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Showing posts with label Inspiron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiron. Show all posts

Dell Inspiron 14 (7437)

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Pros Almost 9 hours of battery life. Speedy. 1080p HD screen. 10-point touch display.

Cons Pricey. Bouncy screen. Only two USB 3.0 ports. Keyboard backlighting is fuzzy. Bottom Line The Dell Inspiron 14 (7437) is a midrange ultrabook that delivers almost nine hours of battery life and speedy performance. But it's a bit pricey compared with the competition, and it suffers from some minor design flaws.

By Joel Santo Domingo

The Dell Inspiron 14 (7437) ($1,049.99 as tested) is an attractive midrange ultrabook, fashioned of aluminum for a bit of premium bling. It also has excellent battery life and performed well on our benchmark tests. It's an attention-grabbing choice for mainstream users who want premium ultrabook looks, but need to save a few bucks. However, a few issues—a bouncy screen, fuzzy backlighting on the keyboard, and the price—hold this system back.

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Design and Features
The Inspiron 14 (7437) comes in a bright, silver-colored aluminum chassis with a black bezel around the touch screen. Silver keys on its backlit keyboard give it a monochromatic look. The key feel is satisfactory, but the backlit silver letters on the silver keyboard wash out in a normally lit room, making it harder to see the keys. Black keys with white lettering, like those on the Acer Aspire V7-482PG-6629, our Editors' Choice for midrange ultrabooks, and the Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (2013) , are much easier to see in a wider variety of lighting conditions.

The 14-inch, 10-point touch screen is bright and has a 1,920-by-1,080 resolution, which matches that of the Acer V7-482PG-6629's display. This is sufficient for most users, even spreadsheet ninjas and people who do light to moderate photo editing. The touch screen and touchpad are both equally responsive, giving you more options for interacting with your laptop. This is an improvement over similarly priced non-touch-screen-equipped laptops like the Acer TravelMate TMP645-MG-9419. If there's any drawback to the screen, it's that it bounces back and forth a bit when in use. The V70482PG-6629's touch display is significantly more stable.

The chassis measures about 9.5 by 14.75 by 0.6 inches (HWD). Despite its slim profile, there is still room for two drives: a 32GB mSATA cache solid-state drive (SSD) and a 500GB, 5,400rpm SATA hard drive for storage. The SSD helps the system boot in about 10 seconds and to come back from sleep even faster, but overall performance on our benchmark tests still can't match that of an ultrabook that uses SSD only (more on that below).

Dell Inspiron 14 (7437)

At 4.12 pounds, it's a little heavy compared with the 3.2-pound HP Spectre 13T-3000, and the thin chassis limits which connectors Dell can include. There's a headset jack, an HDMI port, and an SD card reader, but only two USB 3.0 ports. You'll fill one of the two ports if you need to use a USB-to-Ethernet adapter (not included). Wireless connectivity comes via 802.11a/b/g/n dual band Wi-Fi with WiDi support and Bluetooth 4.0.

Dell left plenty of free hard drive space on the system. Sure, you'll find Amazon, Dell Shop, eBay, Kindle, McAfee LiveSafe (a 12-month subscription), Microsoft Office Trial, and Pocket Cloud on the Start screen, but that's a fairly light load for a consumer-oriented laptop. Dell ships the Inspiron 14 (7437) with a 1-year warranty and 90 days of premium phone support.

Performance
Dell Inspiron 14 (7437) You'd expect good performance from an ultrabook with an Intel Core i7-4500U processor, 8GB of memory, and the 32GB SSD+500GB hard drive combo. The nice surprise is that a system thus equipped would also get almost nine hours of battery life.

The 32GB SSD cache helped the Inspiron 14 (7437) garner 4,631 points on the PCMark 7 test, which measures day-to-day performance. This puts it within striking range of the SSD-only-equipped HP 13T-3000 (4,836) and Gigabyte U24T-CF1 (4,992). The Core i7 processor also helped the Dell ultrabook do well on the Handbrake (1:17) and Adobe Photoshop CS6 (4:24) multimedia benchmark tests. It was faster than the Gigabyte U24T-CF1, though the Acer TMP645-MG-9419 was the leader on the multimedia tests (0:46 on Handbrake; 2:53 on CS6). The Core i5-equipped Acer V7-482PG-6629 lagged behind by a few seconds on each test, but is otherwise competitive.

Performance on the 3D tests was unimpressive, which is typical for systems with integrated graphics. The Inspiron 14 (7437) returned mediocre scores on Aliens vs. Predator (16 frames per second at medium quality; 5fps at max quality), which is only slightly better than the HP Spectre (13fps at medium; 5fps at max). Casual gamers will want the discrete Nvidia GeForce GT 750M graphics in the Acer V7-482PG-6629, which boosts the performance to playable levels at medium quality (39fps), although maximum quality still looks like a slideshow (11fps).

The Inspiron 14 (7437) scored 8 hours 51 minutes on our battery rundown test. This is astonishing, considering that it comes with a powerful (read: battery draining) Core i7 processor and 1080p HD screen. The system's 58-watt battery is responsible for its endurance. The HP 13T-3000 only managed a handful more minutes (8:58) with its slower Intel Core i5 processor, and the other Windows 8 systems also lagged behind. The Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch (2013) is still the undisputed leader on the test at 11:26.

