Posts Tagged ‘Dell Inspiron’

Dell Inspiron 710m Review

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Overall this is a good laptop. Good speed, nice screen, smooth touchpad and keyboard. Only 2 USB ports. The headphones/mic ports are very near the touchpad, which can sometimes make it difficult to operate. I expected this to warm up less, being a Centrino, but after an hour work, it was pretty warm (but very silent!). Aesthetically it is a bit thick: as thick as a bigger laptop, but all in all very convenient to carry around. The Power Adapter is the same size as a bigger laptop, making it not so portable. As this is an ultra-portable notebook, it would have been useful to have a smaller adapter. but No restore CD, and as a result there is a partition on the Hard Drive (about 3.4Gb) that is unusable and exclusive for Restoring the System to its original state. The keyboard is a bit crunched. :)

This likable little notebook with its sleek satin-silver finish starts at $1349 and comes with some nice Media Center-style software.

PC World tested a more expensive $1786 configuration, featuring a top-of-the-line 2-GHz Pentium M 755 processor and 512MB of RAM. Our test unit earned a WorldBench 5 score of 82, so it has enough processing power for any mainstream application. Battery life with the standard 4-cell battery on our test unit lasted only 2.5 hours, but you can get an 8-cell battery for just $99, though it weighs half a pound more. The 710m’s modular bay–rare on an ultraportable–lets you add a second hard drive or double up on batteries for an even better unplugged experience. Our test unit came with a double-layer DVD±RW burner and an 80GB hard drive and the full Corel WordPerfect Office 12 set of applications.

Some quibbles: the keyboard is slightly cramped. (With practice I was able to hit the half-size question mark key and master the keystroke combinations required for paging up and down.) Plus, the docking options are meager: Dell sells only a USB port replicator that hangs off the left side of the notebook by a cable.

The icing on the cake is Dell’s Media Experience, a Windows Media Center Edition knockoff with movie, DVD/CD, and photo slide-show applications. It mimics the Media Center Edition with a big blue menu, and it’s easy to move through, though it lacks a remote control to take advantage of it. All that’s missing is a TV feature since this notebook has no TV tuner option. The 710m is too small to have good speakers, but at least the port for the headphones is located on the front.

Upshot: Dell’s latest consumer ultraportable would make a nice unit for budget-constricted professionals on the go.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron 1200 Review

Friday, October 10th, 2008

I bought this notebook for school,and it has everything i can ask for. This is a wonderful notebook for only 650 dollars, I am so glad i didn’t waste my money on a dell latitude. I have to admit. I have been using this computer for two years and I cannot bear to part with it. I use it for everything. It is a little slower than I like, but the RAM is expandable. I have been saving money for a new Vista notebook but I definitely won’t sell this one. Overall, it is a great budget PC that could perform better but gets the job done.

The Dell Inspiron 1200 with a square black case and a bulky 14.1-inch XGA screen. It looks like a Buick next to newer notebooks, and the battery has never lasted more than a couple of hours, but I have to give it credit. In the seven years we’ve been together, my Inspiron 2500 and its sturdy keyboard have never let me down.

The Dell Inspiron 1200, one of the new breed of ultracheap notebooks, reincarnates my old faithful with a similar square black case, screen, battery life, and trusty keyboard. At $499 after a $50 instant rebate, the 1200 is a lot cheaper than my old budget buy, which cost me about $1500, if memory serves. But today, with better choices even at the $500 level, I’d pass on this Dell.

Although solidly constructed and upgradable, the Inspiron 1200 is a very basic, plain-looking unit with a small 30GB 4200-rpm hard drive, a 1.3-GHz Celeron M 350 processor, and 256MB of built-in RAM (with one empty slot for adding another DIMM). Connections are somewhat limited, though you do get ethernet and modem jacks, a VGA port, headphone and microphone mini-jacks, and one PC Card slot. Built-in Wi-Fi is not an option. It also offers three USB ports–a generous number–though they’re all inconveniently located on the back of the notebook (a design drawback the Inspiron 2500 shared).

Applications and DVD movies look fine on the 14.1-inch SVGA screen, but audio is weak and not terribly rich. The highlight of this 6.3-pound Windows XP Home-based unit (7.2-pound travel weight, including power adapter) is its right-side DVD-ROM/CD-RW combination drive for burning your own data and music CDs. Another nice extra is WordPerfect word processing software.

