Monday 25 July 2011

Laptop Bargains - Dell Adamo 13

New Price: £1500 / Mar 2009
Price Now: £450 / July 2011


Screen:      13.3" 1366x768 LED (Glossy / glass)
CPU:         Core 2 Duo ULV 1.2GHz
RAM:         2Gb DDR3 1066
GFX:          GS4500
HDD:         128Gb Samsung SSD (with TRIM support)
OS:           Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
K/B:          Backlit (auto brightness sensor)
Batt:          5 hours web browsing
Ports:        3x USB 2.0 / eSATA / Display Port
Network:    802.11 b,g,n wi-fi / Bluetooth 2.1 / Ethernet (10/100)
Size:         331x241x16.5mm
Weight:     1.75Kg


As I explained in my first post, looking for a 'thin & light' notebook on a big budget shattered my hope for perfection at a price. When spending upwards of £1000 I'd hoped to be able to hand pick every feature but instead I grew more disappointed with each model I examined. Stepping the budget down to below £500 (same criteria) I expected too much compromise but I was wrong! This was the second bargain that I just couldn't resist:  The Dell Adamo 13.


Unlike the other notebook bargain that I recently bought (the Alienware M11x) the Adamo doesn't sacrifice thickness for graphics punch and battery longevity, this thing is all about 'thin' but also manages quite a bit of 'tough' and 'cool' as well (style & heat :).

The Adamo was clearly made to compete with the first generation Macbook Air. It may not be a clone by design but it screams competition in many ways. The solid aluminium frame with no openings, the backlit keyboard with ambient light sensor, the basic front, the SSD etc. One thing they emulated a little too well was Apple's high prices, the Adamo was actually priced higher than the equivalent Macbook at the time. Cost, a rather lowly CPU and no dedicated GPU were probably the main reasons why this was not a huge success. At £1500 it was just too hard to swallow but at £450 (Save On laptops) however it's a different matter! Its two and a half years old now but think about what  that buys you now... A tablet (Asus Transformer / iPad 2)... A high end netbook (Asus Lamborgini VX6 / Lenovo X100e). These are great machines but I can't help thinking that they feel like toys compared to the Adamo. This feels like a serious machine for creating, not just play. The solid aluminium chassis, extremely good, backlit keyboard and a 128Gb SSD drive just feel special.

Comparisons
OK time to be silly... If you read my first post you would have seen that I came from using a behemoth of a laptop before getting this. A nearly 10 year old 15" Dell Inspiron from 2002 weighing nearly 4Kg and measuring 45mm thick. Perfect for some extreme comparisons to the new stealth notebook. I should point out that the old Inspiron 8200 isn't just a paper weight, its still working and has served my wife and I well (apart from the batteries - which I could fix if I really wanted to). OK on with the comparisons...


Side by side with the old 8200 there is a wealth of difference everywhere you look. Although the screen size has dropped by 2 inches it's actually wider than the 15" 4:3 ratio Inspiron. The Keys on the Adamo are actually bigger than those of my Logitech desktop unit! The keyboard backlight has several levels of brightness and is automatically controlled by an ambient light sensor which works well and also controls the screen brightness. The keyboard is extremely comfortable to type on and the touch pad feels equally nice although very sensitive I found the precision rewarding after a bit of practice.


OK not a comparison but check this out... No it's not a Dell mouse mat. This is the bottom of the Laptop. It's true that not being able to get in to the battery, RAM and Hard Drive is a down side. It looks damn pretty but it just feels wrong for Windows PC components to be so inaccessible. I'm sure this was more necessity than design, I can't imagine modular components being used in here. The RAM and SSD are probably welded to the motherboard and the battery squeezed in to every available nook. This is the down sides of being so thin and surrounded by such a strong metal frame, it's forgiveable at this price although upwards of £500 and I would probably feel differently.

All this aluminium makes it feel very tough, you can happily pick it up from the very corner without fear of flexing or stress. The screen is the same (build / materials), something not true of the Sony Vaio Z. This does however make it a very heavy machine! 1.75Kg might not sound too much and on your lap it's not but when you pick it up there is no denying that the weight is a shock.


