Dell Packs Xeon and Quadro GPU In 4lb Laptop (hothardware.com) 75
MojoKid writes: To look at the Dell Precision 15 5510, you wouldn't know that it sits in the middle of Dell's workstation lineup. The laptop is thinner and sleeker than you might expect a workstation-class laptop to be and the premium carbon fiber palm rest gives the system a decidedly high-end vibe. Not to mention, like the XPS 15, Dell equipped this machine with its 4K IGZO Infinity Edge display that has almost no bezel on three of its sides. However, the Precision 15 5510 is actually Dell's mid-range mobile workstation that also supports Intel Xeon E3 processors and NVIDIA's Quadro M1000 series GPUs. It's essentially a mobile workstation version of Dell's XPS 15 line but along with an NVMe PCIe Solid State Drive, delivers professional grade performance and the pro app certifications that go with it. Compared to Lenovo's ThinkPad W550 line, the Precision 15 is a more sleek, stylish machine and in testing it packs more punch as well. Lenovo may already have their Skylake Xeon refresh in the works for the ThinkPad W series, however.
The Disable Advertising Checkbox... (Score:5, Funny)
it seems to be broken!
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Works for me too partially still have taboola at the end of the page and sponsored content.
Takes care of the massive banner ad at the top of the page tho.
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On AdBlock Plus add filters for "api.stacksocial.com" and "cdn.taboola.com" and that junk should be gone, too.
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Re:The Disable Advertising Checkbox... (Score:5, Funny)
Whoosh?
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Total slashvertisement but cool machine (Score:2)
Yeah, the summary is a total slashvertisement, but it actually looks like a cool machine. If you customize the build, you can choose Ubuntu as the OS and save $100 over the Windows price. It also can take up to 32 GiB of Ram, whereas many small laptops now top out at 8 or 16 GiB GiB (that are soldered to the motherboard, of course).
That said, the machine does cost an arm and a leg and has super shitty battery life.
As a developer... (Score:2, Interesting)
As a developer, I want my laptop to have a large, bright screen and shit-tons of battery life so I can do work on a sunny patio instead of the office when it's nice outside. And since I own a backpack, I don't care about weight or how metro I look carrying my electronics. Therefore, I own a Dell Latitude, which can run VS 2015 on a single charge for about 6-8 hours and weighs a lot more than my (used mainly for pentesting) MacBook Pro.
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I also develop, and I wonder how loud the fans are when I have a few VMs running, the GPUs being hammered, and a zbackup process going on in the background to save my home directory files to my NAS. The laptop can support up to 32 gigs of RAM, which is decent. It also can handle a PCIe based SSD, which also is a nice thing to have.
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The P70 is "Starting at 7.56 lbs", so under 4lbs is something special.
no Ethernet in a pro workstation? without an dongl (Score:5, Insightful)
no Ethernet in a pro workstation? without an dongle?
And to block the TB port to use it (I hope it's TB3 but if it's just USB 3.1 then it's dumb next to using an USB 3.0 one)
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The lack of dual 32" monitors is a real dealbreaker for the laptop.
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It's nice to see the media acknowledge that there's something to the laptop market beyond pretty little machines meant primarily to demonstrate how much of other people's money you can squander.
False Positive? (Score:2)
The idea behind Xeons is running dual. Fail.
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In that case it's same cache, same CPU, same everything, the one big difference is ECC is disabled on core i7, enabled on Xeon E3 (funnily ECC is enabled on Pentium, i3 and even the new desktop Celeron)
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- I can play Witcher 3.
What if I told you people did more with their machines than play games?
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It looks like you can opt for a PCIe SSD instead and keep the 6-cell. Still it has the worst battery life amongst its competitors. You sacrifice a lot to fit under 4lbs.
http://hothardware.com/reviews... [hothardware.com]
The Lenovo P70 is a much more worthy competitor if you can handle the double sized weight. Plus it has the 5000M with up to 8gb memory instead of the 1000M and up to 64GB memory.
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The P50 & P70 support 64GB, come with better warranty options (no ownership transfer needed, Atlanta call center for everyone, 5YR onsite NBD) and don't have unsightly curves.
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A bad company, even worse if it's a staffing agency or other benefit-dodger entity.
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I just configured it to 32GB...
It does top out at 32 GiB (Score:2)
I don't see that option.
The 32 GiB option is there. I'm looking at it right now: "32GB, DDR4-2133MHz SDRAM, 2 DIMMS, Non-ECC [add $170.00]"
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I should add, that $170 is the premium over 16 GiB, not over the base 8 GiB (I think).
Damn that Dell premium (Score:2, Insightful)
Look at that price .. $2600 for that. Only Dell fanboys would pay the Dell hardware premium for that overpriced piece of hardware.
Oh, wait
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He's right. Let's hold out for the E7-v3.
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The only real advantage is ECC RAM support for Xeon processors...
And that's not strictly a Xeon thing.
Go to ark.intel.com
Click on any processor family.
Click on Feature Filter.
Clear the "Family" setting. Change "ECC Memory Supported" to "Yes", then click search.
Observe Xeon's, Celeron's, Core i3, i5, and i7's, Pentium's, Quark SoC, and even Atom processors (ex. E3805 from Q4'14).
AMD also has extensive ECC support, but that's almost an entirely different topic.
Now... if someone could tell me what consumer level motherboard I can get for a reasonable cost that'll support EC
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The mobile Xeon's are a relatively new thing, only coming out with Skylake. Before that, any Xeon "laptop" had a regular workstation/server processor crammed into it which is why they were pretty rare (and heavy). Lenovo has their P series out, and my guess is in the next few months there will be some more options to choose from.
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Lacking (Score:2)
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The new Dells (that replace the M4800) use the chicklet keyboards too. I'm going to be complaining to my Dell rep when I speak to her tomorrow :(
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Hot Hardware (Score:2)
Why I'm a ThinkPad guy... yeah. (Score:2)
My Precision machines ran hot, but I blamed that on being about a mile up. Guess I was wrong.
Not a workstation for me (Score:2)
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oh it has buttons they are just under the touchpad, and they are god aweful as you have this enormous thin semi flexible plate teetering over two of the shittiest tactile switches ever made, and they dont even put those in a sane place, its where the buttons normally are with shitty printouts on said plate
its horrid to use
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Is buying a mouse or trackball too expensive for your budget?
No one uses trackpads, but touchpoints are just as hard to use.
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Is buying a mouse or trackball too expensive for your budget?
No, but I am opposed to paying for a shitty pointing device when there exist laptops on the market that have really good pointing devices. Besides, if I buy a laptop and then an additional pointing device to go with it, I then have to find a place to set said additional pointing device when I am using the laptop, which means I likely won't be able to use it on the bus, train, or airplane. The weight and space savings of their design has also just fallen dramatically when the hardware selection is so awfu
no numeric keypad (Score:2)
why do you pile on the workstation crap in a widescreen formfactor and give us a retarded keyboard?
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Look at the 7510, then.
I just purchased the 7710 (17" version) (Score:2)
I haven't finished configuring it. But am excited. I would say this is a pretty high end laptop. And perhaps rivaling and surpassing the XPS line in many ways. On top of the option for Xeon processors and ECC RAM (which I didn't feel I needed - I went with a quad-core and standard RAM), the 17" version of this machine offers the option for RAID5 using NVMe M.2 drives. Note, for this, you need a special interposer connector and caddy. (Mine should arrive this week, and then I hope to have three Samsung Pr
Hackintosh? (Score:1)