The 2.4-hour battery life and WorldBench 5 score of 57 is good enough for mainstream applications and short stints away from an electrical outlet. (Put in perspective, the Inspiron 1200 lags by about 40 percent the fastest notebook we’ve tested, a Micro Express CL5620 that earned a score of 97 thanks to a 2-GHz Pentium M and 512MB of RAM.) Unfortunately, the battery is an older nickel metal hydride type, which tends to wear out faster than the better-quality lithium ion batteries typically used today. A bonus: If you upgrade to a lithium ion battery ($79), you get a free 64MB Dell USB memory key.

Upshot: Upshot: You can get basic office work done and burn your own CDs with Dell’s bargain-basement Inspiron 1200. But there are nicer-looking and better-equipped $500 notebooks, namely the Acer Aspire 3003LCi or HP’s Compaq M2000.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron 1420

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Dell Inspiron 1420 is easy to ajust brightness, and it comes with lots of memory (3GB) and a hearty hard drive with lots of space.The Dell Inspiron 1420 is a small package, and has lots of power. The screen is very clear, although I need me reading glasses at times, it is easy to read the majority of the time.

My test unit’s configuration was expensive for an all-purpose notebook at $1748 (as of 9/12/07), but it included a long-life battery, a 160GB hard drive, and integrated mobile broadband. Our configuration lacked the optional $50 Webcam, as well as the optional $550 Blu-ray Disc drive; the drive might have been a good complement to our machine’s high-definition, WXGA+, glossy screen, which was bright and easy to read. If you don’t like the glossy screen’s reflectiveness, you can have the screen with a non-glossy, antiglare coating for the same price.

The 6-pound 1420 is a little heavy for a notebook with only a 14.1-inch screen, but it’s very well crafted. The comfortable keyboard features mouse buttons with tactile finger ridges, and the battery has an external power gauge. Your choice from among seven optional lid colors ($50) dresses up the 1420′s standard black case. Our test unit came in a blindingly bright Alpine White. Other hues include Ruby Red, Flamingo Pink, and Spring Green.

Better at multimedia than most notebooks its size, the 1420 offers rich, medium-volume sound. The laptop also sports Dell’s standard Media Direct button, which works better than other instant-on buttons. With this button, you get direct access not only to movie, music, and photo players but also to office-application viewers, a feature that lets you check, say, an Outlook phone number or a PowerPoint slide without having to start Windows. Dell sells some reasonably priced multimedia add-ons, too, ranging from a $15 IR travel remote to a $125 TV tuner and remote package for taking full advantage of the entertainment applications in Windows Vista Home Premium (our test model’s operating system).

Performance was excellent. Our test unit’s nine-cell battery lasted nearly 5 hours. Equipped with a 2.2-GHz Core Duo T7500 processor and 2GB of RAM, the 1420 rose to the top of its class with a WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 83. That score put it in a tie for first place, among currently tested all-purpose notebooks, with a similarly equipped Gateway E-475M. (Two other similarly equipped laptops earned a WorldBench 6 Beta 2 mark of 80.) Our test unit was a decent 3D game player, with an average frames-per-second rate of 42 (30 fps is considered minimally acceptable, and some notebooks manage 100 fps).

Overall this notebook has much to like. It’s fast, capable, and as colorful as you care to make it.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron E1705

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Once I returned the first one the new one works great. It is very easy to work on as well as play games. Clean layout. Nice true life 17″ display.Not as heavy as my Inspiron 8100 & yet bigger. I like the “True Life” display. Rich! Keyboard layout takes some getting used to. Very high up in the footprint. Battery life is poor. Bad problems with the first one. Driver issues and video card problems. Should have got Nvidia graphics. ATI is ok. Sound is average. Paid for the upgrage but not impressed. Overall a good machine.

This 17-inch dual-core notebook includes a TV tuner and delivers outstanding mobile gaming performance.

Dell’s first dual-core offering is both a workhorse and a multimedia star. It isn’t cheap–our review unit cost $2949 as of March 27, 2006–but no other notebook in its class does a better job of providing instant entertainment on a 17-inch screen.

Equipped with a 2-GHz Core Duo T2500 processor and 1GB of RAM, the Inspiron E1705 earned a superior WorldBench 5 score of 97. To help you make the best use of your down time, the new E line (which includes the E1505, with a 15.4-inch wide screen) features Dell’s one-touch MediaDirect button. With the notebook off and without starting Windows, you can press the button once to watch a DVD movie or to access videos, music, or photo slide shows stored on the hard drive, an optical drive, or a USB key or memory card placed in the five-in-one media reader. The only option that the E1705 lacks is instant-on live TV. To watch TV, you first have to launch the Windows Media Center Edition operating system.

