Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Dell Studio XPS X1340-024B

Dell Studio XPS X1340-024B

Dell Studio XPS X1340-024B

Dell’s retail-only Studio XPS X1340-024B sits at the high end of the mainstream laptop group. Move up in price, and you find laptops built to fit specific user profiles, namely gaming systems with high-end graphics and models with large displays and Blu-ray drives built chiefly for media consumption. Beneath its upscale exterior, the Studio XPS X1340 features a fairly typical mainstream configuration that should help it appeal to a wide audience. It offers a faster Core 2 Duo processor than other mainstream laptops, which helped it finish at or near the front of the group in testing. And though it uses integrated graphics, it is capable of running some 3D games. Lastly, extras such a backlit keyboard, edge-to-edge glass on the display, and facial recognition software also help to justify the higher price compared with other mainstream laptops at retail this summer.

Still, the Studio X1340 is not without its warts. For starters, it runs hot. And for a 13-inch laptop, it’s a tad on the hefty side. Ultimately, the deal breaker for many might be its poor battery life.

By way of comparison, the 13-inch HP Pavilion dv3-2155mx weighs a hair less (while carrying a big, extended-cell battery) and runs much longer. The same can be said for Dell’s Studio S1440-022B, which is even more impressive when you consider it has a larger 14-inch display. The Studio S1440 includes a superior software bundle, too, with a full copy of Microsoft Office and 15 months of virus protection. Lastly, don’t overlook the Toshiba Satellite E105-S1602, which features a backlit keyboard, good battery life, and a two-year warranty.

The Dell Studio XPS X1340 boasts a unique look, with its rounded hinges supporting the display and angled shape. The tapered chassis measures (with the lid closed) a rather thick 1.6 inches along the back edge and narrows to 1.2 inches in front. A silver stripe cuts across the lid, separating the piano-black cover from a strip of faux leather. The leather-like strip provides a comfortable grip when toting the laptop around, and, depending on your taste, it either enhances or detracts from the overall design.

Like the Toshiba Satellite E105, the X1340 features a backlit keyboard, which is incredibly useful in low-light situations. It’s one of those features, like the two-finger scroll on MacBooks, that once you have it, you find it hard to live without. The keys themselves are quiet, flat, and roomy. The touch pad is smaller than average, running only 2.5 inches wide by 1.5 inches tall. The mouse buttons are quiet and feature an illuminated stripe when the keyboard backlighting is enabled. A row of touch-sensitive media controls sits above the keyboard, along with buttons for turning the Wi-Fi antenna off and on, and ejecting a disc from the slot-loading DVD burner.

The 1,280×800-pixel resolution on the 13.3-inch LCD screen is standard for a thin-and-light laptop, and is the same as you’d find on the 13-inch MacBook Pro. The glass covering the display runs edge-to-edge, which adds to its slick looks. A Webcam sits above the display, and with the included facial recognition software, which Dell calls FastAccess, you can set it up to log in to Windows by scanning your face instead of typing a password. While it’s better software than what we saw with the Asus UX50V, it still takes too long in nearly every instance to recognize your face. While it’s a cool trick, it’s faster to simply type your password.

Despite its angled, sleek appearance, the Studio XPS 1340 is surprisingly hefty, weighing 5.1 pounds. The new 13-inch MacBook Pro is a half pound lighter, while the older, heavier Lucite MacBook weighs the same as the Studio XPS 1340. Even with a big nine-cell battery, the 13-inch HP Pavilion dv3-2155mx weighs 5 pounds, and the 14-inch Dell Studio S1440-022B weighs only 4.7 pounds (but ditches the optical drive to save weight). One final note about the design: the Dell Studio XPS X1340-024B runs hot. After 15 or so minutes of typical use (Windows apps and Firefox, mind you, not gaming), the left side of the laptop begins to cook your thigh. A relatively quiet fan spins to cool the GPU, but it would seem to be overmatched. The laptop seized up several times during our review process, and it’s worth noting that a few online customer reviews of the X1340 also reported heat issues and instability problems.

Dell is on the leading edge of laptop connection collections. HDMI is becoming more common in laptops, but those offering a DisplayPort connection are still in the minority. Surprisingly, a VGA port makes the cut here, though it was left off of the similar Studio S1440. FireWire is slowly fading from popularity, but a four-pin FireWire port shows up here, along with an eSATA port (which doubles as the second USB 2.0 port) for faster data transfer times to an external drive.

[Via http://dziklaptops.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Dell Inspiron Mini 10

Dell has always been inspiring us with ever new technologies. This time Dell has introduced yet another model of Dell mini. This notebook is not only made in different colors but also packs in quite some features to make it fairly competitive with main stream notebooks. The notebook will ship in 2010 with a totally new processor Intel Atom N450 processor. It has got a six cell battery and color range of Shocking Pink, Baby Pink, Light Blue, Light Green, White and Black. Built in slot to include graphic accelerator card will help you update to a gaming PC. The other very important feature is the choices you are given in terms of the operating system you want to have on this baby. You can have Windows 7, Windows XP Starter, or Ubuntu Linux.

