Friday, September 14, 2007

Dell XPS M1330 (Intel Santa Rosa)




Dell may be one of the top PC brands in the market today, but ask anyone about Dell notebooks and some of the most common replies you'll get will probably be "dull", "bland", "blocky" and "uninspiring". This has nothing to do with specifications or performance, but Dell has been using the same designs generation after generation and with the rise of lifestyle computing products from the likes of Apple, HP, Samsung and Sony, Dell's notebooks really do look archaic in comparison. Even Dell's acquisition of Alienware, a boutique PC brand, early last year did not seem to add any zest into their product line up. Instead, Dell has been experiencing a sluggish year, resulting in HP overtaking them in worldwide PC shipment numbers for the last quarter of 2006. Perhaps this has been a rude awakening for Dell, which has been languishing off their OEM-like approach to the consumer market for too long, but they've finally taken themselves to task with an overhaul of their Inspiron series into a younger, hipper and more attractive range.However, if there is one notebook that will put a stop to critics, it will be the focus of this review - Dell's new XPS M1330 ultraportable. Combining stellar design and the performance oriented approach of the XPS line, the M1330 may very well be singularly responsible for lifting Dell out of their slump in the notebook market.
Brand new XPS, bold new look. The XPS M1330 is one of the best looking Dells in a while.
Front view of the M1330. You can see the audio jacks as well as the memory card reader to the right.
To the right, you have the slot loaded optical drive, WiFi locator button and one extra USB port. Notice the tight integration of the components making full use of available space.
On the left, you have the I/O panel of the notebook including power since there is no space for any at the rear.
Rear view of the M1330. Battery back takes up the entire space, so there are no connectivity ports at the back. To the right, you should see the rear exhaust vent. Among Dell's notebook products, their XPS lineup represents the performance segment and one of the most noteworthy to date has been the XPS M1210, a 12.1-inch ultraportable that boasted features you would not usually find in such a small notebook such as discreet graphics and integrated optical drive. The M1210 raised and set the bar on the performance that ultraportables are capable of and achieved a sort of cult status among its users. As the successor to the M1210, the new M1330 is the ultraportable re-envisioned - performance, style and form factor combined.

Dell XPS M1330 Technical Specifications -->
Processor and Chipset
Intel Core 2 Duo processor T7700 (2.4GHz, 4MB L2)
Intel PM965 (ICH8)
Operating System
Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate
System Memory
2GB DDR2-667 System (2 x 1GB sticks) Memory
2 x DDR2 SO-DIMM Slots
Video & Display
NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GS
256MB maximum supported graphics memory
128MB Dedicated
128MB TurboCache (shared system memory)
13.3-inch WXGA TrueLife LED widescreen display
Native resolution 1280 x 800
HDD
160GB SATA (Seagate Momentus 7200.2 - ST9160823AS)
7200RPM
8MB cache
Optical Drive
Integrated Slot-load DVD+/-R/RW Double Layer drive
Communication
Intel PRO/Wireless 4965AGN Network Connection & Bluetooth 2.0
Audio
SigmaTel?STAC9228 HD Audio CODEC
Front & Side I/O Ports
2?x USB 2.0 ports
1 x RJ-45 (Gigabit LAN)
1 x FireWire (IEEE 1394)
1 x VGA analog output
1 x HDMI output
Integrated 8-in-1?memory card reader
Headphone and microphone jacks
1 x ExpressCard slot
Miscellaneous
Integrated 0.3-megapixel webcam
6-cell 56Wh Lithium-Ion battery
Dimension & Weight
337mm (L) x 248mm (W) x 26.6-38.7mm (H)
Approximately 2.0kg?with battery (6-cell)

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