I knew this would be a contrast: 45mm vs 16.5mm. The Entire thickness of the Adamo is about the same as the lid of the Inspiron. Although its even slightly thinner than the Macbook Air if you've held both you will know that's a technicality. The Macbook Air is lighter (1.35Kg vs 1.75Kg) and has less volume because of it's sloped sides. The Air feels thinner than the Adamo even if it's not on paper.

The thickness of the Adamo is also very similar to the new Sony Vaio Z. Yes the Sony has more battery life, weighs less than a 10" netbook (1.1Kg) while retaining a 13" (Full HD) screen and powered by a (non ULV) Sandybridge core i7 with 8GB of RAM! The Vaio Z is a marvel of micro engineering! It's the Bugatti Veyron of the notebook world and it costs accordingly. That said the Sony doesn't quite have the Adamo's tough aluminium frame and for the price of the cheapest Vaio Z you can buy 3 Dell Adamos with about £100 to spare.


Here's a nice bit of history, connections of 10 years ago vs modern ones (not much has changed since the Adamo was new). It's pretty crazy to see the size and general horror of the old connections that we used to use. Oddly, and interestingly for this comparisons sake both machines concentrate their ports to the back. Today most have their ports on the sides for ease of access and that mostly makes a lot of sense so why are these different? Well the old Inspiron had things like a CD drive, modem port and expansion around the side. The new Dell only has design as an excuse.


I am not sure quite what to think about the Adamo's choice of port location here. On one hand it does look pretty fantastic to keep them away from the front and even looks good how they're arranged on the back. Most connections these days (internet, network, mouse) can all be controlled wirelessly so is it that bad keeping all the ports out of the way? There is however the possibility that you might want to plug in a USB memory stick. This can be rather annoying unless you get used to where the ports are by feel, otherwise you will turning the machine around all the time. Since the build is so strong and the HDD not prone to shakes and knocks you find you don't need to be so careful when moving it around, just try not to forget if you have something big plugged in the back.


Despite being less than 17mm thick almost half of that is taken up by the screen. This might seem like a waste but having aluminium behind the screen as well is a nice touch. Another is the screen coating in the form of 'edge to edge' glass. This makes the whole laptop easily cleaned with a single cloth (no special cleaning fluid required). Hey what do you know, it comes with one, how nice right? Well I probably should have mentioned how much of a finger print magnet the front of the lid is. It does look very pretty with it's blend of materials but only when it's clean, otherwise it will probably drive you crazy (this machine needs to be sexy!).

Software
OK down to the important stuff. How does software perform on this thing? The processing power on offer here is a better than a netbook or tablet (at the moment) but it does have to cope with full fat Windows 7, no cut down starter edition here. The 2Gb of RAM on offer here is just about enough. Although 4Gb would have been nice it's plenty enough to cope with as much browsing, emailing, chatting and word processing as you can throw at it. Even several of each and all at the same time.

Disclaimer
These components are never going to support any kind of modern graphically intensive game, lets be clear. Unless used with some very old games or some kind of 'On Live' system they are just out of the question on this machine. As is any other 3D software, this should be pretty obvious but I should probably say it.

Trick Up the Sleeve
What makes this rather outdated / mediocre specification much, much more palatable is it's solid state drive (SSD). This makes almost every operation you do feel a lot faster than any CPU or RAM upgrade possibly could. As I said before it boots in to Windows 7 fully in just over 30 seconds but all applications get a similar boost. Photo editing was very responsive, actually the main reason I bought this (apart from browsing) is editing photos while travelling and so far I have been very impressed!

Notes about Solid State Drives
SSDs are great but one of the annoying down sides is that they can slow down over time if subjected to heavy use (filling it up, not accessing it a lot). A technology was added to newer SSDs to combat this called 'TRIM command'. Only Windows 7 and OS X Lion currently support TRIM and unfortunately the original Adamo only came with Vista. This version however comes with Windows 7 and what's more, although SSD in the Adamo is one of the older ones it does support TRIM... Bonus!

