Dell Studio

Dell Studio 1555 available in Europe

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

The Dell Studio 1555 with the graphics card ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 is already available in Europe.

Dell Studio 1555 in Europe

There are very few benchmarks, but it looks like the performance of the Mobility HD 4570 is close to that of the mainstream graphics cards of the prior generation (a bit lower than the Mobility HD 3650).

Pricing in Spain is similar to that of the 1537:

  • 499 € base model (Intel Pentium T4200 a 2 GHz, 2 GB de RAM, 160 GB hard disk, Intel GMA 4500MHD).
  • 649 € with ATI graphics (Intel Core 2 Duo T6400 a 2 GHz, 4 GB de RAM, 320 GB hard disk, ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 512 MB).
  • 929 € with BD player (Intel Core 2 Duo P8600 a 2,4 GHz, 4 GB de RAM, 500 GB hard disk, ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 512 MB, BD player).

Dell Studio 1555 already available in the US

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

The refresh of the Dell Studio 15 that I talked about some time ago is already available in the US, Canada and Latin America. We European folks will have to wait a bit more…

Found via: Engadget

Dell Studio 1555 with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 and subwoofer leaked

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

An user at the Notebook Review forums has just found information about a refresh of the Studio line, the Dell Studio 1555. The most interesting upgrades from the current model (Studio 1537) are the ATI Mobility HD 4570 graphics card and subwoofer, that should improve greatly the poor sound of the Studio 15. Both are great additions that address weak points of this otherwise great laptop. The touchpad seems to be a Synaptics now.

Dell Studio 1555 graphics card (ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570)

Dell Studioi 1555 subwoofer

Source: Notebook Review forums.

Update: the Studio 1555 is already available at Dell New Zealand, and it is not much more expensive than  a similarly configured Studio 1537. The guys at the Notebook Review Forums have compiled other differences between the 1537 and 1555 models:

Differences between Studio 1555 and 1535/1537
1. Discrete Graphic Card: 256MB/512MB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 vs 256MB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3450
2. LCD Display: 15.6 inch (16:9) vs 15.4 inch (16:10)
3. (3) USB 2.0 compliant 4-pin ports vs (4) USB 2.0 compliant 4-pin ports
4. 34 mm ExpressCard slot vs 54 mm ExpressCard slot
5. Width: 371.6mm vs 355.6mm
6. Height (back) : 38.9mm vs 33mm
7. Depth: 252.9mm vs 261.5mm
8. Weight: Starting weight of 5.54 lbs (2.515 kg) with 15.6” HD TL LED, 6-cell battery, integrated graphics and a DVD+RW drive vs Starting weight of 6.11 lbs. (2.77 kg) (15.4″ WXGA TL display, 6 cell battery, DVD +/- RW, integrated graphics)

The GeForce 9500M found in the Dell Studio XPS 13 (1340) is in fact a 9400M G + 9200M GS Hybrid SLI

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

So the guys at the Notebook Review forums found it: the Nvidia GeForce 9500M found in the Dell Studio XPS 13 is not a single graphics card, but two: an integrated GeForce 9400M G plus a GeForce 9200M GS with 256 MB of dedicated memory, working in a Hybrid SLI configuration. The expected performance is higher than that of the 9400M G alone and lower than a 9500M GS, so the naming seems right, but maybe the actual performance is not as high as you expected when you saw the 9500M model number.

In addition, as Hybrid SLI is only supported under Windows Vista, so users of other operating systems will only be able to use one of the cards (probably the 9400M G).

Nvidia GeForce 9500M

Source: Notebook Review forums and Dell Studio XPS 13 setup guide (go to page 52).

Dell Studio 15 (1537) review

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Score: 8
In a few words: a basic laptop with dedicated graphics and a good configuration for the price. It is a pity that the speakers are so bad.
Purchase options: Dell Spain, Dell US, Dell UK, BestBuy.com

Most of the time I use my desktop computer, but during the holidays I need a laptop to keep in touch with optimitza (news, forum, e-mail…) and play some old games. The laptop has to be carried only at the beginning and the end of the holidays, so weight is not very important, but price is, because it is not going to be used a lot and it is not justified to spend a lot on it.

