Screen Quality

The screen is unfortunately one of the places where HP's TouchSmart 610 made the right investment while Dell sacrificed quality for the price point. I've honestly never been happy with TN panels this large on the desktop; viewing angles are oftentimes poor and it can be difficult to find a sweet spot. Unfortunately the design of the Inspiron One 2320 exacerbates things; by being slightly tilted back, the top of the screen washes out a bit. Viewing a TN panel from below is pretty much the worst way to look at it, and that wisdom applies here.

LCD Quality - Contrast

LCD Quality - White

LCD Quality - Black

LCD Quality - Color Accuracy

LCD Quality - Color Gamut

The color gamut is good, but everything else about the Inspiron One's panel is just awful. These numbers would be unacceptable in a standalone panel, and would rank "slightly above average" at best as a notebook screen. Our color accuracy after calibration was particularly bizarre, suggesting the gamma in this panel is unusual as that much of a deviation is extremely rare on even the worst of screens. In practice the Inspiron One seems to trend towards a slightly reddish hue, and it suffers from the same kind of hot reds that I'm used to seeing on Dell screens.

Viewing angles are wider than a notebook's, but really the poor quality TN panel used in the Inspiron One makes the composite, HDMI, and antenna inputs on the back of the unit feel more like a convenience at best. I get the feeling Dell was gunning for something that could be used as a TV and more, but it seems most end users would be better served just going out and buying a separate television.

Gaming Performance User Experience, Heat, and Power Consumption
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  • tipoo - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    "more than adequate for even the most basic use."

    Doesn't really make sense.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    No, not really; I've corrected the sentence.
  • Roland00Address - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    i7 2630qm Recommended Customer Price $378
    i5 2400s Recommended Customer Price $184 - $195

    That is a difference of a $150 dollars, or in other words a lot of profit.
  • cknobman - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    Dell has always made overpriced under-powered machines usually accompanied with godawful ugly designs.
  • melgross - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    At least they're consistent.
  • melgross - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    You really are intelligent. Great response! I suppose you are a Dell customer for life.
  • terraformer - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    My father has been through 3 of these very machines, and each one has suffered extreme heat issues that fried the HD. Dell has been accommodating, but read any user reviews around the 'net and see a majority of owners experiencing the same problems. Dell rushed this out the door without addressing the clear cooling problem that these systems have. I still see ads for these all over the place.

    So I talked my father into buying my one-year old 27" iMac, and walked him through the differences in terms of UI. He is thrilled with it now, loves how fast it starts, how it can largely run itself (e.g., updates).

    And I bought a new iMac, spec'd it out pretty highly and, dear kind Sir above, it plays games beautifully and flawlessly. This avid FPS gamer (since Quake days) finds this machine plenty good enough for gaming. And I can run BF3 at ultra settings - turning off AA and a few other things - at native resolution at just above 30 fps. And that is fine with me.
  • dirtboy12 - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    We bought many of these (around 300) for a school district and have seen at least 1/3 of them have their hard drives just die. One poor teacher has been through 4 hard drives on the same machine, but Dell keeps thinking that the solution is to put another one in. What was that quote about insanity?
  • dave_the_nerd - Thursday, November 17, 2011 - link

    Insanity is the mother of invention?
  • OwnedKThxBye - Saturday, November 19, 2011 - link

    Every time I read a review of a consumer/non-enthusiast laptop or all-in-one it seems like such a high value is placed on the screen quality. I sometimes wonder if people understand that these devices are used predominately by people who for the most part don't know what the word resolution means, let alone the differences between a TN and IPS panel. These machines are not aimed at the tech savvy power users, but the kind of people who tell me "everything on this screen looks too small. Is there a way I can make it larger?". A better quality screen with larger resolution isn't going to help them check Facebook and emails any better. In some cases high resolution can even seem like a disadvantage for those with bad eye sight. These kind of people are not going to choose to spend even $40 more on a better quality screen, however they might choose to spend the $40 if it made the screen larger. Customers have never told me they wish they could upgrade the screen on their all-in-one or laptop to a better quality one.

    This is a Dell Inspiron all-in-one that me and you are not going to go out and buy for numerous reasons. I'm reading this review on a 30" HP and have a 24" on either side of it. I will pay the extra for a better quality screen every time, but I know the kind of customers that make up the target audience for this device will not. If the customer chooses to love it and buy it or hate it and not buy it, either way not much if any of their decision will be based on the screen quality.

    Love the review Dustin

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