Product Details
- Shipping Weight: 20 pounds
- ASIN: B000WX63C4
- Item model number: M1330
Product Description
Dell XPS M1330 in Tuxedo Black
Integrated Graphics Media Accelerator X310013.3" UltraSharp WXGA (1280 x 800) display with TrueLife ; 2.0 MP camera Integrated Slot-Load CD/DVD+/-RW Drive
Weight and DimensionsWeight: 3.97 lbs (1.8 kg)Width: 31.8cmHeight: 2.31cm - 3.38cmDepth: 23.8cmPorts2 USB 2.0 compliant 4-pin connectors IEEE 1394RJ45 Ethernet port (10/100)VGA Port, HDMI;ExpressCard 54 mm slot8-in-1 removable memory card readerAudio jacksStereo in headphone/speaker out (x2) dual digital array mics
Package Includes:- Dell m1330 Laptop w/ battery- 65W A/C Adapter- Dell XPS Carrying Case- Dell Manuals and Driver CD/DVDs- Dell XPS Express Remote
COLORSColors available in Tuxedo Black, Midnight Blue, Alpine White, Flamingo Pink.Please contact the sellers of this listing for different colored units.
Technical Details
- Thinnest and Lightest Model of all Dell laptops! (3.97 lbs, less than 1" thick)
- Intel Core 2 Duo T5750 (2.0 GHz, 2MB L2 cache, 667MHz FSB)
- 2GB DDR2 SDRAM, 160GB HDD, Slot-Drive 8X DVD+/-RW
- Wifi-G, Integrated Camera, Fingerprint Reader, 8-in-1 Card Reader, Dell Wireless 355 Bluetooth Module (2.0+EDR)
- Vista Home Premium, 1 Year Warranty from Dell
Dell XPS M1330 13.3" Tuxedo Black Laptop Computer
Customer Reviews
I purchased XPS M1330 on March 2008. Based on a year of usage, I do not recommend this product.
Let me layout the good things about this computer first. The screen quality is very good and shiny (I bought the Slim light-LED display for additional money). The colors are very good. The system does not come with a load of unnecessary software and does not slow the performance. The keyboard feel and comfort is excellent.
However, the hardware integration of this computer is weak. In less than 8 months, the graphics card was completely dead. The mother board was replaced by Dell. Worst of all the problems is the audio skipping and stuttering during just about anything, playing DVDs, listening to music (either from the harddrive or from an external harddrive), or just working. If you search the web for XPS M1330 audio skipping, you'll notice that many other individuals have the same problem. There is a resource conflict between the sound card and the other components of the computer. Dell is aware of this, yet, they still ship out the computers with this problem. Apparently, the Sigmatel, the sound card for Dell, and its drivers are responsible for this. Even if you remove the Sigmatel drivers, you'll hear the audio skipping. My motherboard was replaced second time after consistent errors by the sound card. Still, I hear the audio skipping. I tried all the temporary workarounds that were suggested by many people in forums. But to no avail.
In sum, I do not recommend this product. This is one of the premium lines of Dell products. It is supposed to be highest quality, because it is the highest in price. Yet, the hardware integration is sloppy and poor in quality. I personally regret going with Dell. Next time, I will seriously consider other options, such as HP, ASUS, Apple, etc.
I loved my M1210 and used it for 18 months but recently got an M1330 and I like it even better, except for a few things.
I did like the 12-inch size and weight of the former, but the 1330 is brighter and the keyboard is a little larger, making for improved useability.
BTW, the specs are almost equal: 2.2 GHz processor and 2 Gb. RAM; with NVidia video card.
So the speed is pretty much equal also.
I put 4 Gb RAM into both, and the performance difference is negligible. Don't waste your money: 2 Gb is plenty.
The 9-cell battery of the 1330 is bulky and ugly, compared to the 9-cell of the M1210.
by the way, about batteries: that 9-cell from my M1210 is just about shot, even though the laptop was hardly ever run from only this battery. When using the 1210 mobile, I used the 6-cell almost exclusively; only using the 9-cell when the laptop was running on AC power. Why would that wear out a battery?
The 6-cell from the M1210 is still fine, having been used about 5 hours a week for 18 months.
I liked the rotating camera of the 1210; the 1330 camera is fixed.
The 1330 has better heat dissipation: there's a copper tubing setup that winds its way around heat-producing sources and wicks it over to the fan area; new in this latest design.
I hate the multi-media touch controls of the 1330 as compared to regular buttons (cooly lit-up blue) that you push ; click to use, on the 1210.
I don't like the fact that screen on the 1330 doesn't tilt back further than about 120 degrees, as opposed to the 1210 tilting back all the way, flat to 180 degrees.
the 1330 has HDMI port which the 1210 didn't, but it only has 2 USB ports compared to the 1210's four.
The HDD of the 1330 is more difficult to get at and swap out than the HDD of the 1210.
The 1330 could have been made even a bit smaller, because there's a wide wasted-space frame bordering the screen, but that would have meant making the keyboard the same size as the 1210. Fine with me, but maybe users with big fat hands complained about not enough keyboard room.
Overall a nice laptop. I especially appreciate the MedeaDirect setup that both of these laptops have: a very nice ; useful touch.
This is my sixth Dell laptop and because of their excellent warranty service and great customer care support (especially XPS support) I can't see myself buying anything else.
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