The Dell Studio 15 is a good option: it is a laptop with current hardware, with low-end dedicated graphics card and a good configuration for the price:

  • Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo T5800 (2,0 GHz).
  • Memory: 3 GB DDR2 800 MHz.
  • Graphics card: ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3450 (256 MB dedicated).
  • Hard disk: 250 GB at 5400 rpm.
  • Screen: 15,4” a 1280×800, glossy, LED backlight.
  • Optical drive: DVD burner.
  • Wireless: 802.11b/g.
  • Operating system: Windows Vista Home Premium SP1.
  • Extras: card reader, webcam (2,0 Mpx) with integrated mic.
  • Price: 579 €; similar configurations cost 499 GBP (UK) (749 USD in the US, but with the Intel GMA X3100).

I decided to upgrade the WiFi card to a 802.11n because I know for a fact that the wireless signal I get at my mother’s home is weak, and I got the Midnight blue colour, so the final price was 658 € (with free shipping).

The laptop came without accessories: only the computer, the power brick, a Windows Vista restore disc, 3 driver & software disks, a Microsoft Works disk and the manual.

Dell Studio 15 - general view

Design and finish: design: very good; sturdiness: acceptable; finish: good.

The Dell Studio 15 is a consumer laptop, so it is not as sturdy as business laptops (Lenovo Thinkpad, Dell Latitude, HP Elitebook…), but the plastics seem of good quality. The screen has some flex and when the lid is pressed the picture gets distorted at some spots. Anyway, the laptop feels solid and with a nice finish; it does not bend when pressed with the hands and creaking is minimal. The screen is the only point that bends considerably. The design is very nice, but most of the surface is glossy and a fingerprint magnet. The Midnight blue finish of the lid is matte and good-looking. The power cord falls short, for me.

Dell Studio 15 - vista general

Dell Studio 15 - midnight blue

Screen: quality: good, viewing angles: good, outdoor use: mediocre.

The monitor is 15.4″ at 1280×800 with LED backlight. The first impression is excellent, since it is very bright and with vivid colors, better than most laptops at this price point. But when compared to my HP L2245w, contrast and vieving angles are not so good. Viewing angles are better than in other laptops I have used. As I do not make a professional use of color, I cannot tell about the colour gamut, but I have raised a bit the red level in the Catalyst Control Panel since the skin colour in pictures seems too dull. The glossy surface of the screen is not annoying to work if there is no light behind you, but if there is a window or similar, the reflection can be distracting. In the dark scenes of films and games the reflection is more noticeable, even without light from behind. Outdoors, even with the brightness to the maximum and working with clear background, the reflection of myself in a sunny winter day is too visible. It is possible to work, but it is annoying.

It is very difficult that pictures of the screen reflect what the eyes see, but here you have some images: the first is quite blurry, but it was made with low light and can help to get an idea of how the colours and brightness are; the second is less faithful to the reality, but you can see that the contrast and color are not as good as in my usual monitor, an HP L2245w.

Dell Studio 15 - WLED screen

Dell Studio 15 - WLED screen, compared

Keyboard: feedback: good, layout: very good, flex: very good

The sensitivity of the keyboard is good, even when I prefer softer keys as those of the HP Pavilion dv5 or Sony Vaio laptops. Although if we press strongly the keyboard we can see a certain degree of bending, there is no flex while typing, so you can type comfortably. The layout of the keyboard is very good, with all the special keys grouped in the upper right, and it is very easy to get used to it.

The multimedia keys are touch sensitive and allow to open the Dell Average Direct, control the playback of Dell Media Direct or Windows Media Player (play/pause, stop, forward, backward) but not of Winamp (I did not test other players), control the volume of the system (increase, decrease, mute) and eject the disk of the optical drive. Multimedia controls are not illuminated but they light up when touched; the sensitivity is very good and by now they have not been activated accidentally.

Dell Studio 15 - keyboard

Touchpad: sensitivity average, buttons very good, configuration good.

The touchpad has a slightly rough surface that poses little resistance, on which the finger glides easily. The cursor movement is smooth and precise. Some users complain that this model shows an erratic movement of the cursor, but during these 3 weeks of use I only have experienced it once or twice, and I have not experienced any pause of 0.5 s every 10 s as other users commented. The click of the buttons is soft and makes almost no noise, and they donot feel cheap . Tapping is not perfect, and sometimes it is necessary to repeat the tap . You can configure the standard functions, in addition to the horizontal and vertical scroll , zoom and “circle movement” (I have disabled everything except the scroll), but you cannot define “tap zones” as in the Synaptics touchpads.

