Dell launches new XPS 15 and 17 laptops, XPS desktop with 13th-gen Intel and Nvidia RTX...

nanoguy

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In brief: Dell's latest XPS hardware refresh looks good on paper but not all configurations will be available at launch, and the price tags are eye-watering. Still, the company's latest productivity-focused laptop and desktop machines pack some powerful specs such as Intel 13th-gen CPUs and Nvidia RTX 40 Series graphics solutions.

Mobile World Congress this year was packed with announcements from major phone manufacturers like Samsung, Xiaomi, Realme, Oppo, Nokia, Motorola, and Huawei spin-off Honor. There's even some renewed enthusiasm for 5G network infrastructure that has seen non-telco companies like Intel, Qualcomm, and AMD showcase their solutions based on software-defined, open standards.

This was also an opportunity for companies like Dell to reveal refreshed laptops and pre-built desktops aimed at professionals and businesses. Most notably, the manufacturer has upgraded the internals of its most popular XPS hardware including the XPS 15 and 17 laptops as well as the XPS desktop.

The new laptops feature similar aesthetics to their predecessors from last year. On one hand, the company pushed the thin and light design to the point where portability and build quality are comparable to or even better than that of MacBooks. On the other, there have been complaints about thermal issues from users who expected better from devices that cost well north of $1,000.

Thankfully, this year's Dell XPS 15 and XPS 17 laptops come with what are supposedly more energy-efficient, 13th-gen Intel Raptor Lake mobile processors and Nvidia RTX 4000 or Intel Arc mobile graphics. Both devices can be configured with either Core i5, i7, or i9 Raptor Lake-H CPUs, 64 gigabytes of DDR5-4800 RAM, and up to an RTX 4070 (or Arc A370M) for the 15-inch model or up to an RTX 4080 for the larger, 17-inch sibling.

The new XPS desktop can be configured with up to an Intel Core i9-13900K CPU, up to 64 gigabytes of DDR5 RAM, and up to an Nvidia RTX 4090 graphics card, though you'll soon have the option to choose an AMD equivalent instead. Otherwise, you get plenty of upgradeability and even liquid cooling, should you want to go that route.

All three devices come with Windows 11 pre-installed, but one thing to note is that not all hardware configurations will be available at launch. Dell is planning to improve availability throughout this spring. Below is a rundown of the specs for the company's 2023 XPS lineup.

  Dell XPS Desktop Dell XPS 15 Dell XPS 17
CPU Core i5-13400, configurable up to Core i9-13900K Core i5-13500H, configurable up to Core i9-13900H Core i5-13500H, configurable up to Core i9-13900H
GPU Up to an Nvidia RTX 4090 or AMD RX 7900 XTX Nvidia RTX 4050, configurable up to an Nvidia RTX 4070 or Intel Arc A370M Nvidia RTX 4050, configurable up to an Nvidia RTX 4080
RAM 2 slots/ Up to 64 GB of DDR5-4800 memory Up to 64 GB of DDR5-4800 memory Up to 64 GB of DDR5-4800 memory
Storage Up to two 4 TB NVMe SSDs and four mechanical hard drives Up to two 4 TB NVMe SSDs Up to two 4 TB NVMe SSDs
Connectivity Seven USB-A ports, two USB-C ports, an SD card reader, Ethernet, 7.1 audio Two USB-C/Thunderbolt 4 ports, an SD card reader, a headphone jack, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2 Four USB-C/Thunderbolt 4 ports, an SD card reader, a headphone jack, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2
Display See here Up to 15.6-inch, 3456×2160 OLED touchscreen Up to 17-inch 3840×2400 LCD touchscreen
Power Up to a 1000-watt PSU 86Wh battery 97Wh battery
Starting Price $2,849 $2,949 $3,399

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At first I was gonna get indignant about the price until I read into it and realized Dell is leading these refreshed models with close to their highest specifications first rather than offering lower lower performance parts first/at the same time. HOWEVER, $3k is still a very, very hard ask. You don't have to copy everything you see Apple getting away with Dell... XD
 
Why don't more thin and light laptops come with AMD CPU's? As far as I was aware or what I took away from most reviews was, AMD's CPU's were substantially more energy efficient and legitimately increased battery life by hours depending on laptop make and model.
 
Why don't more thin and light laptops come with AMD CPU's? As far as I was aware or what I took away from most reviews was, AMD's CPU's were substantially more energy efficient and legitimately increased battery life by hours depending on laptop make and model.
To my knowledge it was issues surrounding thunderbolt until USB4 came around, and with that change now taken place, more of these thin and light laptops (with solely the usb c ports and more often than not thunderbolt so you can get a whole host of ports and keep the USB c ports to a minimum, at least that is what the oem's want)
 
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