Dell Aims for Gamers with XPS M1710 265
Mr Tits writes "Dell moved to solidify its position in the lucrative gaming market yesterday by launching the XPS M1710, a dual-core processor system designed to let gamers simultaneously play three-dimensional games while encoding music or scanning for viruses.
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What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Even as a desktop replacement that's just not sensible. Unless you're playing games from 1998 you're still going to need every teeny little bit of power that thing has, and you'd still be alt-tabbing out of games to check the other tasks, which will do nothing for them.
And how exactly the hell does "Dual core" help you when you're thrashing the hard drive wildly trying to virus check?
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
A dual-core really doesn't make games snapper, as I can't think of any that are designed as multi-threaded, but it means you can leave a lot of other stuff running (assuming you've got enough memory) without worrying about how it might drag the game down.
And in the somewhat frequent instances where one app might consume 100% of the CPU through either design of flaw, the system is still responsive because you've got another CPU handling your requests.
In short, I'm never going back to single-core.
Re:What? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What? (Score:2)
That has never happened on my 1 GB system running Guild Wars, TeamSpeak, and IRC. It did a heck of a lot while I had 512 MB though.
Re:What? (Score:3, Insightful)
I have an Athlon X2, and yes, alt-tabbing is snappy. However, since my 2 gig of RAM had to be returned and I'm temporarily down to 1 gig, alt-tabbing out of games is noticably less snappy.
Basically, the snappiness is down to the amount of RAM - if you have to swap the game out and the desktop and other apps back in, then it'll crawl, regardless of how many processors you have. If not, then a single processor will still manage snappy ta
Re:What? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What? (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:2)
Quake 4, ut2k4, few others in the FPS category. It really makes quite a bit of difference, being able to alt-tab.
Re:What? (Score:2)
However, when you've alt-tabed over, the second core makes everything really snappy, since the game is often still eating up a lot of CPU time on one processor, while the other processor is handling my pr0n browsing. Because that's what I do when I alt-tab out of games.
Re:What? (Score:4, Funny)
Fuckton ( Pronunciation: 'f&k 't&n)
Abbr.: FkT
Function: noun
Etymology: Slashdot.org, 4/19/2006, FlameboyC11)
1. A large measure of something, bigger than a metric assload.
Usage:
"With a fuckton of ram, most of the programs you're running won't get paged as the game soaks up ram, so they're just as responsive as they were before you started up Quake4."
Re:What? (Score:4, Funny)
Fuckton > Shitton > Fuckload > Shitload > Grip
Re:What? (Score:4, Funny)
Out of curiosity, where do "bitchload" and "assload" fit in? I have deabted with several friends before as to whether or not either or both are larger than a shitload. Maybe its just a unit thing and its like comparing a metric tonne with a ton.
Re:What? (Score:3, Funny)
Out of curiosity, where do "bitchload" and "assload" fit in? I have deabted with several friends before as to whether or not either or both are larger than a shitload. Maybe its just a unit thing and its like comparing a metric tonne with a ton.
bitchload = fuckload
assload = shitload
one stop to the bowl should be larger than one round of fucking so: shitload > fuckload
Shit should be denser than cum so (assuming the shit isn't liquidic): shitton
Re:What? (Score:2)
Many games also only load from disk occassionally, so the virus check disk thrashing won't be much of an issue.
I'm also not clear on why you'd alt-tab out to check on tasks
Re:What? (Score:2)
This is why all the snappy dual-core multitasking with games is probably a temporary situation. How long is it going to be before game developers are designing their games to take advantage of the multiple cores that are taking over the market? Many of them are already working on th
Re:What? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What? (Score:2)
You're right, althought not exactly. A couple years ago I bought a pretty nice "desktop replacement" (these large laptop with powerful processors, low autonomy, large screen and all). The problem to play video games was not the processor. It was not the screen. It was not even the graphic card or the RAM. It was the friggin' hard drive. You can't decently play a game with a 4200 RPM drive, p
PSSST (Score:3, Informative)
http://www1.us.dell.com/content/products/productd
Re:What? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What? (Score:5, Funny)
That actually worked for me. I stuck my brother on the P3 to play games which stopped him eating up all my bandwidth.