Battery Life
Although it uses a low voltage components the size of the battery is equally subtle. You can find notebooks running this hardware that can last upwards of 10 hours on a charge but they will not be as thin or as well built as the Adamo. Under light use, the screen at about half power (which is plenty indoors) and the wifi on the battery life is a good 4+ hours. With the wifi off and screen on low it could be nearly 6 hours but how much fun would that be? Heavy use (photo editing, video etc.) sees the life drop to 3 hours or less. It's not bad but I can see people taking issue with this when that's the only battery you have. although it's also true that a bigger battery (even if it could have been squeezed in) would have increased the weight further, something I don't think many could live with.

Pros:
  • Beautiful Design
  • Amazingly thin
  • Strong Aluminium frame
  • Backlit Keyboard (with ambient light sensor)
  • A Proper SSD (with TRIM)
  • Decent battery life (this could be a con if you are picky)
  • Price (not the original one)
Cons:
  • Components not easily accessed (although I have heard of people replacing the battery)
  • Front of the lid is a fingerprint magnet (petty issue)
  • Ports are all on the back (could also be a good thing)
  • Keyboard flexes a little (but is the best I have ever used!)
  • A little on the heavy side 
Summary
I must say that all of the cons are pretty insignificant at £450.

I have had this notebook for nearly two weeks now and I am thoroughly impressed with it. I bought in to it knowing it was not the fastest thing in the world but for what I use it for it's perfectly good enough. For such a thin, well made and durable machine I am constantly amazed at how much you can get it for. It may not be available for very long at this price so if you are interested you probably better make up your mind quick and I cannot recommend it enough. As of finishing off this review they have 13 left in stock (update: now only 6!).

    Laptop Bargains - Alienware M11x r1

    New Price: £900 / Jan 2010
    Price Now: £450 / July 2011


    Specification:
    Screen:      11.6" 1366x768 LED (Glossy / glass)
    CPU:         Core 2 Duo ULV 1.3GHz (factory overclockable to 1.7GHz)
    RAM:         2Gb DDR3 1066 (2x1GB upgradable to 2x4Gb)
    GFX:          Nvidia 335M (1Gb dedicated memory)
    HDD:         250Gb 7200rpm
    OS:           Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
    K/B:          Backlit (configurable to 30 colours / 2 levels / 4 other zones)
    Batt:          8 hours web browsing / 3 hours gaming
    Ports:        3x USB 2.0 / Mini Firewire / VGA / HDMI / Display Port / SD / Sim
    Network:   802.11 b,g,n wi-fi / Bluetooth 2.1 / Ethernet (10/100)
    Size:         285x233x32.7mm
    Weight:     1.99Kg


    As I explained in my first post, looking for a 'thin & light' notebook on a big budget shattered my hope for perfection at a price. When spending upwards of £1000 I'd hoped to be able to hand pick every feature but instead I grew more disappointed with each model I examined. Stepping the budget down to below £500 (same criteria) I expected too much compromise but I was wrong! This was the first bargain that I just couldn't resist: The Alienware M11x r1


    When the M11x first came out I remember being really interested in it. A laptop the size of a magazine (although not in thickness of course) that can last 8 hours on a battery or play almost any game, that's just stunning! This 'Custom PC' magazine is the newer / smaller type, slightly smaller than A4 and it's nearly identical to the footprint of this gaming laptop. There was nothing else like it when it was new, 2 revisions and nearly 2 years on it still has little or no competition. The base price when new was £900, as great as it was I had fears that it would be uncomfortable to use and I ended up ignoring it. I then found Dell discounting this original version to just £450. For little more than a netbook I could have a thoroughly capable portable graphics machine with 8 hours of battery life, a backlit keyboard, fast (7200rpm) hard drive, decent speakers, VGA / HDMI / Display Port outputs. I was still a little worried that the small screen and keys could be an issue but at this price I was willing to give it a try.