Here are the system specifications for Dell Inspiron Mini 10

  • Intel Atom  N450 processor with 1.66 GHz speed
  • 10.1 inch with high definition quality
  • Built in speakers with SRS surround sound
  • HDTV tuner and location aware GPS configurations available in coming weeks
  • Crystal HD for smooth HD playback
  • Built in 802.11 b/g wireless with Bluetooth and Mobile Broadband
  • 1GB DDR2 memory at 800 MHz
  • 160 GB or 250 GB storage options available
  • Up to 9.5 hours of battery life ( 3 to 6 cell battery )
  • OS options available include Windows 7, Windows XP Home, & Ubuntu Linux
  • Weighing between 2.7 to 3.1 pounds (approx)

[Via http://technotrunk.wordpress.com]

Monday, December 21, 2009

I say NeTbook and you say NotEbook! Why so many choices?

This one goes out to OB1 who asked me a question regarding ultra thin notebooks. Ironically the Mac Air he had purchased a while got nicked and thus now leaving him with am emptier wallet and the new ownership pain of finding another net vs note “book.” Folks i don’t wana start on a rant here but i have a few observations before i actually round this up. I would like to summon the car industry tiering metaphor if i may.  Do you all recall something called a Corolla? (which costs a pretty penny now)  its from that mammoth Japanese company that sells cars.  Well over the years if you notice they have been upping the ante on that series and introducing other sub- Corolla models like the Yaris and the Yaris hatchback.  Of course the rest of the industry follows this approach as well. The reason i make this analogy because in the Computing industry (laptops even more so) one sees the same tiering structure taking hold more and more. I recall back in the 90’s Dell’s cheapest computer would be no less than 800 USD. But the parts and specifications were not mediocre but average.  Thanks to the might of Intel and AMD they have led a charge of lower priced (and lower performance in some cases) Central Processing Units (or CPU’s or the brains of the computer– sorry about all the industry jargon folks) Thus we have a whole new category of laptops and low end home PC’s running well mostly Windows 7 Home Premium.  So to sum it up we now have:

Netbook: usually does not have any extras (not even a DVD Drive)  ranging anywhere from 299-500USD like the Toshiba Satellite T135-S1300RD TruBrite 13.3-Inch Ultrathin Black/Red Laptop – 9 Hours 22 Minutes of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)

