System Performance

When we reviewed the XPS 13 2-in-1 back in November, it was the first device we had tested which featured the new 10 nm Intel Ice Lake platform. At that time, Dell had also recently refreshed the XPS 13, but had outfitted it with the older 14 nm Comet Lake platform. For the all-new XPS 13, Dell has now brought parity to their lineup with Ice Lake here as well, with the improvements that platform brings, especially to the graphics side.

Dell offers three processor options. The least-expensive offering is the Core i3-1005G1, the mid-tier outfitted with the Core i5-1035G1, and the top-tier offering the Core i7-1065G7. Our review unit features the Core i7 model, as Dell wanted to put its best foot forward.

On the memory side, Dell’s spec sheet shows a 4 GB base, although thankfully that is nowhere to be found on their Dell.com site, at least for the USA. Thanks to the move to LPDDR4X with Ice Lake, Dell now offers up to 32 GB of memory on the XPS 13. Storage is all PCIe x4 NVMe, with 256 GB as the base, and a 2 TB maximum.

To see how the XPS 13 performs, we have run it through our newly updated laptop suite. Please not that if a graph does not contain a specific older device, that means that the test has not been run on it. Since the laptops are returned to the manufacturer after review, we cannot do any regression testing for the most part. If you’d like to compare the XPS 13 to any other laptop we have tested, please refer to our Online Bench.

PCMark

PCMark 10 - Essentials

PCMark 10 - Productivity

PCMark 10 - Digital Content Creation

PCMark 10 - Overall

UL’s PCMark 10 is a whole-system benchmark, testing everything from CPU performance to app loading time. The Overall score consists of three categories, each featuring their own unique sub-tests. Overall the XPS 13 scored right in the same ballpark as other Ice Lake notebooks, although was slightly down in the Productivity tests, but slightly ahead in the other two.

Cinebench

Cinebench R20 - Single-Threaded Benchmark

Cinebench R20 - Multi-Threaded Benchmark

Cinebench, based on Maxon’s Cinema 4D rendering, allows tests of both single-threaded and multi-threaded runs, making it one of the more popular tests for overall computational performance. The XPS 13 does well compared to other Ice Lake equipped notebooks, although with AMD offering up to 8 cores in the same 15-Watt TDP, Intel falls behind in the multi-threaded run.

Handbrake

Handbrake Transcoding (Software)

Handbrake Transcoding (Hardware)

In our Handbrake encoding test, we transcode a 1080p movie to 720p using both software and hardware encoders. Software encoders utilize the CPU, and are generally the preferred method for optimal quality, whereas hardware encoders leverage the media blocks, which in this case is Intel’s QuickSync, for a much faster encode. As we will see more in the thermals section, Dell limits the XPS 13 to a 15-Watt TDP even in its maximum performance mode, where some other manufacturers will allow for higher than listed TDP, up to 20 Watts or so, and as such, the XPS 13 falls a bit behind other Ice Lake notebooks in this test which is TDP limited.

7-Zip

7-Zip Compression

7-Zip Decompression

The popular file compression and decompression tool 7-Zip includes a built-in benchmark, and once again the XPS 13 slots right into where other Ice Lake notebooks fit.

Web Tests

Web performance is a function of not only the CPU performance, but also the browser’s scripting engine, and as such we have standardized on the Microsoft Edge browser. Microsoft has now transitioned their browser to the open-source Chromium project. Due to this, we have reset our web tests to use the new Chromium based Edge and taken the opportunity to decommission some of the older tests. We will now focus on Speedometer 2.0 and WebXPRT 3.

Speedometer 2.0

WebXPRT 3

The XPS 13 again slots right in where you would expect for an i7-1065G7 based system.

Storage Performance

Dell offers from 256 GB to 2 TB of PCIe storage, and the review unit was outfitted with the Intel 600p 512 GB drive. We are transitioning to the PCMark 10 storage benchmark, which uses test traces of actual common workloads, such as booting Windows, and many of the Adobe applications, and as such should be a much better indicator of drive performance than just maximum transfer rates.

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Bandwidth

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Average Access Time

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Score

The Intel 600p performs quite well, with good access times and solid bandwidth. Surprisingly, it can’t quite match the excellent performance we saw from the SK Hynix 2230 form factor SSD in the Surface Laptop 3, but almost matches it.

Design GPU Performance
Comments Locked

224 Comments

View All Comments

  • eek2121 - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    Looks like a solid laptop.
  • Walkeer - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    except for the buggy, slow and power hungry CPU with very bad GPU
  • TheinsanegamerN - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    So buggy and power hungry that it gets 15 hours of normalized battery life. SOOOO power hungry. The iris GPU is also far mroe powerful then your typical HD 620 GPU.
  • Deicidium369 - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    The AMD Kiddies are getting desperate - they know that AMD's time in the Sun is coming to a close
  • PixyMisa - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    Yes, because AMD will never release any further Zen cores. That's totally what's going to happen.
  • Lord of the Bored - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    It is true. AMD is going bankrupt because of Ryzenfall(remember that?). Intel won't even bother to buy the corpse because it is so worthless. nVidia will actively send a team down to AMD HQ to piss on their front door after they lay everyone off.
    ...
    The only part of that I genuinely believe is that nVidia would send a team to AMD HQ to urinate on their porch.
  • Spunjji - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    It's quite funny seeing Deicidium finally admit that AMD have indeed had a time in the sun right as he's proclaiming it to be over.

    It's a binary flip from "their products are all rubbish" to "they're soon going to be losing to an unreleased product". You are the worst kind of zealot.
  • Korguz - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    its not funny, its down right sad
  • sonny73n - Saturday, July 18, 2020 - link

    It is funny because my dog has more common sense than deicidium does.
  • Spunjji - Monday, July 20, 2020 - link

    He's not lacking in sense - he knows exactly what he's doing. It takes some nous to be that specific about which facts you discuss and how you frame them. A real idiot would just shut up after a while...

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now