At the time I looked at the E1705, it had the best graphics card Dell offered–a top-notch nVidia GeForce Go 7900 GS with 256MB of VRAM–and it showed in our gaming tests. (A new flagship gaming notebook alternative, the Inspiron m1710, should be available in April with an nVidia GeForce Go 7900 GTX card.) The E1705 finished first in all but one of our game tests, with results such as 98 frames per second in Doom 3 at 1280 by 1024 resolution and 32-bit color, with antialiasing turned off.

The E1705 will turn heads with its cream-colored trim and bright blue LEDs. At 8.2 pounds and with a 3-hour battery life (using the $79 nine-cell battery), it’s a friendly travel partner.

The E1705 can be configured with up to 100GB of storage, and it comes with a whopping six USB ports, along with a cutting-edge ExpressCard slot and a DVI-D port for the latest flat-panel screens. This port isn’t compatible with analog monitor adapters, but the unit includes a legacy VGA-out port as well. My one complaint about the design is that the DVD burner’s eject button is flush with the case and hard to locate by touch.

It’s something of a pain to keep track of Dell’s external TV tuner, a USB unit slightly larger than a pack of playing cards. But because it’s external, you can save a bit of travel weight by leaving it behind.

For people who plan on using an E line portable to replace a desktop, Dell sells Kensington USB 2.0 docking stations customized for Dell notebooks. A simple port replicator costs $79 and a better one including screen stand is $129.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron 1525

Friday, October 10th, 2008

If you don’t like the specifications of the particular Dell Inspiron 1525 we tested, you can easily configure your own online. That’s an important difference between this unit and most other inexpensive laptops: You can customize it down to the smallest detail–even lid color–before finally clicking the ‘Buy now’ button.

Our review unit will please those for whom good performance is a priority. Equipped with 2GB of memory and the best notebook CPU Dell offered for this model at the time of our review (a 2-GHz Core 2 Duo T7250), our $999 (as of 2/7/08) Windows Vista Home Premium machine earned a WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 78. That’s 17 percent faster than the average score of 65 earned by the five under-$1000 laptops in this roundup, and even 13 percent better than the average of 69 earned by 16 recently tested all-purpose notebooks in any price range. With the battery upgraded from the standard four-cell to a six-cell ($15 extra), our notebook lasted a fairly generous 4 hours, 4 minutes on one charge, about 10 minutes longer than our five budget laptop test group’s average.

About the only thing the Inspiron 1525 can’t handle is 3D graphics; with an Intel Integrated Graphics Media Accelerator X3100 and no dedicated video card option, it’s limited to simple games and other 2D applications.

The 1525 is wedge-shaped but svelte at 6 pounds, including a 15.4-inch 1280 by 800 resolution screen, a DVD writer, and a good keyboard. The port variety and layout is fine (the 1525 is one of the few notebooks in this price range with an HDMI connection). And like the excellent HP Pavilion dv2600se, the 1525 gives multimedia lovers lots of entertainment features: an instant-on button, a Webcam, and even dual headphone jacks. In fact, I like the Dell’s MediaDirect button more than the HP’s QuickPlay because it has Instant Office, an application viewer that lets you access your calendar, contacts and PowerPoint presentations. Also, Dell’s volume gauge is easier to use. Alas, the raspy-sounding speakers take some of the shine off the 1525′s entertainment appeal.

The real beauty of the 1525 is its customizability. For instance, our glossy screen (a no-extra-cost option at the time of our review) was pretty reflective, so you might be happier with Dell’s standard antiglare screen. From a base configuration of $500, you can build your perfect sub-$1000 laptop that includes a lid in any one of 11 different colors ($25 usually, but included in our test model’s price), Bluetooth ($20), an integrated mobile broadband card ($150), and even built-in wireless USB ($150).

If choice of features is paramount in your budget laptop, the Inspiron 1525 is your best bet among the models in our test group.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron E1505 Review

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

I think The Dell Inspiron E1505 have good screen size and processor speed. The Centrino Duo is worth the money.And awsome bulit in wireless card 300mps with the N wireless, very good speeds when maxed out on memory again. The Dell Inspiron E1505 Strong battery life, reliable customer service, no cd recovery system (all pre-installed CTRL + F11

This well-rounded notebook is ideal for getting work done.

