A Farewell to the Dell XPS 14

Sandy Bridge isn’t the only game in town, of course, so we’ve got a few other items to cover. After the discussion of Sandy Bridge on the previous page, we also want to take this chance to talk about what will likely be our last Arrandale laptops. First up we have the Dell XPS 14 L401x, the “little brother” of the XPS trio announced last October. In terms of specs, the L401x is virtually identical to the L501x, only in a smaller chassis.

Our test unit came with the same i5-460M CPU, GT 420M graphics, and 56Wh battery. Visually, the three XPS laptops are all the same: rounded corners with a silver matte finish, and aluminum palm rests. The design works well enough, though we tend to prefer cleaner lines. However, some of the extra features offered in the XPS 15 were enough that it garnered our Gold Editors’ Choice award—specifically, we liked the combination of a high quality 1080p LCD upgrade, Optimus Technology graphics, and excellent audio. We mentioned in December that the 1080p upgrade had disappeared from the Dell website, but we’re happy to report that the display upgrade is once more back in stock. (You can find it under the “Colors” configuration area—it’s now priced at $195 instead of $130, but the base price has dropped to $799 as opposed to $899 so the final cost with the 1080p display is now under $1000.)

We mention the things we liked about the XPS 15 as a jumping off point for the XPS 14, because unfortunately it loses most of the best features. The L401x still comes (rather, came) with JBL speakers and WAVES Maxx Audio, but without the subwoofer it lacks the bass punch of the larger models. There’s no LCD upgrade available either, and the standard 1366x768 display is just as poor as the other LCDs we’ve lambasted during the previous couple of years. Finally, the smaller chassis apparently doesn’t have enough space for USB3.0 support, so that feature goes missing as well. Smaller isn’t always better, and putting the same components into a more cramped space also resulted in generally higher temperatures and noise levels—we’d certainly be concerned about upgrading the L401x to the quad-core Clarksfield processors!

There were some good aspects to the design, though. For instance, idle battery life improved 16% and Internet battery life went up 35%. (We noted in the L501x review that our Internet test did quite poorly, and it appears the L401x doesn’t suffer the same fate.) H.264 playback remains nearly the same at just under three hours. For gaming, the 768p resolution is also a better fit for the GT 420M GPU—1080p is simply too much for anything but low detail settings on most games without a faster GPU. The final benefit of course is the size and weight. Personally, 14” laptops are one of my favorite form factors in terms of combining a smaller size with a comfortable keyboard, reasonable display size, and battery life/portability. If the XPS 14 had offered a 1440x900 quality LCD upgrade, it would have been nearly “perfect” for mainstream use.

Ultimately, I’m not surprised to see the XPS 14 disappear. It wasn’t a bad laptop design, but there was very little on tap that you couldn’t already find in the Inspiron 14R. The main change is that you got NVIDIA Optimus in place of either Intel IGP or ATI HD 550v (a lower clocked and renamed HD 4650). The XPS keyboard also offered backlighting and the palm rest is aluminum rather than plastic. If you configure similar performance, the XPS price premium is fairly reasonable: $899 for the XPS 14 we have compared to $809 for the Inspiron 14R with an i5-460M, 4GB RAM, HD 550v, and 500GB HDD. That’s worth $90, certainly, but it still feels like it waters down the XPS (“Xtreme Performance System” back in the day) brand.

Anyway, we’ve added results from the XPS L401x to Mobile Bench as well. Combined with the updated NVIDIA 266.58 drivers, graphics performance is actually up relative to the L501x in most games, and you can see how the two models compare. Like the notebook on the previous page, the L401x came with a Western Digital Black HDD instead of the ubiquitous Seagate 7200.4 that was in the L501x we tested, so PCMark scores are up as well. However, CPU performance was down slightly in Cinebench and x264 encoding, and temperatures were up. It looks as though the smaller chassis couldn’t cope with the heat as well, and the result is that Intel’s Turbo Boost isn’t able to run quite as fast in CPU intensive benchmarks.