Re:What? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What? (Score:2)
Although web browsers are complex layout engines, and therefore browsing speed is a lot more processor dependant than slashdotters generally make it out to be. Try web browsing on an old machine, and the difference is quite noticable.
Re:What? (Score:2)
Mine's set to 8am - week days, I should be just leaving the house to get to work. Weekends, I'm either still in bed or on my way there
maybe its a sign that I should cut down on my Red Bull/Coke/Bawls/Speed intake and go to bed
You need help to stay up to 2am gaming? Oy, what is today's youth coming to? I remember particularly one day in my early teens when I borrowed
Scanning for viruses? (Score:5, Insightful)
WTF?
Heey everyone! Now you can use your computer AND scan for viruses at the same time! How awesome is that!
Is that really a selling point?
I don't get it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it. (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Or maybe they will just let the Alienware brand die? It's not something that hasn't happened before.
Overlaping product lines are profitable (Score:2, Interesting)
Jesus Christ. (Score:4, Funny)
Did
Re:Jesus Christ. (Score:2)
Scanning for Viruses = IO Intensive (Score:2, Insightful)
I find that virus scanning isn't so bad on the CPU but is killer with the I/O. And personally, I'd rather save my IO for map loading and such.
Imagine that! Virus scanning at the same time! (Score:2)
woah! (Score:5, Funny)
THREE DIMENSIONAL?!?!?!?!?!?
O_O
Re:woah! (Score:2)
obligatory simpsons quote (Score:2)
Dual CD drives? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Dual CD drives? (Score:2)
Re:Dual CD drives? (Score:2)
Re:Dual CD drives? (Score:2)
Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:4, Insightful)
First they have random unneeded software such as Musicmatch jukebox, Quickbooks Demo, various useless Dell phone home software packages etc. There have been several reviews of Dell gaming machines where some games won't even start because of incompatibilities some games have with Dell's TSR's.
Secondly, Dell's warranties aren't worth a crap. For example if a Dell computer has a bad hard drive it will take at least 3 hours of calls and diagnosis before you can get their helpdesk to send someone out to replace it. It's generally easier to go to (insert computer store here) and replace the drive yourself rather than wearing the cost of using Dell's helpdesk at all.
A lot of my customers use Dell computers. I support them a lot. If you do end up with one make sure to reinstal from scratch, try not to use the recovery CDs which will restore all the crappy Dell spyware with it.
That's my 2c.
Kiwi
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Know what you're doing.
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Therefore, corporate Dell != consumer Dell.
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
probably this might help - (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.yorkspace.com/dell-de-crapifier/ [yorkspace.com]
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
I can't vouch for whether or not it works but having used Dell before, ANYTHING is better than the crap they put on their PCs before they go out the door.
Hope it helps.
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
It used to be easier to go through Dell, but these days it's much easier to go through hardware manufacturers. Call 'em up, wait on hold for maybe 10 minutes, get an RMA, send it back.
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
Re:Have they removed the Dell spyware and malware (Score:2)
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/19
Isn't Duo Core an SMP system? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't Duo Core an SMP system? (Score:2)
Is that a good enough answer.. Btw an article this morning mentioned that AMD is working on such technology, but its not out yet.
Re:Isn't Duo Core an SMP system? (Score:2)
To some extent, you are correct: it isn't a simple one process to one processor mapping. Indeed, any modern OS has many processes that need to get CPU time on occasion. However, if you have 2 processes that are C
Mike Dell knows his market (Score:5, Interesting)
Australia? (Score:2)
I have their 389.20 SC model coupled with their 24" monitor for a media machine in the lounge but the built in video is awful. I modified a pci card to suitbut if I could get my paws on the XPS that would be so much better.
I don't think shopthestates for such a thing is appropriate.
Battery life (Score:2, Insightful)
With all that high spec dual core processor, gfx card, big 30% brighter lcd screen, simulateous virus scanning, burning cds and all the wizbang gizmos...I think it's more of a 'desktop replacement' than a 'notebook'.
If you are doing word processing good, if you're playing, have a power socket nearby.