Dell’s Inspiron E1505, an entertainment notebook, including an Intel Core 2 Duo processor, music and photo editing, and movie viewing. The 6.9-pound E1505 also throws in pretty good speakers, dedicated media buttons, and a cushy keyboard with stylish white trim, giving you a great all-around choice for consumers who don’t want to spend an arm and a leg on a desktop replacement.

It’s $1186 (as of 11/6/06) E1505 came with the Windows XP Media Center Edition operating system, a double-layer DVD burner, four USB ports, a FireWire port, an ExpressCard slot, and a three-in-one memory card reader. The laptop’s 15.4-inch WXGA screen is great for mainstream work, but if you need to see more on your screen at once, a WSXGA+ resolution is an option.

Now it unit has a 120GB hard drive. You can get a 160GB hard drive, still a relatively rare notebook option, for less than $60 more. Unfortunately, a built-in TV tuner is not an option, as it is on most other entertainment notebooks, but Dell’s USB TV tuner is just $104 extra. The small external box comes with all the cables you’ll need to connect to a cable box or a set-top box.

Dell’s Inspiron E1505 equipped with a 2-GHz Core 2 Duo T7200 processor and 1GB of RAM, our machine earned a WorldBench 5 score of 102, which ranks within the top 20 percent of notebooks we’ve tested. The first E1505 we reviewed–equipped with a 1.66-GHz Core Duo T2300 processor and 1GB of RAM–did not play games smoothly and ran noticeably slower than other notebooks when we worked in multiple windows. With the faster chip, the notebook is now a much better multitasker, on a par with competitors, but game play is still poor: The laptop managed just 19 frames per second when displaying Doom and 36 fps in Far Cry. The 64MB of dedicated video memory allowed by a 128MB ATI Mobility Radeon X130 HyperMemory card just isn’t enough to get most games off the ground. (We didn’t test with the optional 256MB video card.)

The E1505 turned in excellent battery life, lasting 5.5 hours on one charge. The battery, which is located on the bottom of the notebook, sports an external gauge that lets you see how much juice is left before you have to plug the notebook in.

Like Dell’s high-end XPS entertainment portables and budget-friendly Inspiron counterparts, the E1505 has a unique “instant office” capability. The feature makes staying on top of business as simple as pressing the MediaDirect button. The button launches a menu that now includes not only the usual entertainment options–DVD, music, videos, and photos–but also additional menu selections for the application viewers. Without launching Windows, you can view–though not edit–your PowerPoint slides and Outlook and Outlook Express calendars and contacts. You can also play DVDs, music, and digital photo collections. So if you’ve forgotten the starting time for a meeting, just pause the movie and check your schedule.

Expandability is somewhat limited. The E1505 is user upgradable, with both the hard drive and memory chips in accessible bottom compartments. However, docking is nothing fancy, with only a couple of options–the better one being a screen stand port replicator, a $103 extra. (You must provide the wireless keyboard and mouse.)

Popularity: unranked [?]

Dell Inspiron 6000 Review

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

I think It will do just about everything that that any computer can do and then some. Moreover,it’s a reliable feature rich box at an affordable price!

For anybody who wants a computer this a great computer. It weighs about 12 pounds but that already for me. It is very fun and easy to use and will do everything I have asked and more. I’ve had this router for a few months now and I must say that I’m pretty impressed with it’s performance. The features that I use are VPN and wireless security and the performance is great.

Dell Inspiron 6000

Dell Inspiron 6000

We can see that the Dell Inspiron 6000′s wide screen than on most other 15.4-inch displays thanks to its WUXGA resolution of 1920 by 1200 pixels. the Dell Inspiron 6000 work with higher-resolution photographs, more spreadsheet columns, and more tiled documents simultaneously on the Inspiron 6000 than you can on some 17-inch wide screens. The Inspiron 6000 is also available with a 1280-by-800-pixel WXGA screen or a 1680-by-1050-pixel WSXGA+ screen for $150 less or $50 less, respectively.

It has a lot more going for it than just its extra-high-resolution screen. We did test the nine-cell battery (a $99 option), and it lasted an impressive 5 hours on one charge, making the 6000 an excellent candidate for the road–if you don’t mind its 7.5-pound weight (I like this weight,it’s fit to me). An extra-fancy external power gauge helps you keep track of when you’ll need to recharge.

