Showing posts with label dell latitude d830 battery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dell latitude d830 battery. Show all posts

Friday, March 19, 2010

Battery life up 30%! Windows 8 is more energy-efficient than Vista

Microsoft program manager Lusidunpa Na Beike (Ruston Panabaker) Tuesday said the system, compared with WindowsVista, in Windows8, the Sony VGP-BPS8 life time will be increased by 10% to 20%. Tuesday, Panabeike have been demonstrated, using two of the same model (the operating system different) laptop playing DVD. Demonstration results showed that running Windows8 notebook battery life than running Vista laptop Apple battery life longer by 30%.


Windows 8 is more energy-efficient than Vista


Overall, when users watch DVD through the laptop when the laptop battery life under Windows8 be increased by 10% to 30%. Panabeike said it was a great performance.


Last week, has been reported that the use of Windows8 operating system, Internet this Toshiba laptop battery life decreased by 1 / 3. Focus on the laptop reported “Laptop” magazine this week that Toshiba, the Internet has been tested, the results of the use of the Internet after Windows8 reduce the time of the battery life of 2.5 hours. In the XP system, the battery life of 9 hours, 24 minutes, while Windows8 only 6 hours 53 minutes.


According to Toms Hardware site testing, the XP system, the Acer AcerAspireOne access to this Sony laptop battery life is 8 hours and 28 minutes, while in Windows 8, under 5 hours, 54 minutes, the same reduction of 2.5 hours.


the article is via : batterymag


                         dell battery


                        Acer battery

Dell Inspiron E1405 Battery Review

Dell plans to begin offering the E1405 with a higher Core 2 Duo processor beginning in the last quarter of this year. We anticipate the E1405’s performance will improve as a result of this processor upgrade, but dell inspiron 6400 battery life might also be impacted.


Dell Inspiron e1405 Specs:



  • Processor: Intel Yonah Core Duo T2300 (1.66 GHz/2MB L2 Cache)

  • OS: Microsoft Windows XP Media Center Edition

  • Hard Drive: 80 GB SATA @ 5400RPM (manufactured by Hitachi)

  • Screen: 14.1″ WXGA+ UltaSharp Widescreen with TrueLife (1440 x 900)

  • Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950

  • RAM: 1.0GB DDR2 SDRAM @533 MHz (2 x 512MB)

  • Optical Drive: 24x CD-RW/DVD-ROM

  • Battery: 6-cell lithium ion Dell XPS M1730 Battery

  • Wireless: Dell 1390 Mini Card 802.11 b/g (54 Mbps)

  • Weight: 5.3 lbs

  • Dimensions: 1.5″ (H) x 13 ” (W) x 9.6″ (D)

  • Ports/Slots: 1 IEEE 1394 (FireWire), 4 Universal Serial Bus (USB 2.0), 5-in-1 removable memory card reader, VGA monitor out port, S-video out, RJ-45 Ethernet LAN, RJ-11 modem, ExpressCard 54mm, headphone/speaker jack, microphone connector


Its 85Whr (9-cell) Dell XPS M1530 Battery sticking out from the back, the E1405 would actually be over a pound lighter than the E1505 battery, instead of just 0.8 pounds lighter.


The battery Tech Specs:

Technology : 9-cell lithium ion

Voltage: 11.10V

Capacity: 85Wh

Dimension: 206.70*49.00*23.80mm

Weight: 0.456kg

Condition: Brand New, 1 year warranty!

Works with: Dell XPS M170 Battery, Apple A1185 Battery, Latitude 620 Battery , Dell Latitude 630 Battery


The Dell Inspiron E1405 battery features :

* 85 WHr capacity lets you work seamlessly while on the move

* Provides very safe charging and discharging

* Offers reliable power for dependable performance

* Competible with the battery code as : Dell TC023, Dell Y9943,


Customre Reviews :


this Dell laptop battery is a nightmlare. i bought 2 defective ones in a row and now dell will only refund one of them. the first one didn’t charge at all. after 2 weeks, the second one doesn’t charge past 5% of its capability. Dell will not refund me for the first one because their agents never connected me to the right # after I purchased the second one. Now i am over the 21 days. Dell has problems.


