General System Performance

Winstones 2004 and the PCMark products provide a reasonable look at overall system performance (minus games). Honestly, any modern dual core system is basically "fast enough" when it comes to these tasks. Anyone looking to buy an XPS system would have to be interested in gaming, or at least some more graphics intensive applications, or else they would be far better off ditching the high-powered graphics chip. Still, let's see how the systems compare.

System Performance - WinStones 2004


System Performance - WinStones 2004


System Performance - Futuremark


System Performance - Futuremark


Encoding Performance - AutoGK 1.96


Encoding Performance - AutoGK 1.96


The M1710 delivers an impressive start, basically winning five of the six tests. The only benchmark that it doesn't win is Business Winstones, where it finishes last place. That particular test has very little that will take advantage of multiple processors, and of all the tests we'll run today, it represents applications that are most dependent on user input. PCMark05 has the M1710 in the middle of the pack, but the faster graphics cards of the desktop systems are the only thing keeping it from a first-place finish.

Test Setup Synthetic Gaming Performance
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  • timmiser - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Quieter than my Inspiron XPS version 1.
  • Bluestealth - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Do they turn off, because that would just get annoying...
  • timmiser - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Yes. You can change the color and intensity of the lights plus configure the 3 light positions: Speakers/air vents/XPS lid, seperately.

    The lights are controlled in the BIOS and also in an included Dell windows utility.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Yes, all the lights can be disabled within the BIOS.
  • Patrese - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Great review, I found the addition of the game tests with sound quite good, just as the inclusion of reference desktop systems for comparison. And the laptop is just awesome...

    Not that I have the money to buy one of these (not even close, to be honest), but I got curious about the battery life on uses likes web/office. I wonder if the energy saving features can take it a bit closer to the "normal" laptops on that kind of use, since in gaming the 7900GTX certainly needs a lot of juice. And how hot does it get under gaming?
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    I'll be getting a copy of MobileMark shortly, but I didn't have it in time for the first part. There are quite a few other things I'm going to try to cover in part 2, like potentially turning down GPU performance for longer battery life. Maximum temperatures are warm but not hot - older P4M laptops are all substantially hotter, and even some PM laptops get warmer. The larger size does help with cooling, I would imagine.
  • One43637 - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    i feel sorry for the person that tries to game with that thing on his/her lap. battery life on that thing must be horrendous. good thing it's billed as a DTR.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    The system gets warm, but not uncomfortably so (for me). I will get some specific numbers for part 2.
  • plewis00 - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    Who games with a laptop actually on their lap? You need a decent mouse anyway and that means a table surely?
  • Rock Hydra - Tuesday, April 18, 2006 - link

    I sit on the couch with my Dell 110L in my lap and use the couch cushion next to me as my mousing surface and play games.

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