Re:Battery life (Score:2)
60GB HD? (Score:3, Insightful)
60GB hard drives is quite small for a *gaming PC*. Between todays OS (several GBs) and games sizes reaching into the GBs, mp3/ogg collections reaching into the GBs whats up with a 60GB HD? I'm supprised the default isn't at least a 120GB. I don't even game much (though I keep Quake 3 installed for the times when I want to get my blood flowing) have 3 drives. (1) ATA 120GB, and (2) 35GB 10K rpm SATA in raid 0. That gives me 70GB for fast loading software, video, etc, and another 120 for the OS, backups, and scrach media.
laptop (Score:2)
Re:60GB HD? (Score:2, Insightful)
Deal breaker is the input device (Score:2)
Oh - I'm planning on getting one of those! (Score:3, Funny)
*cough*
Many usages (Score:5, Funny)
Or, you could use *both* cores and play a six-dimensional game!
Makes sense to Atari anyway...
6D games (Score:2)
Actually 6 dimensional games are possible if you do it right. 3D = hieght x length x depth. If you consider time as a dimension then your at 4D. But then you need to include some immaginary or at least non-apparent dimensions.
You can use a "Magic Eye" type of patterned texture (an autostereogram [wikipedia.org])over the entire screen to add a second dimension of depth (and a true depth this time). Furthermore you can use a the color spectrum to represen
Re:6D games (Score:2)
That's 12 dimensions for a good ol' game of Quake 1.
Missing the point (Score:2)
Hard core gamers trying and squeeze every last performance index out of their system to get the maximum performance and quality out of their favourite games. They spend hours tweaking BIOS settings, RAM settings, overclocking their system, all in an effort to get one more frame/sec out of their system.
Running a movie encoding or DVD ripping software in the background while t
Re:Missing the point (Score:2)
Re:Missing the point (Score:2, Informative)
As the other replies here point out, there is no united hardcore gamer profile. In fact, it sounds like you are describing a hardcore system tweaker. Someone who gets their kicks producing the highest FPS figure out of a machine, rather than actually playing the game. It seems to me a true gamer would be spending their time actually gaming rather than trying to figure out how to get another meaningless half percent of performance out of their system.
My wife wants a portable system with plenty of power to
How much did slashdot get paid (Score:2)
OMG COMPUTER COMPANY BUILD COMPUTER WITH READILY AVAILABLE PARTS AND SELL IT
anticaps filter line goes here
I'm waiting for the M1911 ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I'm waiting for the M1911 ... (Score:2)
Too soon?
Great Expectations... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Great Expectations... (Score:5, Informative)
The fact of the matter is, dual core processors help tremendously in many scenarios. Why should I wait while my 1 hour miniDV video is being transferred to my PC sucking up 10-15% CPU, when I can play a game during that time and not notice the slightest slowdown? How about those instances when I'm developing, compiling my app and my whole (single CPU) system slows down to a crawl
And which computer these days has only 1 optical drive? Even the cheap emachines from 4 years ago came with a DVD-ROM and CD-RW.
Re:Great Expectations... (Score:2)
Dell-usional (Score:5, Funny)
no brainer (Score:3, Funny)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but ... (Score:2)
Hard core Gamers (Score:2)
I mean seriously, I don't know of anyone that would even want to burn a cd while gaming.
Come on, that's what microbreaks are for.
Wrong title (Score:5, Funny)
Dell Aims for Windows Vista users
Then I hope that machine has SCSI RAID (Score:2)
WHY??? (Score:2)
After seeing this machine (Score:2)
Unless the real motive is an end-run to sell AMD chips I don't see the logic.
Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:3, Insightful)
a dual-core processor system designed to let gamers simultaneously play three-dimensional games while encoding music or scanning for viruses.
This is the first time I have heard of virus protection as justification for using a dual core processor. That is almost as bad as marketing dual cores because they do fast DRM. Why have windows users come to expect so little?
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
3d games jam up the whole system (disk i/o, memory i/o, cpu bandwidth, graphics bandwidth that there's no damn difference how many cores you got on the cpu.
if the buses are jammed with data overload, you don't encode or scan anything.
an smp box with separate processor and separate buses and separated memory would be a whole another deal (but they if they still operate on the same disk controller, it's still f-d).