    Comparisons
    OK time to be silly... If you read my first post you would have seen that I came from using a behemoth of a laptop before getting this. A nearly 10 year old 15" Dell Inspiron from 2002 weighing nearly 4Kg and measuring 45mm thick. Perfect for some extreme comparisons to the new stealth notebook. I should point out that the old Inspiron 8200 isn't just a paper weight, its still working and has served my wife and I well (apart from the batteries - which I could fix if I really wanted to). OK on with the comparisons...


    I must say that side by side the difference is not as massive as I would expect considering the specifications. The keys don't look a lot different, although they do feel smaller during use. The bigger issue is really the spacing between them, a chiclet style, with bigger spaces in between would have been nice but never mind. At least they glow in the dark (and in any colour no less). That leads me to my first rant: backlit keyboards are a feature still commonly (and annoying) missing from a lot of new laptops, even high end ones like the Portege models (sorry to pick on you Toshiba). In the sub £500 market you just wont find it so discounted older models like this are the only way to go if you value this feature and are on that budget. Having used 2 laptops with backlit keyboard now I would never buy one without it again because I often use it in dim lighting and cannot properly touch type.


    This shows the scale difference a little better. It still doesn't look as different as I would have expected although it's worth noting that the Inspiron 8200 is a 4:3 ratio screen whereas the M11x (and every other laptop today accept Apple perhaps) is 16:9. Personally I think 16:10 is the best but that's just me and again at this price I wont make a big thing about it.


    Last but not least the side shots: I would not call the M11x a thin machine @ >32mm but for what it is I think they have done a very good job. Most of the M11x's weight and thickness comes down to the discrete graphics card and the massive battery. They don't make laptops like the Dell Inspiron 8200 any more, you would really struggle to find something as thick or heavy these days. What is not uncommon however is plastic laptops with bad designs and lots of panels. Walk in to any PC World at look through the ones they have on display. I found that many of them look pretty shocking, in a market where you really need to be noticed to succeed it's amazing how many manufacturers just don't seem to care.

    Build
    What the M11x does give you is a really sturdy smooth metal shell with good access for upgrades and nicely arranged ports.Two headphone sockets so you can share what you are listening to is brilliant! Having an HDMI and a Display Port is a really nice touch, especially good for me with a 30" Dell Monitor! Personally I would lose the VGA but I know some people complain about the lack of a modem *rolls eyes*.



    The single access port underneath daunted me a little at first but after upgrading the RAM to a single 4Gb stick (you can have 2x4Gb max) for £28 from Crucial I really like this design. It has retention clips on the screws so you don't lose any of them, there are no stickers on anything to tell you it's evil to upgrade stuff yourself and everything is very easy to get at. All of what you see here is a very solid metal!


    Battery
    You can remove/replace the battery but you have to take off the entire bottom panel to do it and that's 8 screws, not the end of the world when it lasts so long on a charge. One nice feature is the ability to check the battery's charge without having to turn it on. There is a small button on the bottom of the laptop with 5 small dots next to it (middle left of the above image). Pressing the button will light up the dots so you can tell weather it's near 20, 40, 60, 80 or 100% charge.


    Heat
    The above image also shows my one big gripe with this machine. The two groupings of holes at the front of the underneath are where the hard drive and RAM are kept. Because the holes get covered when using it on your lap it gets pretty warm during light use here. It's ok if you leave it on a desk but I think it would have been nicer to put some porting in the front and sides to get some airflow going right through the machine here. Do some slightly more heavy tasks (still not gaming though) and the machine heats up a bit more, it then starts the GPU cooler (top right) and it happily kicks out cold air while the rest of the machine gets hotter. Saying all that it does take about an hour to start getting toasty during browsing so this would not put me off recommending it, well not for £450 but I hope they addressed this in the newer models.

    Backup
    Ok back to the good stuff but first for a problem... Thin laptops with no DVD drives are becoming pretty popular these days, I certainly don't miss an optical drive but it does present a problem if you need to re-install your Operating System. Most manufacturers put a DVD for this very purpose in the box without a word of how annoying it would be to re-install it. I am probably one of the few people who actually have an external DVD drive but I still find it annoying. This could easily be remedied by having your factory reset installer on a USB stick, this is totally possible and easy too but it doesn't happen because Microsoft is very scared of Piracy related to distributing software like this. Personally I think they are stupid for not embracing USB installs, after all Apple have just done it with their new Lion OS so come on M$.


