Dell M6500 General Performance

Futuremark PCMark Vantage

Futuremark PCMark05

Video Encoding - x264

Video Encoding - x264

3D Rendering - CINEBENCH R10

3D Rendering - CINEBENCH R10

Futuremark Peacekeeper

Application performance is what we expect from the Core i7-920XM in the M6500. The Clevo W870CU uses the same CPU and scores similarly, which illustrates again the point that the hardware is only part of the equation with computers (and notebooks in particular). The design is at least as important, and the W870CU feels flimsy and cheap compared to the M6500. PCMark makes the M6500 look very slow, but the SSD in the W870CU (or lack thereof in the M6500) is the culprit; substitute an SSD into the M6500 and you'll see scores equal to the W870CU.

Heavily threaded tasks like video editing and 3D rendering will fly on the M6500, particularly if you have the high-end CPU and GPU options. As stated, you can't get a more powerful mobile CPU or GPU at present. It appears the M6500 lags slightly behind the Clevo W870CU in several of the application tests, but part of that likely comes from differences in memory (4x1GB vs. 2x2GB), plus we expect Dell plays it safe with M6500 optimizations—stability is far more important than being a few percent faster.

As a mobile workstation, heavily threaded applications are the tasks that we expect most owners will be interested in running—along with CAD/CAM and other similar applications. For those users, turn the page for SPECviewperf 10 and SPECapc LightWave results for the M6500 and W870CU. The M6500 should do particularly well in the workstation oriented SPECviewperf test.

Testing Overview Dell M6500 Workstation Performance
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  • Nick-932 - Saturday, August 21, 2010 - link

    Have you seen one in real life next to an Apple...Because all apples look like wimpsy flimsy notebooks comparing to an M6500.

    Additionally, they do not even have any spec similar as the M6500, even 8 months after their initial release.
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    ...but that 'thing' above the keyboard...????

    Didnt read the review actually as it's too expensive for me. So if what ever that thing is is explained as crucial then I apologise.
  • strikeback03 - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    I read the review and still don't know. I was expecting an explanation of what the thing that looks like it was attached with a blob of caulk is on a laptop they think looks good.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    I guess you guys are referring to the FIPS fingerprint scanner? It's not "attached by a blob of caulk"... though I suppose the images don't quite convey what it actually looks like. Here's a better shot, if you didn't look at the gallery:

    http://images.anandtech.com/galleries/605/dell-pre...">http://images.anandtech.com/galleries/605/dell-pre...

    It's an optional extra for security; rather than swiping your finger, you place it on that scanner. It's supposed to be more accurate than the swipe scanners.
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    So why does it look bolted on?

    Lenovo manage to make a decent looking fingerprint scanner.

    This thing is a mess. In fact the more I look at this laptop the more crap it looks.

    Looks like a rough prototype.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    Perhaps it looks better in person. The scanner is flush with the rest of the chassis, and about the only complaint I'd have with it is that the scanner has a gray border. Trust me, the chassis as a whole feels rock solid. I don't think it's the most awesome looking laptop ever created, but the LCD does look great and it's nice to see a large notebook I wouldn't be embarrassed about using in a business setting.

    Since you dislike the look of this notebook so much, what do you think makes for an attractive notebook? And please don't say MacBook Pro... they're fine, but you simply can't fit quad-core i7 with a Quadro FX 3800M into anything that thin. I'm actually quite impressed that the M6500 is "only" 1.3" thick!
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    lol, no I wouldnt say a MacBook pro.

    However, I do find it baffling why manufacturers struggle to come up with something asthetically pleasing.

    I do believe less is more, though it would be hard to design a laptop on that principle that wouldnt infringe on the mac design. They have reduced a design to it's near minimum.

    I like the general look of my Inspiron 13Z though the 8 cell battery pack spoils the lines. It does mean however I can go 8 hours+ without power. The glossy plastics are also a big no-no.

    If Dell just improved the build quality of say their Studio line with better/tougher plastics then that would go a long way.

  • DukeN - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    Would truly have appreciated a Lenovo W5XX comparison here, or even a T500. TIA.
  • hko45 - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - link

    Another reason to get this is the E-Port Plus docking (for all mobile Precision and most Latitudes -- I haven't seen anything comparable from anyone else). It allows the connection of two DVI or DisplayPort displays. That's what I use for my M6400 when I run PhotoShop & Lightroom. This should take care of any color issues. I would only use it as my first edit pass for my photos when on the road anyway. I'm definitely going to get an M6500 as soon as funds permit.
  • geekforhire - Wednesday, March 10, 2010 - link


    I received my Precision M6500 about a week ago, and in general I'm very happy.

