAM is dirt-cheap and easy to upgrade.


RE: M1640
By timmiser on 1/13/2009 4:23:51 AM , Rating: 2
It is pretty rare when a 20% Dell coupon doesn't say, "Does not apply to XPS laptops".


RE: M1640
By MrX8503 on 1/12/2009 11:50:05 AM , Rating: 5
quote:
2gb ram? dude i just picked up an HP like 6 months ago with 4GB ram, 320 gb HD, Turion x2 and i believe the screen res is 1080p for around 1100$ At future shop. And thats Canadian too. With all the border fees that should cost americans what? 900$ lol.


Um, this new laptop has a C2D P8400, which would destroy your Turion. The Studio XPS also has 4GB DDR3 , backlight keyboard, slot loading dvd, and RGB LED. I don't think your laptop has any of these things and the Dell is priced at $1200 without coupons.

These new laptops aren't replacing the old XPS, instead these are a new line of laptops called the Studio XPS.

I'm guessing the order goes something like this, Inspiron, Studio, Studio XPS, then finally XPS being the top tier.


RE: M1640
By aegisofrime on 1/13/2009 9:31:30 AM , Rating: 2
quote:

I'm guessing the order goes something like this, Inspiron, Studio, Studio XPS, then finally XPS being the top tier.


I'm not familiar with Dell models, but from Dell's website the Studio XPS royally trounces the regular XPS models.


RE: M1640
By ksherman on 1/12/2009 10:44:38 AM , Rating: 1
Indeed, but is that video card really all that good? I seem to remember the 3xxx series from ATI/AMD as being rather lack-luster... Wouldn't they have been better served with a 9600M or similar? Otherwise, looks great!


RE: M1640
By vulcanproject on 1/12/2009 12:32:31 PM , Rating: 2
yes, dell WHERE ARE THE GAMING GPUs?

you wait 6 months for dell to integrate geforce 9 in a mid size machine, then the best they offer you is a 3670 for the XPS M16 which is only slightly quicker and very similar to the ancient 8600 it replaces in the smaller XPS M15 range. why cant you understand dell, some people want compact laptops with decent graphics power, 9700M GT at least!! i would prefer a 9700M GTS, it looks a half decent match for a 13 x 7 screen. is 9700 too much to ask? if acer can fit them to mid size machines, why cant you?

instead probably for fear of stepping onto alienware branding, they fit the new generation of midsize XPS with next to no graphics improvement! pfff eejits


RE: M1640
By MrX8503 on 1/12/2009 12:48:15 PM , Rating: 3
honestly I prefer the ATI GPU compared to NVIDIA ever since the GPU's dying fiasco.


RE: M1640
By Chadder007 on 1/12/2009 4:30:08 PM , Rating: 2
Same here bro.
ATI > NVidia in Laptops especially.


RE: M1640
By nafhan on 1/12/2009 1:11:12 PM , Rating: 2
Actually, all the GPU's you just mentioned are in the same ballpark. The laptop 8600 GS has 16 stream processors, but the laptop 8600 GTS has 32. The 9500 to 9700 GT mobile also have 32, and are differentiated by GPU and/or memory speed. The 9700GTS does, however, have a whopping 48 :)
So, none of the nvidia parts you mentioned would be much faster than the 3670 except for the 9700GTS.
ATI uses the same nomenclature for desktop and mobile parts. Makes things much less confusing...


RE: M1640
By vulcanproject on 1/12/2009 1:24:21 PM , Rating: 2
i must correct you, top XPS M1530 choice has the 8600M GT with 32 streams and 475 core/950 shader clocks here, 1400mhz GDDR3. 3670 is slightly faster than 8600M GT. yes the 9700M GT also has 32 streams, BUT with a 625mhz core clock and crucially 1550mhz shaders, 1600mhz GDDR3 memory - that makes it considerably faster than the 8600M GT - a good 30 percent faster overall actually :-)

the 9700M GTS as i mentioned, is a considerably superior match for a higher resolution screen. it has more shaders, at a slower speed but is still quite a lot faster than the GT - which is quite a lot down to its 256 bit bus as well as the shader power.


RE: M1640
By Pirks on 1/12/2009 3:59:49 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
dell WHERE ARE THE GAMING GPUs?
In Dell/Alienware M17


RE: M1640
By Stacey Melissa on 1/12/09, Rating: 0
RE: M1640
By FITCamaro on 1/12/2009 1:35:53 PM , Rating: 2
Figured as much.