    Anyway the good thing is that Alienware machines come with a bit of software (Alien Respawn)  that lets you put your factory reset re-installs on to a USB stick. All you need is a stick of at least 8Gb, I just bought 2 Sandisc Cruzer Blade USB sticks on Play.com for £14 inc. postage! Reliable, small, fast enough and I even have a redundancy if anything goes wrong with one. Brilliant! Thanks Dell, I hope you do that for all of your machines.


    I am mostly going to use this as a machine for internet browsing, the size for travelling is a huge plus for me because I want to be able to edit photos anywhere. Photoshop performs incredibly well with the Nvidia GPU on! HD movies run brilliantly too (seen here at max brightness in the sun). Heck I can even play Crysis in a field it I want to, I love it!! :).

    I'm afraid that since I bought this it has now disappeared from the Dell website. However I do see one on Amazon for £500 that already has 4Gb of RAM and a bigger HDD so if you really want one all is not lost.

    Sunday 24 July 2011

    Laptop Lust

        Magic
    I have always found laptops fascinating. When I got my first proper PC back in 1999 for university I was fascinated by them too but they made a lot more sense to me, big modular boxes with lots of components, lots of room for them to breath, all hooked up to a huge monitor and a minimum of a mouse and a keyboard (wires everywhere). Laptops on the other hand have been almost as powerful as their large scale siblings, everything you need in one device and a battery so you can play with them anywhere you want. Magic!

        The First
    My first laptop was bought in 2005 when I moved to Amsterdam but unfortunately was anything but magical. It was my only computer at the time, I had the idea of 'travelling light' between England and the Netherlands but it ended up never actually coming with me on the plane because it was still too big and heavy. In my greed I bought a 17" desktop replacement with a very capable graphics card. I tried getting one from 'Rock Direct' and 'Mesh' who both guaranteed they would be able to make one up for me before I had to move out of the country but they are both a bunch of lying scum bags who just wanted my money, needless to say I will never deal either of them again! Actually I think Mesh are history now *grins with delight*, I wonder if it had anything to do with the way they were told to blatantly lie to their customers... hmm. Anyway the one I ended up getting at a shop in Amsterdam was just wrong for me. It was too big, hot and heavy for a start. It was also not very comfortable to use and had terrible battery life. It sent me flying back to desktop PCs so hard that I didn't think about laptops again until I moved back to England in 2009. I really wanted a 2nd computer, mostly for my wife, something either of us could use anywhere in the house. I wanted another laptop but i could not afford one, which is where this beast comes in to the story.


        The Beast
    This is a Dell Inspiron 8200. It was my brother's and dates back to 2002. He's since moved on to a newer Dell as well as a netbook for portability so he kindly donated the trusty old Inspiron to us. OK so its 44mm thick, weighs nearly 4Kg, lasts about 2 minutes on battery, has a big card sticking out the side for wi-fi (g) and a hard drive smaller than my micro SD card but I have to say... we love it! It's reliable, the CPU and RAM are ok enough to slowly run Photoshop on Windows XP Pro, the screen is a brilliant non-glossy 1440x900 and the keys are nice. I hope laptops of today last as well as this has, after nearly 10 years it's still providing us some productivity. In human years of evolution this thing is about 20 million years old!

