Dell XPS 13 review a true answer to the MacBook Air Digital Trends
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(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) PCMark 10
Complete Dell XPS 13 (Core i5-1230U) 1393 / 4,459 333 1379 / 3457 4023 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 2
(Core i7-1280P) 1493 / 8668 126 1575 / 7595 5094 Dell XPS 13 Plus
(Core i7-1280P) 1316 / 8207 127 1311 / 6308 4309 Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) 1417 / 6854 112 1402 / 8682 5647 HP Elite Dragonfly G3 (Core i7-1265U) 1699 / 5936 194 1618 / 5601 4975 The main purpose of nerfing the XPS 13, I assume, is to distinguish the XPS 13 from the Plus model, which uses a more standard 15-watt processor. Less power means less performance – and in this case, it’s actually quite a bit less. This is one of the worst-performing Intel 12th-gen laptops I’ve tested so far. It’s even a bit slower than last year’s 11th-gen model. But with a 9-watt processor that has only two Performance cores, it’s kind of what I’d expected. That might sound horrible, but really, I would argue that last year’s performance is probably enough. You shouldn’t be buying this laptop to edit video all day or play games. Instead, it’s for web browsing, online work, video conferencing, the occasional photo edit or coding project — and this laptop handles all of that just fine. It’s the multi-core performance that suffers the most, after all, and for the most part, those types of applications are just not what a laptop of this type is for. Furthermore, when it comes to choosing the processor for a laptop, it’s not all about performance. Looking beyond the benchmarks, you’ll see a number of advantages that better suit the Dell XPS 13 to compare with a laptop like the M1 MacBook Air.
Dell XPS 13 2022 review a true answer to the MacBook Air
By Luke Larsen October 6, 2022 Share Dell XPS 13 (9315) MSRP $829.00 Score Details DT Recommended Product "The Dell XPS 13 happily trades performance for a healthy dose of affordability and efficiency." Pros Aggressive price Very compact design Great battery life Comfortable keyboard Display is bright and high quality Cons No headphone jack Performance is lacking The beloved Dell XPS 13 of previous years no longer exists. Contents Video reviewDell XPS 13 specsA familiar designRedesigned internalsThe hidden benefits of less powerWhen missing a headphone jack is a problemBuy it but tread lightlyShow 2 more items The popular line of premium laptops is now split between the XPS 13 Plus and the standard XPS 13 – and that’s meant a new approach to distinguishing the two. With the XPS 13 Plus as the more expensive, cutting edge, that leaves the standard XPS 13 as the cheaper offering. The result is a nerfed XPS 13 in terms of performance, but at an extremely affordable starting price of just $829.Video review
Dell XPS 13 specs
Dell XPS 13 (9315) Dimensions 11.63 x 7.85 x 0.55 inches Weight 2.59 pounds Processor Intel Core i5-1230U Intel Core i7-1250U Graphics Intel Xe Graphics RAM Up to 32GB LPDDR5 5200MHz Display 13.4-inch 1920 x 1200 IPS Storage Up to 1TB PCIe SSD Touch Optional Ports 2x Thunderbolt 4 ports Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 Webcam 720p + IR camera Operating system Windows 11 Battery 45 watt-hour Price Starts at $829A familiar design
Taking a look at the design, there are a few notable changes from previous generations of the XPS 13. Like the Plus model, this one is all aluminum, so no more carbon-fiber weave in the palm rests. I’ll definitely miss the white color option and the unique materials of the old XPS laptops. Dell now offers the lighter “Sky” color, which is the one I have, and the darker “Umber” model. The Sky color is interesting too, since the keycaps are a slightly different color. It all comes together in a color scheme that feels unique. These aren’t standard silver and black, at least. Dell hasn’t bought into the trend toward sharper 1080p webcams. The super thin bezels are still here, of course. As the pioneer of super-thin laptop bezels, Dell’s design remains the most aggressive with its screen-to-body ratio. It looks as spectacular as ever. Unfortunately, the persistence to keep the look, means it’s still stuck on a tiny 720p webcam housed in the top bezels. It’ll get by for the occasional Zoom call, but it’s not the most flattering in terms of image quality. It does some odd things with colors, and struggles in common video conferencing scenarios, especially if the lighting isn’t perfect. Dell hasn’t bought into the trend toward sharper 1080p webcams, especially not at the expense of its