#1 pointless article of the da
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:3, Informative)
3d games jam up the whole system (disk i/o, memory i/o, cpu bandwidth, graphics bandwidth that there's no damn difference how many cores you got on the cpu.
Actually, you would be surprised how little HD access there is high end games, also with faster drive. And with 2GB of RAM, there is more than plenty of room for ANY game and other processes.
As for the CPU, the Dual cores are designed to handle the bus bandwidths, or in effect Dual-Core CPUS would be worthless.
Al
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
Well considering the 'in use' portion of any game, YA you can easily...
Even the high end games we have tested, the top REAL-TIME memory use registered is just a bit over 1Gb, and that was for CoV...
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless you're a gamer. You know, the kind of people Dell is hoping will buy an XPS system.
It's all fine and dandy if "most people" want to have all these programs running all the time. Hardcore gamers, though, know to turn everything off if they want the best performance. Dell apparently still doesn't understand this - they first of all load all the same junk onto their XPS machines as they do on their mainstream machines, then rather than tout the raw gaming performance of the XPS line, they tout the fact that you can multitask. Gamers don't care about multitasking. They care about one task and one task only: playing games.
Again, if Dell wants to market the XPS line as sort of a high-end everyman computer, that's fine. But that's never been their stated goal. This was the line intended to garner them street cred, the "top-down" approach where the real hardcore users will spend that extra money and then tell all their friends how great Dell is.
This strategy is ass-backwards if that is their goal. They should be touting how lean their systems are, not how many things you can do at once. They should be touting how many frames per second you can get running the latest games, not how you can encode music while you're playing. These are things that appeal to mainstream users, not the high-end, hardcore users Dell is trying to attract.
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
And if Dell (or anyone) gets these systems built correctly, we won't have to do that.
Here's what they may be thinking we want to run:
Re:Marketing dual cores to windows users (Score:2)
If they expected more, they wouldn't be using Windows.
It's a catch-22.
Mac book pro price comparison (Score:2)
Yet now we see that when Dell puts out a more highly speced machine the price jumps up enormously. ENORMOUSLY. so what the heck is
Re:Mac book pro price comparison (Score:2)
Neither Dell's XPS systems nor Apple's computers are trying to marketed as low cost commodity systems. They cost disproportionately more because people they are selling to people willing to pay more. Well, Apple at least; I doubt Dell will sell that many high-end gaming systems until they start putting them out under the Alienware brand because Dell has a
Re:Duo Core (Score:4, Insightful)
I doubt so, considering that Dell bundles its XPS PCs with a crap load of software that slows down your gaming exprience [slashdot.org]. Of course, it's possible to achieve good results by doing a fresh reinstall of Win XP on them.
Re:Duo Core (Score:2)
Then I had that horrid incident repeated this past weekend when my partners M140 all of a sudden couldn't connect to any wireless network. Spent 3 hours on the phone with Daniel in India, went through system restore, enable/disable, check this, check that, wipe system and start clean but first backup data (Only 3 cd's worth as the machine is 2 months old), and wireless still wouldn't work.
Only difference between t
Re:If Dell really wanted to sell to gamers, (Score:2)
No worries, that's what they bought Alienware for. Now they can play both sides of the fence. If Alienware is not your style, or your Mom/Dad/Boss won't buy from a company with alien in its name, go with Dell's XPS line. But if you believe the Alienware rigs are superior or you just don't like Intel very much these days, go with them. Either way now Dell makes money without chasing away corporate accounts.
I suspect this XPS M1710 project was already in the pipeline
Re:Mahoosive Storage! (Score:2)
Well it may be enough, but it isn't the state of the art in laptops...
I have a twin 60gb 7200rpm RAID configuration in this laptop, giving me 120gb of storage with almost twice the speed, and this laptop is almost a year old.
Drives are pretty small and efficient anymore, so RAID configurations in laptops will become even more common, just as dual-core processors have, and even the newer la
Re:Real Gamers (Score:2)
The XPS is a desktop replacement, an eight pound laptop, with top-of-the-line components.
This is not a DIY project.