This battery only lasts a few months when I checked the price for a replacement I got shocked. I will try other batteries not from dell and check quality and price, maybe I can get the same performance as the oem but without wasting more money.


The articel Via Laptop battery

Dell Inspiron E1405 Battery Review

Dell plans to begin offering the E1405 with a higher Core 2 Duo processor beginning in the last quarter of this year. We anticipate the E1405’s performance will improve as a result of this processor upgrade, but dell inspiron 6400 battery life might also be impacted.


Dell Inspiron e1405 Specs:



  • Processor: Intel Yonah Core Duo T2300 (1.66 GHz/2MB L2 Cache)

  • OS: Microsoft Windows XP Media Center Edition

  • Hard Drive: 80 GB SATA @ 5400RPM (manufactured by Hitachi)

  • Screen: 14.1″ WXGA+ UltaSharp Widescreen with TrueLife (1440 x 900)

  • Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950

  • RAM: 1.0GB DDR2 SDRAM @533 MHz (2 x 512MB)

  • Optical Drive: 24x CD-RW/DVD-ROM

  • Battery: 6-cell lithium ion Dell XPS M1730 Battery

  • Wireless: Dell 1390 Mini Card 802.11 b/g (54 Mbps)

  • Weight: 5.3 lbs

  • Dimensions: 1.5″ (H) x 13 ” (W) x 9.6″ (D)

  • Ports/Slots: 1 IEEE 1394 (FireWire), 4 Universal Serial Bus (USB 2.0), 5-in-1 removable memory card reader, VGA monitor out port, S-video out, RJ-45 Ethernet LAN, RJ-11 modem, ExpressCard 54mm, headphone/speaker jack, microphone connector


Its 85Whr (9-cell) Dell XPS M1530 Battery sticking out from the back, the E1405 would actually be over a pound lighter than the E1505 battery, instead of just 0.8 pounds lighter.


The battery Tech Specs:

Technology : 9-cell lithium ion

Voltage: 11.10V

Capacity: 85Wh

Dimension: 206.70*49.00*23.80mm

Weight: 0.456kg

Condition: Brand New, 1 year warranty!

Works with: Dell XPS M170 Battery, Apple A1185 Battery, Latitude 620 Battery , Dell Latitude 630 Battery


The Dell Inspiron E1405 battery features :

* 85 WHr capacity lets you work seamlessly while on the move

* Provides very safe charging and discharging

* Offers reliable power for dependable performance

* Competible with the battery code as : Dell TC023, Dell Y9943,


Customre Reviews :


this Dell laptop battery is a nightmlare. i bought 2 defective ones in a row and now dell will only refund one of them. the first one didn’t charge at all. after 2 weeks, the second one doesn’t charge past 5% of its capability. Dell will not refund me for the first one because their agents never connected me to the right # after I purchased the second one. Now i am over the 21 days. Dell has problems.


This battery only lasts a few months when I checked the price for a replacement I got shocked. I will try other batteries not from dell and check quality and price, maybe I can get the same performance as the oem but without wasting more money.


The articel Via Laptop battery

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Saving my laptop battery life methods

We all like quests… right?? Well, mine has to do with getting the most out of my Sony VGP-BPS9 on my aging laptop. Aging that includes the power-providing battery. I already have a head start on this with my laptop specs. It is a Dell Inspiron 700m Battery . It is also based on the Centrino platform, which was Intel’s first major play into laptop powersaving. Included within are an arsenal of powerful components that use minimal power (at the time).


My specific laptop was based off of the Carmel platform. It includes an Intel Pentium M 1.6GHz processor with variable speeds ranging from 600MHz to 1.6GHz, the Intel 2200BG wireless networking card, and the (unfortunately) low-powered 855 Chipset which includes Intel Extreme Graphics 2. Also included is a 12.1″ widescreen LCD Powerful Dell Inspiron 6400 Battery, which I am sure uses less power than some of the larger screens out there.


I already had low power-consumption in mind when I installed Slackware (started with 10.2). I installed cpufreq-utils and cpufreqd which allowed me to adjust my processor speed depending on certain power conditions. I also purchased a larger battery (on this model the Dell Latitude D830 Battery is in the back, so the larger one extends further out the back). The original was a 4-Cell that provides 2200mAh. I replaced that with an 8-cell that provides 4400mAh of power. When the battery was new it provided a whooping 5 hours of battery life. Sadly batteries will dwindle and the power it is capable of putting out will shorten over time.