The Dell Inspiron 14 (7437) offers premium looks at a midrange price, and its performance—particularly its battery life—shows that it's a solid system. Unfortunately, the screen bounce is a definite drawback for a touch-screen laptop, particularly with a list price higher than $1,000. The HP Spectre 13T-3000 offers better connectivity, a lighter aluminum chassis, and a list price that's $50 lower. The Acer Aspire V7-482PG-6629 remains our Editors' Choice for midrange ultrabooks, thanks to its better balance of features, functionality, and price, not to mention its discrete graphics chipset, which aids in gaming performance.


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Dell Inspiron 15 (7537)

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Pros Large touch screen. Numeric keypad. Full set of I/O ports. 16GB of memory. Speedy boot time.

Cons Flimsy screen hinge. Keyboard takes time to master. No 5GHz Wi-Fi. Bottom Line The touch-screen Dell Inspiron 15 (7537) ultrabook is aimed at power users who absolutely need premium components for heavy multitasking.

By Joel Santo Domingo

The Dell Inspiron 15 (7537) ($1,149 as tested) is a high-end ultrabook with a premium aluminum and glass construction. It's worth considering if you need discrete graphics for multimedia creation or moderate gameplay. While it is a solid power user's system, it doesn't do enough to distinguish itself from the pack.

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Design and Features
The Inspiron 15 (7537) is made of aluminum and Corning Gorilla Glass NBT, which makes for a very slim 15.6-inch laptop. At 0.9 by 15 by 10 inches (HWD), the system is similar in size to rivals like the Acer Aspire V5-573PG-9610 and Asus N550JV-DB72T. At 5.61 pounds, it's slightly lighter than the 5.68-pound Asus system. However, the Acer V5-573PG-9610 is noticeably lighter (4.85 pounds).

I/O ports are plentiful, including an Ethernet port, an HDMI port, a headset jack, an SD card reader, and four USB 3.0 ports. For wireless connectivity you get 802.11 b/g/n 2.4GHz (not 5GHz) Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0. 

The display has a 1,920-by-1,080 resolution, which means you'll be able to view 1080p videos natively, as well as edit high-resolution photos easily. That's much better than the 1,366-by-768 resolution of the Asus N550JV, but pales in comparison to our premium ultrabook Editors' Choice, the Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus, which packs a 3,200-by-1,800 QuadHD+ resolution screen into a 13.3-inch laptop. The Inspiron 15's screen is very thin, thanks to the aluminum and Gorilla Glass construction, but it isn't as solid-feeling as the Samsung Book 9 Plus or the Acer Aspire V7-582P-6673. A bit of screen bounce can be a drag if you're a constant touch-screen user.

While the numeric keypad is a plus, itsDell Inspiron 15 (7537)
inclusion means that some keys like the Enter and Backspace are a shorter and more cramped than on a standard laptop keyboard. I often found myself hitting the Number Lock key instead of Backspace, and the 4 key on the keypad when I meant to press Enter. It's not insurmountable, but takes some getting used to.

Our review unit shipped with a 1TB hard drive with 8GB cache solid-state drive (SSD). The supplementary cache SSD helps the system boot up in a quick 14 to 15 seconds, and come out from sleep even faster. The hard drive has plenty of free space, since there are few preloaded apps. I like the fact that Dell includes a one-year subscription to McAfee's LiveSafe Internet security suite with the system. This matches the one-year warranty on the laptop.

Performance
Dell Inspiron 15 (7537) The 1.8GHz Intel Core i7-4500U processor, 16GB of memory, and 8GB cache SSD helped overall performance in our tests. The Inspiron 15's score of 4,133 points on PCMark 7 was better than most of its rivals, but still lagged behind the HP Envy TouchSmark 15t-j100 Quad Edition (5,521 points), which has a faster-clocked Intel Core i7-4700MQ processor. The Gigabyte U24T-CF1, which has a similar CPU and GPU, came in second with 4,992 points, and the Samsung Book 9 Plus and its slower 1.6GHz Core i5-4200U placed third (4,907 points).

Thanks to its Nvidia GeForce GT 750M discrete graphics, the Inspiron 15 performed well on our 3D gaming tests, showing playable scores at medium quality settings (45 frames per second at Aliens vs. Predator; 39fps at Heaven). The Gigabyte U24T-CF1 was a smidge better than the Inpiron 15 (7537) on the Heaven test at both medium (44fps) and max (33fps) quality settings. That's because the Gigabyte system's native display resolution is 1,366 by 768, which is far easier to process than the 1,920-by-1,080 resolution of the Inspiron 15's screen.

At 6 hours 12 minutes on our rundown test, battery life is good, almost matching the Gigabyte U24T-CF1 (6:19). The Acer V5-573PG-9610 (7:17), Acer 573PG-9610 (9:17), and the Samsung Book 9 Plus (8:15) all lasted longer, however.

The Dell Inspiron 15 (7537) is the equivalent of a utility player in baseball. It's solid, and will work well, but it doesn't quite distinguish itself in the crowd. Sure, it plays games better than rivals, but if that's important to you, there are plenty of faster gaming laptops to choose from. With its flashy aluminum exterior, you might expect The Inspiron 15 to stand out on battery life, performance, and weight, but it just doesn't. The Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus remains our high-end ultrabook Editors' Choice, due to its QuadHD+ screen, speedier SSD-only configuration, and more stable screen hinge.


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