Showing posts with label Dell Latitude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dell Latitude. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Dell Latitude E7440: Worth anyone’s business


Achieving better mobility with your notebooks is not only the boon for consumer devices nowadays.

What we are seeing is an influx of thinner offerings with a myriad of features targeted at the business
user.

This is what Dell’s business laptop — the Dell Latitude E7440 — is all about. It takes off from current consumer offerings, such as a thin chassis and an incredible matte 1920×1080 full-HD IPS 14” display, yet provides optimum security features you won’t find in just any other similar offering.

What impressed me first about the E7440 was its silver casing made of materials such as aluminum and magnesium alloy. Before even opening it, the E7440 looked sleek and sturdy — a treat for one to see or touch. It has a thickness of only 2.1 centimeters and weighs just over one and a half kilos, surely not a hassle for people on the go.

Its 1.9Ghz Intel i5-4300U CPU and 256-GB SSD was quite evident in its boot-up speed. In just about ten seconds, I am in my Windows 8.1 main screen, ready to begin my “stress test.” But, as I checked the available applications, none of any of the widely used PC apps were installed. Bummer. So I had to make a trial subscription to Office 365 to get the suite and freeware to continue with the review. Although,
most of the time I simply made do with Internet browsing.

One major setback was that it also did not have a built-in DVD drive, something that’s quite expected of a business laptop. As such, be ready with your portable external hard drive if you want to easily install your office programs or link to the office network or cloud to sync with your business applications.

However, all in all, I had no major problems — except for instances when the system froze and I needed to reboot. Also, logging in was a pain because I opted using my Live.com account to access Windows,  something I don’t recommend. Setting up a username and password from Windows 8 itself would do.

Apart from the usual Windows hang-ups, the E7440 gives the user the inherent mobility it espouses and the performance it touts with its 4GB RAM, allowing the flexibility of handling several complex computer tasks—enhancing images, watching videos online, accessing a hybrid cloud, completing office tasks, updating social media accounts, and even playing an online game (shhh…) at the
side- simultaneously, wherever I am (depending where the broadband signal is faster).

However, it did lag on several occasions, sometimes even at the login screen itself — when I had to wait for a good two minutes before I could type in my credentials. And when it began processing the subsequent requests, it again stalled for a good three minutes before the Windows 8 main screen finally appeared.




The business laptop

A good point for the E7440 is its attractive and vivid display. It boasts of a vibrant color contrast as RGB (reds, greens, blues) register on screen pretty well with incredible clarity and on vertical or horizontal viewing angles. It also offers impressive sound quality with its speakers (located at the bottom of the chassis) producing solid and loud audio levels without any tinge of distortion.

But, the keyboard was a lowdown—as it was too feeble to even follow our fingers’ instructions, flexing at the slightest amount of pressure. This oftentimes becomes irritating when you try to key in multitudes of characters at the shortest time possible, as it forces you to stop and correct what you
type.

In contrast, the touch pad offers an excellent interface to initialize programs with its smooth surface, which allows your fingers to easily traverse it. And, surprisingly, its pointing stick offers a good alternative, offering great accuracy.

Despite the obvious hang-ups, it is still worth paying a steep price for the Dell E7740 as it offers what any business user or traveller will look for in a laptop—easy to use, easy to bring along, and a solid performer they can rely on.

source: interaksyon.com



Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Dell equips latest computer models with powerful specs, cutting-edge design


MANILA, Philippines — Dell has recently launched its newest line of laptops that fall under the Dell Latitude 3000, 5000, and 7000 series.

With the latest mobile computing products, Dell balances “sophisticated design, quality construction, and uncompromised durability to offer businesses of all sizes a wide variety of solutions.”

“These exciting new additions to the Latitude line provide our commercial customers what they’ve been asking for by bringing touch capability to the workspace at desirable price points,” said Christopher Papa, country manager of Dell Philippines.

All the models have touch displays that offer Corning Gorilla Glass NBT for up to 10 times higher scratch resistance compared to soda lime glass, the predominant material used in laptop screens throughout the industry. They also come with StrikeZone shock absorbers, Fast Response Free-Fall sensors, and rubber hard drive isolation for added protection of valuable data.

The Latitude 7000, Dell said, is the most secure and manageable of the Ultrabooks, which they said comes with “exceptional reliability and has mobility at its finest with business-class style.”

With the 12-inch model starting at just 20 millimeters thin and 1.3 kilograms, the Latitude 7000 price starts at P45,000.

While the Latitude 5000 and 3000 series, the computer company said, allows for “easy entry into business-class computing.”




Both series, with a choice of 14-inch and 15.6-inch screen sizes, will be able to address the needs of today’s “dynamic workforce by enabling easy entry into business-class computing,” according to a statement provided.

The Latitude 5000 will be available end of October, while the the 3000, which is already available in the market, has a base price of P26,000.

Worth adding is the 9020, a powerful Intel vPro-enabled All-in-One desktop with touchscreen capability.

Powered by the latest Intel Core i7 processors, it comes with a choice of hard drive, SSD or hybrid drive; high-speed memory options; and optional discrete graphics.

It has a 23” multi-touch display that supports the Windows 8 Interactive experience.

With “form and function being the goal,” this new line is designed to run for content creation, engineering, and other professional software applications.

source: interaksyon.com