Or an ASUS Eee PC 1005HA-EU1X-BK 10.1-Inch Black Netbook – 4 Hour Battery Life

Ultra thin notebook: close cousin of the Netbook and sometimes the mid ground between supper high and price and super performance. I would include the Apple MacBook Air MC234LL/A 13.3-Inch Laptop”" and even the (this one packs more features for the money)  Lenovo Thinkpad X301 13.3-Inch Black Laptop – Up to 5.5 Hours of Battery Life (Windows XP Pro)”" Notebook: which is your full scale notebook which start as low as 599 – 2700USD smiler to a or the infamous Apple MacBook Pro MC118LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop”" And the of course there is the desktop replacement workhorse! like the DELL GAMING LATTOP – Intel® CoreTM2 Duo P8600 2.4GHz (3MB Cache, 1066MHz FSB) , Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium 64bit, 17-inch WideXGA+ 1440×900 (900p) , Slot-Load Dual Layer DVD Burner (DVD+-RW, CD-RW) , 4GB Dual DDR3, 250GB SATA HD, Single NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 260M 1GB, Internal 300Mbps Dual-Band a/g/n Wireless with MIMO Technology”" are nothing but a behemoth like the  Apple iMac MC413LL/A 21.5-Inch Desktop”" These workhorses are “supposedly” the desktop class killers. To make life easier across the board, i will share with you a quick decision making Usage and Laptop or desktop so you can quickly make up your mind and just start using instead reading reviews and rants like this one: Common user: email, internet surfing, word precessing, light spreadsheets, home finances, light multimedia (playing NO High Definition content / music is fine) Any of the following should be good enough : (mind you i haven’t owned any of these except the ASUS eEE PC for my little daughter to skype with) ASUS Eee PC Seashell 1005HA-PU17-BK 10.1-Inch Black Netbook – 10.5 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”" Acer AOD250-1584 10.1-Inch Blue Netbook – Up to 9 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”" Toshiba Mini NB205-N230 10.1-Inch Black Onyx Netbook – 9 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”" Mid user: email, internet surfing, word precessing, corporate spreadsheets, home finances, multimedia ( High Definition content / music / watching movies / some light games) Any of the following should be good enough : Sony VAIO VGN-FW510F/B 16.4-Inch Black Laptop (Windows 7 Home Premium)”" HP Pavilion DV6-1354US 15.6-Inch Black Laptop – Up to 4 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)”" ASUS UL50Ag-A3B Thin and Light 15.6-Inch Black Laptop (Windows 7 Professional)”" Advanced Gaming and Desktop Replacement Warrior! This is all the way and becomes the complete home PC which works off road and in the home/home business+ high end gaming or designing! ASUS G51J-A1 15.6-Inch Blue Gaming Laptop (Windows 7 Home Premium)”" Apple MacBook Pro MC226LL/A 17-Inch Laptop”" The All in one family PC Now there really is no such thing as a family shared notebook, there are alternatives i do like. Most recently i had a chance to play with the Dell Zino HD Dell Inspiron Zino HD Piano Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium)”" I really like this little hot tomato! its fast! its easy to use! and has an HDMI out (to connect to your existing HDTV) and 2 e-SATA ports (for super fast backup to your external family) . Works very nicely with any standard LCD or Plasma. For the family i highly suggest the following rig: Dell Inspiron Zino HD Piano Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium)”" LG W2486L 24-Inch LED Backlit Monitor (Gloss Black)”" Western Digital My Book Studio II – 2 TB (2 x 1 TB) USB 2.0/FireWire 400/FireWire 800/eSATA Desktop External Hard Drive WDH2Q20000N”" and finally a keyboard/mouse combo that actually would work in your living room IOGear Multimedia Keyboard with Laser Trackball and Scroll Wheel, 2.4GHz Wireless GKM561R (Black)”" Your well under 1000USD (3750 SAR) with this setup and i think with the new Windows 7 all those 3 or 6 family members would be relatively happy. Oh and you will need some backup software to backup all the Windows user accounts on this machine. I would suggest reading my Backup article Now for all you die hard Mac folk out there, i am a bit reserved on the whole new iMac line from Apple. I would prefer a nicely loaded  Apple Mac mini MC239LL/A Desktop”" + LG W2486L 24-Inch LED Backlit Monitor (Gloss Black)”" and of course PTC Mini-DVI to HDMI Adapter with 6ft HDMI Cable for Macintosh”" but i will enlist it anyway : Apple iMac MB950LL/A 21.5-Inch Desktop”" Western Digital My Book Studio II – 2 TB (2 x 1 TB) USB 2.0/FireWire 400/FireWire 800/eSATA Desktop External Hard Drive WDH2Q20000N”" So there you have it! a simple list of brands and names and of course my rants! if you have further questions, please do send me directly for more Q&A’s. These technology investments should not be complicated — i try to make it simple but even i get caught up in the mix of trends and glamour! Netbooks, notebooks, p.c., mac, intel, mad, dell, which netback, netback roundup, notebooks roundup, low end home pc’s, p.c. vs mac, dell zino HD, macbook pro, family PC, family computing, mini port to hdmi, mac mini on HDTV, dell zino on HDTV, HDTV, HD movies, HD Nation useful Links http://www.hqlaptops.com/apple-macbook-air-vs-lenovo-thinkpad-x300/

This one goes out to OB1 who asked me a question regarding ultra thin notebooks. Ironically the Mac Air he had purchased a while got nicked and thus now leaving him with am emptier wallet and the new ownership pain of finding another net vs note “book.”

Folks i don’t wana start on a rant here but i have a few observations before i actually round this up. I would like to summon the car industry tiering metaphor if i may.  Do you all recall something called a Corolla? (which costs a pretty penny now)  its from that mammoth Japanese company that sells cars.  Well over the years if you notice they have been upping the ante on that series and introducing other sub- Corolla models like the Yaris and the Yaris hatchback.  Of course the rest of the industry follows this approach as well. The reason i make this analogy because in the Computing industry (laptops even more so) one sees the same tiering structure taking hold more and more. I recall back in the 90’s Dell’s cheapest computer would be no less than 800 USD. But the parts and specifications were not mediocre but average.  Thanks to the might of Intel and AMD they have led a charge of lower priced (and lower performance in some cases) Central Processing Units (or CPU’s or the brains of the computer– sorry about all the industry jargon folks) Thus we have a whole new category of laptops and low end home PC’s running well mostly Windows 7 Home Premium.  So to sum it up we now have: Netbook: usually does not have any extras (not even a DVD Drive)  ranging anywhere from 299-500USD like the   ASUS Eee PC 1005HA-EU1X-BK 10.1-Inch Black Netbook – 4 Hour Battery Life”"

Ultra thin notebook: close cousin of the Netbook and sometimes the mid ground between supper high and price and super performance. I would include the Apple MacBook Air MC234LL/A 13.3-Inch Laptop”"  and even the (this one packs more features for the money)  Lenovo Thinkpad X301 13.3-Inch Black Laptop – Up to 5.5 Hours of Battery Life (Windows XP Pro)”"

