Dell Studio 14z Application Performance

You can read about our testing setup and the other laptops used in our previous MSI X610 review. The Studio 14z is more expensive than the Gateway NV52 and NV58, MSI X610, and pretty much any netbook out there. However, it has more in common with such laptops than it does with higher performance notebooks so we will compare the 14z with those systems. Here's the tested configuration of the Studio 14z.

Dell Studio 14z Test System
Processor Intel Core 2 Duo P8600
(2.40GHz, 45nm, 3MB shared L2, 1066FSB)
Memory 1GB Onboard plus
1x2048MB Hyundai PC3-8500 @ DDR3-1066 7-7-7-20
(Hyundai Electronics HMT125S6BFR8C-G7)
Graphics Integrated GeForce 9400M
Driver version 179.62
16 SPs; 450/1100 Core/Shader Clocks
Display 14.0" Glossy LED Backlit WXGA (1366x768)
Seiko Epson D229J 140AT
Hard Drive WD Scorpio Blue 320GB 5400RPM 8MB
(WD3200BEVT-75ZCT)
Optical Drive N/A
Battery 8-Cell 14.8V, 4.84Ah, 71.63Wh
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit
Price Price as configured: $1019 (with $159 instant rebate)

We will start our performance comparison with general application testing, including PCMark, CINEBENCH, and video encoding tests. As usual, we will include detailed PCMark05/PCMark Vantage results where applicable so you can see the individual test scores.

Futuremark PCMark05

Futuremark PCMark Vantage

3D Rendering - CINEBENCH R10

3D Rendering - CINEBENCH R10

Video Encoding - DivX

Video Encoding - x264

Video Encoding - x264



And what should come as no surprise, the Dell Studio 14z places at the top of all of our application benchmarks. Our test system includes a Core 2 Duo P8600, which is faster than any of the other laptop processors. That alone is enough to account for the above charts. Obviously, the 14z isn't going to be able to compete with faster notebooks in terms of raw performance, but it doesn't need to. It provides plenty of performance and as we will see shortly, it still offers good battery life and you get a lightweight chassis.

Dell Studio 14z Overview Dell Studio 14z Gaming and Graphics Performance
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  • beastyben1 - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    the speakers are the best I've had in a laptop. very loud and clear.
  • BPB - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    Got this a few months ago for my daughter and we have been VERY happy with it. I believe we went with an 8400 CPU, and I do think as mentioned they were offering higher than the 8600 option mentioned in the article. My daughter got her's in pink, by the way. I guess they got rid of that color option. We went with the higher res screen and backlit keyboard. Again, very, very happy with it.
  • beastyben1 - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    I've owned this laptop since August.

    Everything is perfect, except the worst touchpad drivers I have ever used. Sticks, freezes just terrible. Must use a mouse. Otherwise I love it. T6500, 8-cell, 1600X900 LED.
  • FATCamaro - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    How do you people accept this kind of junk. I'm glad I switched to Mac once I started buying laptops.
  • The0ne - Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - link

    Your single interpretation of defect means absolutely nothing in regards to the quality of the laptop. Having said that why in the world you any one of you start a "mine is better than yours" or "Mac is better than Windows PC" debate? It's pointless and childish.

    You're going to have to face that fact that there is NO SINGLE product made without defects. There is no Quality system that will give your 100%, and no TPS doesn't either.

    But you all know this and yet lower yourself to this type of discussion. I wouldn't mind so much if this was in other tech sites but I don't like it on Anandtech where there are typically very knowledgeable and respectful users.

    And lastly I'm 100% sure none of you voicing your opinion is not even in the industry or manufacturing/logistic to know what you're saying other than Google-ing. Trust me when I say this, there are no perfect product. What you call junk isn't junk and what you hail as the mightiest is not either. All you can do is try to Google, or what I call it research, as much as you can and hope that what you paid for isn't in one of the bad ones made.
  • Eagle17 - Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - link

    I have a macbook pro with the santa rosa chips. I have frequent problems with it. I am on my third battery (at $130 ea) the backlit keyboard does not always light up anymore, only 2 usb slots, a funky not always works hold two fingers and press the button for right clicks. The OS is so/so I would be just as happy with linux since there are not many native macos applications that I find usefull.

    the unit is all aluminum which at first glance makes it seem very sturdy however in the three years i have owned it the lid has started to stick and requires more force to open. And like most modern laptops it does get blistering hot.. the metal case just makes that worse.

    The led backlit screen is very good though. that is the one thing i really like about this device. maybe the only thing.
  • JimmyJimmington - Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - link

    "And like most modern laptops it does get blistering hot.. the metal case just makes that worse."

    I don't know what you mean by "most modern laptops." If a laptop is too hard to put on your lap then it's poorly designed.
  • Eagle17 - Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - link

    sorry I mean the last few C2D laptops I have had (2 hp 8xxx series, the macbook pro, and a lenovo t500) they all get pretty hot althought the macbook is the worst.

    both of my atom based netbooks are just fine though. (acer 9in and asus 1005ha)
  • Pirks - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    Junk? My Alineware notebook pwns any MacBook Pro and dances on its unicorpse, including the top of the line MBP 17, because it has faster hardware. The Alienware's trackpad is shitty, you're right on that, PC trackpads are mostly shit these days compared to Macs but my Alienware still plays all my games REAL fast while MBP craaawls slooowly given same resolution and detail settings... so to each his own. When MBP starts playing games as fast as my Alienware then I may think about it, but it'll never happen, alas. At least not with Jobs at helm.
  • beastyben1 - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    like Macs are not subject to faults? I'd much rather have this. my .02.

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