This is certainly true of the Dell Precision M6600 Workstation laptop (acer btp-58a1 battery) which is one of the most powerful laptops that exists today. You can pick one up with a SandyBridge Core i5 processor and 8Gb of 1,333MHz DDR3 RAM (They don’t come with any less than this) for £1,280 ($1,600) and specify the internal components up to a staggering £5,000. The machine I’ve been testing sits at around £3,500.
There’s no scrimping here though. The processor is a Core-i7 running at 2.5GHz; the fastest Dell provide. The memory is standard at 8Gb but this can be expanded up to either 16Gb of 1,600MHz DDR3 or a staggering 32Gb of 1,333MHz DDR3. The twin hard disks inside this machine (you can have up to three including a solid state mini-card) are 250Gb and 750Gb 7,200RPM. The Dell website will allow you to speficy hard disks up to 256Gb SSDs.

Externally the machine is very well specified too with a backlit keyboard (optional but very useful), track pad with three buttons and a seperate nipple with its own three mouse buttons, 2x USB2 ports, 1x eSATA/USB2 combo port, 2x USB3 ports, full HDMI, VGA, Gigabit Ethernet, DVD burner with optional Blu-Ray burner, ExpressCard slot, SD Card reader, seperate microphone and headphone jacks, Firewire, Displayport and an excellent webcam built into the bezel.

The keyboard isn’t a scrabble-tile affair commonly seen elsewhere. It’s a more traditional style and really excellent. The keys are large and well spaced with a large Enter key and full size keys on the numeric pad. The cursor keys are in a sensible place though the left shift key is a little narrow. The keyboard also has controls for the calculator and media playback controls. Above the keyboard are volume and mute buttons.
The Precision M6600 is very upgradeable too. Undo two screws inside the Dell inspiron 1420 battery compartment and the bottom slides off the case to reveal the hard disks, memory and expansion slots all easily accessible and well laid out. It’s extremely neat, tidy and commendable for such an expensive machine. The exterior of the case is positively lovely with an aluminium bronze finish that you just want to stroke and a bright, silver Dell logo on the lid.

There are very few problems with the machine either. The screen is a bit reflective, though it’s very bright and can be used outdoors. Dell studio 1536 battery life is reasonable at 5 hours on very light duties but you’ll struggle to get two hours when pushed, maybe even just 45 minutes if doing demanding encoding work. The charger is a brick and the laptop itself weighs in at a hefty 4.5kg. This is not a machine you’ll be wanting to lug back and forth, nor giving up space in your luggage allowance when going through an airport.
What can I say about the Precision M6600? Well what this machine has in terms of hardware is simply the finest currently available. For the few people who need power of this type there is simply no better machine. Sony and Lenovo make machines of a similar specification though neither is quite as attractive with it.

Build quality is first rate and the M6600 feels extremely solid with no give or flex anywhere in the chassis. An accelerometer works with software on board to protect the hard drives in the event that you drop it. It’s quiet too with just a faint whirr of the fans during general usage, though it can get hot; but you’re unlikely to work with a 4.5kg computer on your lap.
Overall I’d have given the M6600 a full 10 out of 10 for power, flexibility and quality even if this machine wasn’t my own. For workstation grunt in a portable form factor, I genuinely believe you won’t find anything finer.
laptop battery brand have: dell laptop battery, sony laptop battery, Acer laptop battery , Apple laptop battery , Compaq laptop battery , Fujitsu laptop battery , HP laptop battery , IBM & Lenovo laptop battery , Toshiba laptop battery , laptop AC Adapter , hp compaq laptop battery
next blog: Canon 5D Mark II Battery Grips: BG-E6 vs. Third-Party Grips
No comments:
Post a Comment