Notebook: which is your full scale notebook which start as low as 599 – 2700USD smiler to a Toshiba Satellite T135-S1300RD TruBrite 13.3-Inch Ultrathin Black/Red Laptop – 9 Hours 22 Minutes of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"or the infamous Apple MacBook Pro MC118LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop”" And the of course there is the desktop replacement workhorse! like the DELL GAMING LATTOP – Intel® CoreTM2 Duo P8600 2.4GHz (3MB Cache, 1066MHz FSB) , Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium 64bit, 17-inch WideXGA+ 1440×900 (900p) , Slot-Load Dual Layer DVD Burner (DVD+-RW, CD-RW) , 4GB Dual DDR3, 250GB SATA HD, Single NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 260M 1GB, Internal 300Mbps Dual-Band a/g/n Wireless with MIMO Technology”"are nothing but a behemoth like the  Apple iMac MC413LL/A 21.5-Inch Desktop”"These workhorses are “supposedly” the desktop class killers.  To make life easier across the board, i will share with you a quick decision making Usage and Laptop or desktop so you can quickly make up your mind and just start using instead reading reviews and rants like this one:

Common user:  email, internet surfing, word precessing, light spreadsheets, home finances, light multimedia (playing NO High Definition content / music is fine) Any of the following should be good enough : (mind you i haven’t owned any of these except the ASUS eEE PC for my little daughter to skype with)

ASUS Eee PC Seashell 1005HA-PU17-BK 10.1-Inch Black Netbook – 10.5 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”"

Acer AOD250-1584 10.1-Inch Blue Netbook – Up to 9 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”"

Toshiba Mini NB205-N230 10.1-Inch Black Onyx Netbook – 9 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Starter)”"

Mid user:  email, internet surfing, word precessing, corporate spreadsheets, home finances, multimedia ( High Definition content / music / watching movies / some light games) Any of the following should be good enough : Sony VAIO VGN-FW510F/B 16.4-Inch Black Laptop (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"

HP Pavilion DV6-1354US 15.6-Inch Black Laptop – Up to 4 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"

ASUS UL50Ag-A3B Thin and Light 15.6-Inch Black Laptop (Windows 7 Professional)”"

Advanced Gaming and Desktop Replacement Warrior! This is all the way and becomes the complete home PC which works off road and in the home/home business+ high end gaming or designing!

ASUS G51J-A1 15.6-Inch Blue Gaming Laptop (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"

Apple MacBook Pro MC226LL/A 17-Inch Laptop”"

The All in one family PCNow there really is no such thing as a family shared notebook, there are alternatives i do like. Most recently i had a chance to play with the Dell Zino HD

Dell Inspiron Zino HD Piano Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"

I really like this little hot tomato! its fast! its easy to use! and has an HDMI out (to connect to your existing HDTV) and 2 e-SATA ports (for super fast backup to your external family) . Works very nicely with any standard LCD or Plasma. For the family i highly suggest the following rig:

Dell Inspiron Zino HD Piano Black Desktop PC (Windows 7 Home Premium)”"

LG W2486L 24-Inch LED Backlit Monitor (Gloss Black)”"

Western Digital My Book Studio II – 2 TB (2 x 1 TB) USB 2.0/FireWire 400/FireWire 800/eSATA Desktop External Hard Drive WDH2Q20000N”"

and finally a keyboard/mouse combo that actually would work in your living room IOGear Multimedia Keyboard with Laser Trackball and Scroll Wheel, 2.4GHz Wireless GKM561R (Black)”"

Your well under 1000USD (3750 SAR) with this setup and i think with the new Windows 7 all those 3 or 6 family members would be relatively happy. Oh and you will need some backup software to backup all the Windows user accounts on this machine. I would suggest reading my Backup article

Now for all you die hard Mac folk out there, i am a bit reserved on the whole new iMac line from Apple. I would prefer a nicely loaded  Apple Mac mini MC239LL/A Desktop”"+ LG W2486L 24-Inch LED Backlit Monitor (Gloss Black)”" and of course  PTC Mini-DVI to HDMI Adapter with 6ft HDMI Cable for Macintosh”"

but i will enlist it anyway : Apple iMac MB950LL/A 21.5-Inch Desktop”"

Western Digital My Book Studio II – 2 TB (2 x 1 TB) USB 2.0/FireWire 400/FireWire 800/eSATA Desktop External Hard Drive WDH2Q20000N”"

So there you have it! a simple list of brands and names and of course my rants! if you have further questions, please do send me directly for more Q&A’s. These technology investments should not be complicated — i try to make it simple but even i get caught up in the mix of trends and glamour!

useful Linkshttp://www.hqlaptops.com/apple-macbook-air-vs-lenovo-thinkpad-x300/

[Via http://techiestage.wordpress.com]