        Aspirations
    As much as I love this old Dell I also love new shiny gadgets and their evolution so inevitably I have been looking to replace the Inspiron 8200 with something a bit smaller. Something that I could travel with, something that could last a decent amount of time on it's battery and yet have some power when needed. I thought this would be tough so I started looking at the best equipment money could buy. Here are some that I nearly bought but couldn't quite live with because they weren't perfect for their rather huge asking prices...
    • HP Envy 14
    • Sony Vaio S
    • Samsung X3a
    • Lenovo X1
    • Macbook Air
    • Sony Vaio Z
    • Toshiba Portege 830
        What's Wrong with Perfection?
    What's wrong with this high spec portables you ask? Well the first 2 suffer from very lacklustre screens. The HP used ot have a very nice one called a 'radiance' display but dropped it for some reason and turned a well rounded machine in to a heavy paper weight where almost any other laptop is preferable, very poor show HP! Sony 'S' series displays are plane bad, even if you upgrade them to the higher 1600x900 resolution. they are mind numbingly dull and even have bad viewing angles when they are not glossy, damn Sony I didn't know that was possible with LED but you managed it, another well rounded spec utterly destroyed by a terrible screen! What killed most of these machines for me was ultimately the price but on top of taking away a dedicated graphics card while not giving back much in the way of battery life (Samsung / Lenovo). The Macbook Air and Toshiba disappeared from my list for not including a backlit keyboard, something that Apple has since fixed but was inexcusable to lose in the first place. Sony Vaio Z is pretty perfect, I almost went for this but the price again stopped me. It's not that I don't think it's worth it, I think Sony have done a great job with the new Z, I love the idea of the external graphics as an option when backed up by the HD3000 of the Intel chip and the amazing job they have done with the size and weight... Simply stunning, I just couldn't afford it.

        The Good Bit
    I had made peace with the fact that I couldn't have the Sony for quite a while but I soon started looking in to Laptops again. This time for my father who wanted a similar specifications to me (thin, light, good battery life, powerful enough for a bit of photo editing) but on a much smaller budget to the one I had previously been looking at. My first thoughts were "you'll be lucky, I can't find what I want for twice the price" but I soon started to find things that were very interesting. Some of these deals are slightly older machines trying to get sold off and some are new ones fighting for attention in the ever growing 'thin & light' category. If you can live without the ability to play games you can pretty much name your budget and get something that covers all of the classic criteria. For a little over £300 you can get a thin 13" machine with an 8 hour battery life and a nice keyboard. Go up to £450 and things really start to become interesting! I found two machines at this level so good that I had to buy them both. Why did I buy two laptops when I couldn't afford one? Well firstly the one was a Sony Vaio Z which starts at over £1400. For this price I could get three very interesting laptops and have enough left over to buy a mouse or two. So now my wife and I both have a new laptop to use and carry around. Here are the details for the two bargains that I found...


    • Alienware M11x - £450

    An 11.6" LED / glass screen, fast hard drive, switchable dedicated graphics card (capable of playing almost any game), a backlit keyboard (configurable to any colour). 64bit full Windows 7 machine weighing 2Kg with up to8 hours of battery.

    • Dell Adamo 13 - £450

    A 13.3" edge to edge glass LED screen, 128GB SSD drive (boots in 30 seconds), solid aluminium chassis (behind the monitor as well), 18mm thick, ambient light sensor for screen and backlit keyboard. 64bit full Windows 7 machine weighing 1.75Kg with up to 5 hours of battery.

    Both of these computers were a lot more expensive when they were new, The Adamo was £1500 and the M11x was £900. I thought that deals like this would be hard to find (unfortunately the Alienware deal has already ended) but there seem to be lots more where that came from, some full price machines almost as interesting:

    • Lenovo X100e (£326)
    • Asus UL30a (370)
    • Acer Timeline X 3820TZ (£380)
    • HP ProBook 4320s (£300)
    • Lenovo Ideapad Z370 (£436)

    My wife and I have now been using these brilliant little machines for over a week now. For more images and a full review of each of them stay tuned, I will post them soon. For now here is another shot of my lovely benchmark Inspiron machine from 2002 that I will use to compare to the two new baby laptops after the break, watch this space...



    Hello

    Hi Everyone,

    I am starting this blog because I love babbling and ranting about stuff, especially technical stuff. So I decided to write some reviews about gadgets in case it might help others decide whether they are worth spending your hard earned cash on or avoided like a plague ridden rodent.

    I am going to start off with what I am writing this on: Laptops

    Right off I go, I hope you enjoy the ride...