We expect Dell to come out with Sandy Bridge XPS laptops sometime in the next two or three months, but we’ve been told not to expect an XPS 14 update. That’s a shame, as we still think it could be a great form factor. Imagine a high quality 14” LCD with better performance and thermals—sort of like the Dell XPS equivalent of the MacBook Pro 13. That’s what we’d really like to see Dell do with the XPS brand: look at the Apple MacBook line here. The MacBook has basic features and performance at a reduced price; move up to the MacBook Pro 13 and you get essentially the same performance, but you add the unibody chassis and a much nicer LCD. In fact, every laptop in the MacBook Pro lineup has a good contrast LCD with reasonable color accuracy and a nearly ideal (for sRGB work) color gamut. So ditch the rounded corners, improve the build quality even more, and make every XPS laptop come with a quality LCD; then we’d have a brand that we could point to and say, “Sure, it costs more, but at least you get quality for your dollar.” Reusing the base Inspiron chassis just doesn’t seem like a great idea for a “performance” brand.

Which brings up another laptop: HP’s Envy 14. Long heralded as a great combination of price, performance, build quality, and features, users were asking for a review of the Envy 14 for a long time. HP never did manage to get us one, but one of our readers was kind enough to let us borrow his Envy 14—complete with the 1600x900 Radiance display upgrade!—to run it through our tests. At this stage, it’s too late in the game for a full review of the Envy 14, and like the XPS 14, the Radiance LCD is no longer available. However, with this mobile update already in the works we have a perfect chance for a rundown of the Envy 14. I’ll turn this over to Vivek, since he was the one to actually lay hands on the fabled laptop.

Why Sandy Bridge Matters for Notebooks HP’s Envy 14: An LCD That Was Too Good to Last?
Comments Locked

49 Comments

View All Comments

  • JarredWalton - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    There's a lot of licensed technology in most GPUs, and most of that exists on the half-nodes right now. Back in the 90nm and 65nm days it didn't really matter, but when TSMC went to 55nm and then 40nm a lot of the companies doing design work on various modules went that route rather than sticking with the CPU nodes. So it's not just a quick and dirty process shrink, but the end result could be very interesting.
  • DanNeely - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    That didn't answer my question about what is different between half and full nodes that makes it more than just a process shrink?
  • JarredWalton - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    Sorry... AFAIK, nothing is different, other than extra work involved porting IP from 40nm (ATI's current target) to 32nm.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, February 8, 2011 - link

    In that case, why are you expecting amd to move everything to half node processes?
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, February 8, 2011 - link

    Because when everything else moves to 28nm, AMD would have their IP on 32nm; then next will be 20nm and 22nm. In my talks with AMD and GlobalFoundries at CES, they didn't outright state that they would move over, but right now the only ones really doing things on the "full nodes" are AMD and Intel. If you want to get in on the smartphone and tablet stuff -- or other SoC designs -- it makes it far easier to be able to license chunks of the design from others.
  • Soleron2 - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    "Anand guessed at a Q3/Q4 2011 launch for desktop Bulldozer, which means Bulldozer might not join the mobile party until Q4’11 or perhaps even 2012."

    Desktop Bulldozer is Q2 '11 according to AMD, officially. John Fruehe has confirmed this multiple times. Server Bulldozer is Q3 '11.
  • JarredWalton - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    I clarified the text... high-end desktop will be first, but it's basically the server chip. I think the "mainstream" desktop stuff will come later, so basically we're getting Athlon FX equivalent first, then Opteron, and then regular Athlon (to draw parallels with the K8 rollout).
  • icrf - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    "multithreaded tasks like video encoding and 3D rendering generally need more floating-point performance"

    My understanding is video encoding is very integer intensive, or at least any DCT-based ones. I'm told x264 spends most of its time in integer SIMD, so I'm not sure standard integer cores matter much, as the vector hardware is where everything is happening.
  • JarredWalton - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    I believe video encoding apps have been optimized to use a lot of SSE code, which means even if they're doing INT work in SSE, it still uses the FP/SSE registers. Anyway, without hardware we really just can't say for sure how Bulldozer will perform -- or what sort of power it will require. I'm guessing it will be competitive with Sandy Bridge on some things, faster in pure INT workloads, and slower in FP/SSE. But for mobility, I think it might use a lot more power than most notebooks can provide. We'll see in a few months.
  • SteelCity1981 - Monday, February 7, 2011 - link

    Clock speed also makes a diff seeing has the i7-2630QM is 270mhz faster than the i7-720QM.

    Anantech should underclock a i7-2630QM to match a i7-720QM clock speed in one of its test to see how much faster the i7-2630QM is clock for clock.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now