Audio: volume mediocre, quality average, bass mediocre, configuration good.

Speakers are, for me,  the weakest point of the Dell Studio 15. Los altavoces son la queja principal que tengo de este portátil. I am not an audiophile, but i like music and I can notice the difference in quality between the Logitech X-210 that I have attached to my desktop computer and the Logitech Z-4 that I have in the living room. The Dell Studio 15 do not have a subwoofer, so a deep and powerful sound cannot be expected, but even when compared to other laptops without subwoofer the audio of this laptop is poor. Basses are there, not as in my LG LS70 in which it seemed that the bassist was on holiday, but even the quality of the high tones is only acceptable. The volume allows listening to music or a film even if there is some environmental noise, but it gets distorted easily if you try to set it very loud. Using the Windows Vista audio properties and the laptop own IDT Audio Control Panel (with graphic equalizer) you can improve sound output a little, but the speakers simply are unable to deliver a good sound. You can listen to some music in the background or follow a movie or game, but you cannot really enjoy them. Of course, the audio outputs can be used (it has two 3.5 mm headphone jacks) to plug the laptop to quality speakers or headphones.

Ports

I like the distribution of the connections: all of them are on the sides, so they are easily accessible and not bother especially. I have not missed any port, and 4 USB ports (one of them shared with an eSATA port) are more than enough.

Dell Studio 15 - left side

Left side: In the hinge there is a button to search for WiFi connections. Following there is the slot for a security lock, the wireless switch, HDMI, VGA, 2 USB (the top shared with eSATA), Ethernet, microphone, two headphones, 54 mm Expresscard and card reader.

Dell Studio 15 - front

Front: infrared port in the center.

Dell Studio 15 - right side

Right side: FireWire (IEEE 1394), 2 USB ports, slot-loading DVD burner, power plug and power button. I’m a bit afraid of slot-loading, but I have not experienced any problems until now.

Dell Studio 15 - rear

Rear: no ports. You can see the heat vent; it is a convenient location, so the hot air is thrown far from your hands, nearby peripherals or other objects you could be keeping at hand.

Comfort: temperature very good, noise good.

The laptop is quite cold and very silent when performing tasks low-intensity tasks: it is warm to the touch but you can have it on your lap without problems (at least in winter and with jeans), and the fan only turns on occasionally. If you are connected to the power outlet and doing more demanding tasks, such as playing a 3D game, the fan is turned on and can be heard constantly; although it is clearly audible, it helps keeping the laptop almost at the same temperature than when surfing the net, so that you can continue using it comfortably. I have to recognize that if you are very sensitive to noise you can find it annoying, but as I use to play with headphones I do not find the noise too problematic.

Dell Studio 15 - bottom

The bottom has three ventilation slots. The battery has a button that, when pressed, indicates the level of charge. For upgrades and repairs, all the bottom is open…

Dell Studio 15 - open bottom

…that gives easy access to the memory modules, hard disk and internal cards. As you see, there is an internal slots used by the WiFi  module and two free slots for WWAN, Turbo Memory or similar.

Webcam: pictures good, video good, audio good.

The webcam is 2.0 Mpx and allows to take pictures of up to 1600×1200. The image quality is good, but there is some static, especially if the lighting is not very good; it also lets you record video up to 640×480. The built-in microphones record at a quite low volume and initially capture a lot of hissing, but removing the Microphone Boost in the recording options improved the audio recording. All in all, for casual video recording or videoconferencing is quite good.

General performance

Considering that the configuration is quite basic and that it runs Windows Vista, I was surprised by the good performance. Working with 4-10 Firefox tabs, GIMP with 2-3 pictures of 5 Mpx and a few other apps (OpenOffice Writer, Microsoft Word or maybe Dreamweaver) you can switch tasks without delay, but sometimes it keeps thinking for a few seconds to open a window or a menu: quirks of Windows Vista, I guess.

