Palm Dell

by admin on January 1, 2010

Palm Dell

Dell Latitude E6400

If Della € ™ s Vostro series is designed for small and medium enterprises on a budget, is designed Latitude series for corporate problem that needs connectivÂity and reliability above all. Think of latitude as Della € ™ s response to Lenovoâ € ™ s ThinkPad series. At first glance, the Latitude E6400 looks very big, strong and very square. It seems that Dell cut it for a solid piece of plastic and metal. No, the matte black finish is very nice to us, but itâ € ™ s just that the box-like design brings to mind the analogy often used â € € œbuilt as a tanka.

The cover sports a black, brushed aluminum finish that is very eye catching, but in a kind of return more relaxed and youâ ™ €'ll just notice that givÂing yourself another look over. The E6400 is built around a magnesium alloy cage that is ideal for longevity and even coating around the region to the palms look like itâ € ™ s not to last. In fact, most metal design is adds a little weight, but the E6400 feels surprisingly dense, as if Take Much abuse. The screen size is 14.1 inches, but this notebook has a everyone fairly wide bezel around the screen, making it look much bigger, though not as large as a 15.4-inch model.

It sports the design double-button mouse that Lenovo also supports and track button, which is a must for all notebooks corpoÂrate seriously. The track isnâ button However € ™ t red (nee Lenovo IBM proprietary), but is black and blends in with the keyboard. The keys are well established and offer feedback short and very positive. Although this wasn t ™ € the keyboard most established of the five laptops we tested, the spacing between keys and beveled is ergonomically designed to work.

The trackpad is the perfect combination of grip and comfort while we find tracking to be a bit more of a problem. In fact, this was one of the main left Downs with the E6400, the pad will stick sometimes, or simply refuse to do what he commands the fingers â € "more annoying. The TrackPoint works better and itâ € ™ s clear to see that isnâ ™ € t an adornÂment for Dell, and many users swear by the ThinkPad trackpoint and Dell will apply very well. A fingerprint reader thrown, a necessity for many business users as an additional safety measure, since it restricts access and passÂwords few can.

The screen itself is a matte panel, so that reflections are not a problem and resolution of 1440 x 900 pixels is absolutely perfect. Wea € ™ re tired of 1280 x 800 pixels and high resolution ultra-portables are a no-no too. This resolution is correct for the size of the screen. The LCD panel is LED illuminated, and must carry the energy saving benefits as well. In terms of configuration capabilities of the E 6400 is fully customizable in the true Dell fashion. The one that came with a T9400 processor again. This CPU is very fast and runs at a speed of 2.5 GHz, while maintaining a whopping 6 MB of cache Level 2 â € "ideal for someone who needs more CPU performance.

It seems that the E6400 with the only ships of 7200 RPM hard drives and this is very good because the storage subsystem is typically the slowest component of any PC or laptop. SSD is also an option with the new range, although the costs are astronomical. In the actual style workstation ships Dell Latitude E6400 with NVIDIA Quadro graphics solution, the NVS 160M, which is not powerful, it is based around eight processors in parallel, but it's the fastest way Intel GMA € ™ s and one-tenth of the action away from a GeForce 9300M GS. D-Sub and S-Video is connected are provided as video outputs.

The Latitude E 6400 is priced at Rs. Above 60,000, although it is priced the model we have received Rs. 95,000, not bad considering the processor and the solution graphics.

For more information on Dell Inspiron 1525 http://www.consumermate.com/ session

About the Author

John Wells provides you the best and latest information on Compare Laptops Prices, if you want to Dell Vostro 1400. he suggest you log on to http://www.consumermate.com/

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