I am not sure how many of you already saw this. Dell announced, a few days ago, at CES 2022, the XPS 13 Plus.
The media coverage is here:
It comes with a 28-watt 12th gen Intel processor, up to 32 GB LPDDR5 RAM, up to 4 TB PCIe gen 4 SSD, up to a 4K 3840x2160 500-nit or 3456x2160 OLED screen, two Thunderbolt 4 ports, and a 55 Wh battery. It comes with a "zero-lattice" keyboard, a "capacitive touch function row", a "seamless glass touchpad", a "UltraSharp Webcam", and no headphone jack. It weighs 1.24 kg and will sell for $1199 and up.
The way I see it, Dell is desperately trying to copy Apple so it can upsell its products to the customers. And I think it is a very bad move for Dell.
Now, look at the press release on Dell's website. "Redesigned from the ground up", "we've stripped away the unnecessary", "with best-in-class edge-to-edge displays that bring your visions to life". It is as if Apple were saying it. And it is "available in timeless colors" -- is Dell trying to sell a watch or jewelry?
Pathetic.
The XPS line has been a media darling for some time. I personally got an XPS 15 once, and it provided me a very bad experience: faulty keyboard, swollen battery, failing SSD, reflective screen, bad webcam at the bottom of the screen, bumpy trackpad, and a chassis that simply broke out of nothing. It looked very good at the store, but the build quality was subpar and it did not feel half as premium as it could. Other Windows laptops, including Dell's own Latitude line, proved to be far better choices.
Now, let us see how this XPS 13 Plus behaves. I have not seen it yet, and it may surprise me in the end. But I feel there are too many trade-offs.
XPS 13 Reinvents Itself, Embracing Simplicity as the New Premium | Dell
Introducing XPS 13 Plus and a new UltraSharp monitor that takes collaboration and visual experiences up a notch .
www.delltechnologies.com
The media coverage is here:
Dell XPS 13 Plus adds a buzzy (and controversial) new touch bar: We tried it at CES 2022
Dell's flagship laptop also gets an edge-to-edge keyboard for 2022.
www.cnet.com
Dell's XPS 13 Plus is a beautiful ultraportable, but it has no headphone jack
The XPS 13 Plus is Dell's most polished ultraportable yet.
www.engadget.com
Dell’s XPS 13 Plus brings a MacBook Touch Bar-like experience
And a likely larger price tag.
arstechnica.com
Dell's 14-core XPS 13 Plus is unlike any XPS you've ever seen
Beautiful, thin, and powerful, the redesigned XPS 13 Plus looks to set a new benchmark for premium laptops, once again.
www.pcworld.com
Dell XPS 13 Plus Touch Bar equals zero
Dell's "new capacitive touch experience" on the XPS 13 Plus ignores everything that was wrong with Apple’s Touch Bar in the first place.
www.macworld.com
It comes with a 28-watt 12th gen Intel processor, up to 32 GB LPDDR5 RAM, up to 4 TB PCIe gen 4 SSD, up to a 4K 3840x2160 500-nit or 3456x2160 OLED screen, two Thunderbolt 4 ports, and a 55 Wh battery. It comes with a "zero-lattice" keyboard, a "capacitive touch function row", a "seamless glass touchpad", a "UltraSharp Webcam", and no headphone jack. It weighs 1.24 kg and will sell for $1199 and up.
The way I see it, Dell is desperately trying to copy Apple so it can upsell its products to the customers. And I think it is a very bad move for Dell.
- "Capacitive touch function row": This is another name for a TouchBar rip-off. Just when Apple is moving away from it, Dell is embracing it. A very bad design choice. Users are required to move their eyes away from the screen so they can use the touch function/bar.
- "Zero-lattice keyboard": I am not sure this will work. Having some space between the keys helps the user finds the key.
- No headphone jack: This is completely inexplicable. Removing the headphone jack from a smartphone is something I can understand, even though I would prefer to have it. But why remove it from the laptop? Does it take so much space that a laptop cannot accommodate a headphone jack? Not even Apple dared to do it with its MacBook Air.
- Ports: It comes with only two Thunderbolt 4 ports. One of them seems to be used for the power supply, which gives us only one available for anything else. Really inconvenient. I am not sure about other places, but the only devices compatible with Thunderbolt here in Brazil are dongles that allow us to use far more useful USB-C and HDMI ports, among others. Just when Apple decided to expand the ports in its MacBook Pro line, Dell launches a laptop with just two.
- Weight and battery: The current Dell XPS 13 has a 52 Whr battery and weighs 2.64 lbs (1.2kg). The Dell XPS 13 Plus has a 55 Whr battery and 2.7 lbs (1.24kg). There seems to have been close to zero improvements in this department, even though it may make a real difference for those wanting a thin and light laptop. My Dell XPS 17 has an 80 Whr battery and weighs 2.98 lbs (1.35kg), despite having a larger chassis that accommodates a 17-inch screen.
Now, look at the press release on Dell's website. "Redesigned from the ground up", "we've stripped away the unnecessary", "with best-in-class edge-to-edge displays that bring your visions to life". It is as if Apple were saying it. And it is "available in timeless colors" -- is Dell trying to sell a watch or jewelry?
Pathetic.
The XPS line has been a media darling for some time. I personally got an XPS 15 once, and it provided me a very bad experience: faulty keyboard, swollen battery, failing SSD, reflective screen, bad webcam at the bottom of the screen, bumpy trackpad, and a chassis that simply broke out of nothing. It looked very good at the store, but the build quality was subpar and it did not feel half as premium as it could. Other Windows laptops, including Dell's own Latitude line, proved to be far better choices.
Now, let us see how this XPS 13 Plus behaves. I have not seen it yet, and it may surprise me in the end. But I feel there are too many trade-offs.