I tested HD video playing using Quicktime: interestingly, while some H264 trailers such as 300 (720p) and The Bourne Ultimatum (1080p) play flawlessly, with a CPU usage of 30-60%, the Serenity trailer (720p) is laggy at times, with up to 90% of CPU usage; on my desktop computer (see specs below) it is completely smooth. More tests with additional trailers and computers are needed to find out if it is a isolated problem or if the configuration is too weak for HD video playback. Anyway, the Serenity trailer is mostly OK, but not perfect.

Update: It is clearly a software issue. Using VLC Media Player instead of Quicktime, the Serenity trailer plays perfectly, I watched 5 more H264 trailers (two of them 1080p) and all of them were perfectly fluid. All clips from dvdloc8.com.

I ran PCMark 05 and 3DMark 06 to be able to compare the scores of my Studio 15 to other laptops:

PCMark 05: 45483DMark 06:  1802

I also performed a comparision against my desktop computer in a series of real world task. All the tests were performed using free software that can be downloaded and run for free, so anyone willing to compare scores can do it without spending a cent. The configuration of my desktop computer is: Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 (3.0 GHz), 2 GB RAM DDR2-800, 750 GB HD (7200 rpm), ATI Radeon HD 3450 (256 MB), Windows XP Professional SP2. The tasks performed were the following:

  • WinRAR: compressing the Far Cry demo folder (567 MB) in RAR format.
  • Folder copy: creating a copy of theFar Cry demo folder (567 MB).
  • Video transcoding: converting The Bourne Ultimatum trailer (H264 at 1920×816) to Xvid at 320×240 using Any Video Converter.
  • Multitasking: the same conversion while the Far Cry demo folder is compresed in RAR and GIMP has open 14 pictures of 5 Mpx.
  • Far Cry (demo) Low, 800×600. Average fps.
  • Far Cry (demo) High (Medium texture filter quality), 1280×800. Average fps.
  • Crysis (demo) Low, 800×600. Average fps.
  • Crysis (demo) High, 1280×800. Average fps.

Results:

Dell Studio 15 - benchmarks

As expected the difference in processor frequency (3 GHz in the desktop vs 2 GHz in the Dell Studio 15) is clearly noticeable in most tasks, but the biggest difference is in the folder copy task, moltly influenced by hard drive speed. But in the multitasking test the Studio 15 scores better than the desktop: as the test implies a very high memory use, the 3 GB of RAM give a significant advantage to the laptop; in addition, it is likely that Windows Vista handles multicore processors better than XP.

Gaming performance

The Dell Studio 15 is clearly not a gaming laptop: a moderatly old game such as Far Cry (2004) is playable at 1280×800 and High detail, but gameplay is not as smooth as it is desirable (I got 19-21 fps, 26.7 fps average). A demanding game such as Cryisis is quite playable at minimal settings (800×600, everything set Low), even while the scores are not good (13-40 fps, 25.3 fps average); but in points where there is fog or similar effects (like when the plane door opens in the introduction, or when you are close to the flare after the first encounter) performance drops considerably, so scenes where this kind of effects are widely used could become unplayable.

I also published gaming benchmarks for the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3450.

Battery life

Although I have not been able to make a more extensive testing, after surfing the Net for 2 hours and 11 minutes with maximum screen brightness and the balanced energy profile, still a 27 percent of the charge was left (44 minutes estimated); so you can expect a battery life of almost 3 h, something more lowering the screen brightness and choosing the energy saving profile.

Veredict

I am very happy with the Dell Studio 15. Of course, I would like better speakers, a more sensitive touchpad and softer keyboard, but this laptop fullfils my needs and, keeping in mind that it can be had from 499 € in the basic configuration, it is a real bargain.

Strengths

  • Good configuration for the price
  • Nice and modern design
  • Good screen compared to laptops in the same price point
  • Does not get hot, even while gaming
  • Good port and keyboard layout

Major weaknesses

  • None

Minor weaknesses

  • Mediocre speakers
  • Touchpad sensitivity not perfect
  • Can be noisy under heavy load
  • Screen not suitable for outdoors

Some purchase options

Do you want more information, or would like to add some? Use the forum.

Dell Studio XPS 13: almost here

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Dell Studio XPS 13Many users are waiting for an update to the Dell XPS lline, and at least the 13″ version (Studio XPS 13) is ready to launch. According to the sources, it is going to be released at CES 2009 (January 8th to 11th) and it is already at the Dell USA web site from USD 1,406, but the link does not work, so we do not know the specs for this price. You can find some pictures of the laptop at Engadget.