    Mine has the i7 Q720 processor, 64GB SSD, CD/DVD burner, 1440x900 RGBLED display, Intel 5300AGN Wifi card, 4GB memory, and Windows 7 Pro.

    My previous notebook computer was 15.4" Dell Inspiron 8600, which I also designed, and served me well for 5.5 years. It failed about 6 months ago with a motherboard problem that would be expensive to replace - about as much as a netbook. At the time, I didn't want to spend alot of money on a replacement computer, so I got a netbook: Asus S101. It's a nice little (little!!!) machine, came with a Window XP Home on a 16GB SSD (note: they are now shipping with a 32GB SSD, which is actually livable, where the 16GB is definitely /not/ and later upgraded to 64GB). It does alot of things very well, but I eventually came to the conclusion that this was not enough computer for me. And if it failed I'd have to ship the computer away to the manufacturer for service - which would put me out of service for about 2+ weeks. So I bit the bullet, and got another real computer.


    Loves:

    Performance is excellent. This is safely the fastest notebook I've ever had the pleasure to work with - ever.

    The display is excellent, displaying everything including movies with great sharpness, color quality, and contrast.

    The keyboard has good touch, and the back-lighting is a nice touch that really should be included with every notebook.

    Someone gave good though to the internal airflow, which allows the machine to be quiet and be effective even when resting on my lap with a comforter.

    The SSD is giving snappy performance, but it's actual available physical C: size is 58.7GB, and there is the risk that the performance will decline over time (trim capability is unknown yet).

    Fastest wifi performance I've ever measured: downloaded iTunes yesterday and the Network tab on the Task Manager showed an average 10.5% utilization with frequent peaks of 11.75% of a 54mbps wifi connection (I have a 7mbps DSL line to the internet with a high performance wifi router, but the Apple servers deserve some credit too).

    The sound fidelity coming from the speakers is extremely good, especially for a notebook. Playing the movie "The Transporter" (music by Stanley Clarke), there were several very interesting sound positioning effect that many other speakers just won't present quite as well.

    The built in webcam and array microphone work well. I'm having lots of great conversations with my daughter via Skype, who's on a 2 month trip in Ireland. Visual detail is good, and room echo of what I'm sending is low to non-existent.

    I'm a believer in the Dell 4 year high end extended service warranty, and include it in all of the notebook computers that I design, because notebooks are subject to physical insults that desktop computers are not, and Dell will overnight ship replacement parts. Want to rent a great notebook computer for the price of a new great computer, here are 2 realistic human threats that tend to produce total loss: Dropping, and Liquid Spills.

    Overall build quality is good. But it kind of better be with a machine this heavy, or else simple motions like lifting it from the front corner is going to cause the chassis to quickly split.

    There are oodles of practical connectors and adapters built in, and I really like the slot-load CD/DVD drive.


    Peeves:

    The battery life seems to last about 2 hours, not the 3-4 hours I was designing for (I attribute this to the lowest end display card, which is much stronger and much higher power consuming than I wanted). I've played with the various power options and I've been able to improve the duration from the 1.5H that I seemed to first be getting when I received the machine, but I think 2.5H is going to be the wall.

    The touch pad is left of where it should be. It's centered under the keyboard, rather than in the physical center of the computer, causing an awkward right hand "lunge" across to 1.5" left of where I naturally expect it to be. But I can recalibrate.

    This machine and power brick are large and heavy, and are well served by backpack transport rather than something with just a single handle.

    The low level light performance of the webcam in a dimly lit restaurant is fair, producing brownish grainy images. (reminder that the human eye has such an amazingly good sharpness even with wide variations of available light, that even modern DSLR technology comes no where near what the human eye can do so easily that we take that capability for granted.)

    The machine was shipped about 3 weeks later than the original estimate. Note that this longer-than-expected actual ship date has happened with all other 17" Precision notebook computers that I've designed in the past.

    Not sure yet about the 64 bit OS. There have been 1-2 weird freezing issues which I suspect the 32 bit OS may not experience; there is a compatibility issue with printing from a 64 bit machine to a printer attached to a 32 bit machine, but the effective work around is to print directly to the network attached printer. But having 4GB of available memory with a 64 bit OS is nicer than having 3GB of actually available memory on the same machine with a 32 bit OS. So the jury is still out on whether to reinstall with the 32 bit OS, or stick with the 64 bit OS.


    In a nutshell, I can see myself growing old with this woman.


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