RE: M1640
By ImSpartacus on 1/13/2009 6:36:21 AM , Rating: 2
You didn't think they would just be handing that out, did you? Are we talking about the same company?


Mmmm advertisement
By oab on 1/12/2009 11:07:01 AM , Rating: 2
It seems that these product announcements always look and red like long-form advertisements. The kind that used to be in magazines in the early '90s for tech stuff.




RE: Mmmm advertisement
By Captain828 on 1/12/2009 12:49:01 PM , Rating: 2
this is an announcement of new hardware presented at this year's CES which is similar to the GTX290, GTX285, Sony P Series etc. announcements and not an ad

they inform us of new/upcoming launches of various tech related things

why people can't comprehend this is beyond me...

on topic: what it doesn't really say anywhere exactly is the resolution of the 13" XPS... WXGA is 1366x768, which kinda sucks since there is no option for a 1080p one


RE: Mmmm advertisement
By foolsgambit11 on 1/12/2009 7:00:03 PM , Rating: 2
This is a rehash of a press announcement from the PR department at Dell. While that may not technically be an advertisement, in content it is all but one.

What the OP was responding to was the lack of analysis in the article about things like what you brought up. The screen of the 13" XPS will probably not be available as 1080p. It's perfectly understandable, since a 13" 1080p would be much more expensive, if currently available at all. But an advertisement skips even the understandable disappointments, while a real article about these products probably wouldn't.

But either way, I'd rather have this info put out on DailyTech than not. Best would be a thoughtful article that links to the official press release, but I'm happy with what I get, and filling in the rest myself.


By joey2264 on 1/12/2009 1:12:14 PM , Rating: 2
Not sure where you got the m1340 and m1640 names from, but I am pretty sure Dell calls them the Studio XPS 13 and the Studio XPS 16.

They are some hot little notebooks.

Dell is finally getting the fact that it really needs to compete on design. HP should be scared, as these really do beat the pants off the comparable HP notebooks (although they are also a little more expensive)




By ImSpartacus on 1/13/2009 6:39:04 AM , Rating: 2
Yeah, I was wondering the same thing.


I want a P-MVA or IPS LCD screen dammit!!!
By jmunjr on 1/13/2009 1:30:41 AM , Rating: 2
I'll happily pay more for a laptop that DOESN'T have a TN panel... Please, someone tell me where to find one...!! do they use more juice or something?




By Penti on 1/13/2009 9:05:39 AM , Rating: 2
There are no LCD Panels from the panel manufacturers that has anything else then TN when it comes to notebook displays. DELL can't really change that. Nobody else either as they aren't panel manufacturers. Need more power? Yes a lot. Notebook displays are low power displays. A 15.4" panel might have a 16 ms response time and ha power consumption of 4.8W, when a 17" IPS panel might have a 20W power consumption.


Not impressed.
By kondor999 on 1/12/09, Rating: 0
RE: Not impressed.
By FITCamaro on 1/13/2009 7:28:32 AM , Rating: 2
Another down rate for speaking the truth.


By crystal clear on 1/13/2009 7:59:05 AM , Rating: 2
Dell settles state consumer protection claims

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Dell Inc (DELL.O) has agreed to pay $3.35 million in a 34-state settlement of allegations that the personal computer maker mislead consumers on financing, warranties and rebates.

State attorneys general said on Monday that Dell had engaged in "deceptive" financing promotions, promising zero-percent financing but charging them higher rates.

In addition, consumers said they failed to receive promised rebates and had trouble getting warranty service.

Under the agreement, Dell will pay $1.5 million into a restitution account. Consumers have 90 days to submit claims in their state.

Dell, the world's No. 2 PC maker, has also agreed to pay $1.85 million to the states to reimburse legal costs.

"More than the money, this agreement provides profoundly important business practice reforms," Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said in a statement. "No more bait-and-switch financing -- offers touting zero-interest that become surprise high-interest charges or astounding late penalties."

http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUS...




"Paying an extra $500 for a computer in this environment -- same piece of hardware -- paying $500 more to get a logo on it? I think that's a more challenging proposition for the average person than it used to be." -- Steve Ballmer














botimage
Copyright 2009 DailyTech LLC. - RSS Feed | Advertise | About Us | Ethics | FAQ | Terms, Conditions & Privacy Information | Kristopher Kubicki