Dell is also preparing an ultrathin competitor to the Macbook Air, codenamed “Adamo”.

Sources: Engadget and Xataka (Spanish).

Dell Studio Hybrid: Dell’s minicomputer available (at least in Spain)

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

Dell has just presented the desktop minicomputer Studio Hybrid. It is already available in Spain (and probably in other countries, but at the moment not in the US, UK or Australia).

It is a small (or VERY small, look at the size of the CD in the picture) form factor desktop computer with an appealing design. It has a good assortment of connections for a computer of this size (5 USB, FireWire, Gigabit Ethernet, DVI, HDMI, S/PDIF, card reader, line-in, speakers-out and headphone-out) but it’s not very powerful (up to Intel Core 2 Duo T8100 at 2,1 GHz, 4 GB RAM and 320 GB hard disk drive; graphics card is an Intel GMA 3100 that can’t be upgraded). Anyway, its performance should be enough for the most common needs and can be configured with BD drive.

Dell Studio Hybrid costs from 449 € with the base configuration (Celeron processor, 1 GB  RAM and 160 GB hard disk), pero under Windows Vista I recommend the first preconfigured option (Pentium Dual Core with 2 GB RAM), costing 549 €.

Watch Dell‘s site for your country, It’s likely to be available later today or tomorrow.

Update: it’s already available at dell.com, and PC Magazine has already published a review.

Laptop Reviews: Dell Studio 15 and 17, HP Pavilion tx2500z

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

This week the new Dell Studio 15 and Dell Studio 17 have catched most of the reviews:

Dell Studio 17: specs, pricing and reviews (US and UK)

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Dell Studio 17

In addition to the Dell Studio 15, the new Studio series from Dell has a 17″ laptop, the Dell Studio 17, that is also available at Dell (US site; UK site).

Configuration options: these are the available options at the moment:

  • Processor: US: Intel Core 2 Duo T5750 up to T9300; UK: Intel Pentium Dual Core T2390 up to T9500.
  • Memory: 2, 3 or 4 GB RAM (667 MHz).
  • Hard disk drive: US: 160 to 640 GB (5400 rpm only); UK: 160 to 320 GB or 160 GB at 7200 rpm.
  • Graphics card: ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3650 (256 MB); Intel X3100 also available in the UK.
  • Monitor: 17″ at 1440×900 or 1920×1200; 1440×900 with LED backlight also available.
  • Optical drive: slot-loading; DVD-burner or BD-ROM/DVD-burner combo.

Pricing: US: from 999 USD; a better configuration (T8100, 4 GB, 320 GB, ATI 3650) costs 1324 USD; adding the WUXGA screen and BD-ROM drive brings the price up to 1674 USD. UK: from 469 £; a better configuration (the same as above) costs 689 £, and the proposed full-HD configuration costs 949 £.

Reviews: PC Magazine.

Found in: Notebook Review.

Dell Studio 15: specs, pricing and reviews (US and UK)

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Dell Studio 15

It seems that the laptop leaked as Dell Inspiron 1535 belongs in fact to a new series of laptops, and its name is Dell Studio 15. Studio laptops combine the style and quality of XPS series and the options and pricing of Inspirons, conforming a very interesting line that is already available at Dell (US site; UK site).

Configuration options: these are the available options at the moment:

  • Processor: US: Intel Core 2 Duo T5750 up to T9300; UK: up to T9500.
  • Memory: 2, 3 or 4 GB RAM (667 MHz).
  • Hard disk drive: US: 160 to 320 GB (5400 rpm) or 200 GB at 7200 rpm; UK: 250 to 320 GB (5400 rpm only)
  • Graphics card: ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3450 (256 MB); Intel X3100 also available in the US.
  • Monitor: 15.4″ at 1280×800, or 1440×900 (LED); 1920×1200 also available in the US.
  • Optical drive: slot-loading; DVD-burner or BD-ROM/DVD-burner combo.

Pricing: US: from 799 USD; a better configuration (T8100, 4 GB, 320 GB, ATI 3450) costs 1224 USD. UK: from 479 £; a better configuration (the same as above) costs 628 £.

Reviews: PC Magazine, CNETNotebookcheck, Notebook Review, Notebook Review, optimitza.

Found in: Notebook Review.