The Inspiron 6000 is a pretty laptop with a sloped front and cream-colored trim. Our unit had a multiformat DVD burner, plus FireWire and TV-out ports and four USB 2.0 ports, all placed for easy use. The 6000 accepts user upgrades easily. Like many laptops, it has two memory slots located in a compartment on the bottom of the laptop. But instead of residing in dovetailed slots, the modules lie side by side–an unusual arrangement that makes them more accessible than most. The hard drive is a breeze to remove, too: Just unscrew its bottom panel and tug the drive out through the right side of the case. Though the optical drive doesn’t have a lever for popping it out, you can boost it out by its lower edge after removing a security screw on the bottom of the case.

Dell Inspiron 6000

Dell Inspiron 6000

However,I have not found it any yet but I know the mouse pad is a little small for me; but maybe it is because I’m not use to it. and documentation is poor. some features like VPN don’t have proper guidance in the manual.

I think you’ll like the 6000′s panel of dedicated CD controls and its surprisingly good stereo sound. (Only one other model in our roundup, the Fujitsu LifeBook N6010, offered better audio.) There’s no instant-on button for playing discs without using Windows, but you can play CDs while the lid is closed, because the music buttons and speaker outlets remain exposed. Pressing one of the buttons momentarily lights the entire music panel’s bright blue LEDs, a helpful feature in dark environments.

The 2-GHz Pentium M 760-equipped review unit did well in our speed tests, earning a WorldBench 5 score of 89, about 8 percent above the average for systems equipped with the same processor.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Dell Inspiron 530 Value Desktop PC

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

The Dell Inspiron 530 was powerful enough to earn superior scores (for a value PC) in both its productivity and graphics performance tests, yet it’s quite inexpensive at $689 (as of 2/7/08).
Our test syste

m was based on a 1.8-GHz Intel Pentium dual-core E2160 processor and had two sticks of 1GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM, for a total of 2GB of memory. It came with a 19-inch Dell SE198WFP wide-screen LCD (1440

by 900 native resolution), as well. Most value systems use integrated graphics that rely on main system memory, but the 530′s graphics duties are handled by a 128MB nVidia GeForce 8300GS graphics card. The 250GB

W

estern Digital Caviar hard drive provides an average amount of storage space for PCs in this price range, and our test unit had a DVD/CD combo writer, too.
As for performance, the 530 earned a WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 73–commendable in the value desktop category, and slightly better than the 71 earned by the Compaq Presario SR5350F, which uses the same Intel Pentium dual-core E2160 CPU. The Inspiron 530 provided the best performance in the 3DS Max DirectX component of the WorldBench suite of all the value systems recently tested. Not surprisingly, therefore, it also earned the top scor

es among value systems for its graphics performance, making it the best choice for playing simple games. Because it

s graphics card has only a modest 128MB of memory, however, it still isn’t powerful enough for intensive gaming titles, such as Doom 3 and Far Cry. In our Doom 3 tests, the system earned only a subpar s

core

of 20 frames per second running at 1024 by 768 resolution with antialising turned on.

The 530′s attractive,

glossy white-and-silver midtower case is well ventilated, and its sliding front panel covers an external bay m

o

dule containing a media card reader and connectivity ports. Inside the 530′s case, you’ll find that good old-f

ashioned screws secure the components, so you’ll need a screwdriver when installing expansion cards and op

tical drives. Like most other value systems, the 530 uses a smaller motherboard that supports fewer

expansion options than larger (and pricier) boards. Available expansion options include one 5.25-inch external and one 3.5-inch internal drive bay, two PCI and one PCIe x1 card slots (the PCIe x16 slot is fill

e

d by the discrete graphics card), and two (out of four) DIMM memory sockets. The 530 lacks FireWire ports, but they can be added as an extra-cost ($30) option.
The Dell monitor delivered sharp text and fine color quality in both still and moving images. The USB-based optical mouse and enhanced keyboard that Dell bundles with this system are comparatively better (in performance and feature

s) than the standard-issue input devices that come with most value systems. Among the keyboard’s extra

s are several quick-launch keys, a retro-style volume knob, and two upstream USB ports. The 530′s online-only d

ocumentation is exemplary, with thorough, well-written instructions that are (thankfully) specific to the actual model, unlike the more generic documentation that some vendors often include.
If you want a value desktop with an excellent price-to-performance ratio and some room to grow, Dell’s Inspiron 530 is arguably the best deal among the budget PCs we’ve tested recently.

Popularity: 1% [?]