hard-earned top bezel. The display itself hasn’t changed this time around either. It’s still a 16:10 IPS panel with options for touch or non-touch. You can crank it up to 444 nits, which is plenty bright, even if you’re working outside or near a window. Of course, color saturation (AdobeRGB 75%) isn’t wide as the high-resolution OLED models available on the XPS 13 Plus. But for the purposes of a sub-$1,000 laptop, this is an excellent display. Dell has also saved many of more experimental design features for the XPS 13 Plus. So, no haptic feedback trackpad, edge-to-edge keyboard, or capacitive touch buttons that replaced the function row. Everything here is more familiar and more comfortable. I miss the haptic trackpad from the XPS 13 Plus. The one aspect I actually miss from the Plus model is the haptic trackpad. I loved the implementation of it, and the chunkier click of the standard XPS 13’s touchpad feels tiresome in comparison. Double clicks aren’t as smooth, and the click mechanism is overly loud. While the XPS 13 Plus got a lot of the flashier new features, it retained a very similar internal design to previous generations of the XPS 13. The standard XPS 13, though, couldn’t be more different on the inside.Redesigned internals
A lot of engineering work has gone into making the Dell XPS 13 thinner. It’s now 0.55 inches thick, which makes it one of the thinnest Windows laptops you can buy. And it does feel really thin to hold, despite the fact that it’s actually only 5% thinner than the previous model. But as I’m sure you know, at this size, every millimeter shaved off comes with a mountain of work behind the scenes. First off, Dell says the motherboard is 1.8 times smaller overall this time around, including using a thinner PCB, which is actually now using a tech borrowed from smartphone boards. Pulling off the back cover, you can see how little space the motherboard now takes up — it’s pretty astounding. Dell has found ways to shrink basically every component, including the storage and memory — and without getting into all the details, it’s an impressive amount of engineering work that went into this internal redesign. But the result, again, is just a 5% reduction in thickness. And if it sounds like I’m not impressed, it’s because there’s this little laptop out there called the M2 MacBook Air. At 0.44 inches thick, the MacBook Air is still 20% thinner than the XPS 13. That sounds like more than it really is, though. You won’t see a huge difference in thickness when you set these laptops side by side, and Dell has put in a lot of work to make sure of it. But when it comes down to it, the real kicker with the new XPS 13 is the performance. In attempts to shrink everything down, you get just one fan, and with it, just a 9-watt processor from Intel’s 12th-gen U-series chips. These chips have just two Performance cores, which is four fewer than the P-series chips like the one used in the Dell XPS 13 Plus. Geekbench(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) PCMark 10
Complete Dell XPS 13 (Core i5-1230U) 1393 / 4,459 333 1379 / 3457 4023 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 2
(Core i7-1280P) 1493 / 8668 126 1575 / 7595 5094 Dell XPS 13 Plus
(Core i7-1280P) 1316 / 8207 127 1311 / 6308 4309 Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) 1417 / 6854 112 1402 / 8682 5647 HP Elite Dragonfly G3 (Core i7-1265U) 1699 / 5936 194 1618 / 5601 4975 The main purpose of nerfing the XPS 13, I assume, is to distinguish the XPS 13 from the Plus model, which uses a more standard 15-watt processor. Less power means less performance – and in this case, it’s actually quite a bit less. This is one of the worst-performing Intel 12th-gen laptops I’ve tested so far. It’s even a bit slower than last year’s 11th-gen model. But with a 9-watt processor that has only two Performance cores, it’s kind of what I’d expected. That might sound horrible, but really, I would argue that last year’s performance is probably enough. You shouldn’t be buying this laptop to edit video all day or play games. Instead, it’s for web browsing, online work, video conferencing, the occasional photo edit or coding project — and this laptop handles all of that just fine. It’s the multi-core performance that suffers the most, after all, and for the most part, those types of applications are just not what a laptop of this type is for. Furthermore, when it comes to choosing the processor for a laptop, it’s not all about performance. Looking beyond the benchmarks, you’ll see a number of advantages that better suit the Dell XPS 13 to compare with a laptop like the M1 MacBook Air.