So to get to the point of my quest, Dell Inspiron 1525 Battery was to get the maximum life out of my laptop. The reason was that I was getting ready to go on leave. I currently am stationed at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, and flight times back to the states are kinda long. So I wanted to be able to use my laptop for as long as possible while I was flying (partially due to the fact that I can’t sleep on planes, even when assisted with sleep medication). So with the help of Google, I was able to come up with the following.


First things first, I found I needed to re-compile my kernel. This will be distro-specific, due to different distros compiling kernels different ways. Mine will all be based off of Slack 12.1 which is the version I was running at the time with my Dell Latitude D630 Battery. The biggest reason for me, was to included tickless-support, which basically only wakes up the processor when there is something for it to do.


Next was to get a program called PowerTOP (PowerTOP needs certain things built into the kernel, the items needed are listed on their site). It is developed by Intel and is used to show what is causing your processor to wake from its low power state. The other benefit it gives is it will tell you some information on how to use less power Dell Latitude D520 Battery, such as disabling Bluetooth, or setting a lower scan rate for your wireless. It provides hotkeys so you can change these directly in the program without exiting. It also provides the actual commands that it uses to change these. This way you can make them into a script (like I did).


Some of the functionality it wants to change may not be beneficial for everyday use of a laptop (like disabling Bluetooth). So if you want some of these to run everytime you run your laptop you could add them to your system startup with Dell Inspiron 1721 Battery, which in Slackware is under /etc/rc.d/rc.local (distros vary in their startup procedures, so yours may be different). For other times (like when on a plane and you don’t want any wireless devices running) you can make a specific script for it that you run when needed.


Another tool worth mentioning is laptop-tools. This is a script that will run in the background and whenever the laptop starts using the battery, it automatically will provide powersavings. There is a detailed article about what it does here.


Now come the common sense items. People should realize these, but lets face it… everyone has brain-farts.



  • Dim your laptop screen to the lowest level still viewable. The higher the brightness of your LCD screen, the more power your backlight will consume.

  • Don’t use your Dell Inspiron 1420 Battery CD/DVD drive. It uses a lot of power to spin a disc. Their are plenty of tutorials to convert your dvd’s to a file on your hard drive.

  • Don’t use external devices. Even an external mouse or usb drive will use additional power.

  • Depending on your distro you may want to consider using a different window manager. Some window managers have a lot of programs running in the background that will take up processing power and in turn use more of your battery. While I normally run KDE 4, I use windowmaker when I am trying to save power.

  • Disable 3D acceleration in your Dell C1295 Dell KD476. Again, this will use unnecessary processing power. You can do this in your /etc/X11/xorg.conf file by commenting out the Load dri and glx modules. Just put a # in front of them.

  • Disable any unused services. If you won’t be using your webserver or database software, there is no reason to be running those in the background. You can add any of these to your powersave script.

  • Disable any unused hardware. You can do this by removing the modules. If you won’t be using usb, then remove it. Some of the devices you may want to consider disabling are: firewire, pcmcia slot, bluetooth, wireless, card readers, and more this can saved Dell Inspiron E1705 Battery life.

  • The more obvious one is, if possible, buy a larger battery. This will be dependent on the laptop, because some laptops do not have any larger batteries available. Worst case, buy a new one to replace your aging battery.


Unfortunately I don’t have an amount of extra Dell Latitude D820 Battery life this gave me, but I did lower my wake-ups from idle per second by more than 400 wake-ups. And this is just when I am using KDE4. With switching to windowmaker I was able to lower the total amount to 40-60 wake-ups per second. Granted, when I am running my video player that number does go up, but the lower the number of wake-ups the less power your processor will consume.


The article via batteryblog

Thursday, March 11, 2010

How to prolong digital cameras battery life

At present, digital cameras have been widely used. How to extend Acer battery life, 7 kinds of methods introduced here:


(A) Less flash. Flash power consumption is the largest in the Kodak and Dell KD476 battery Dell Y9943 battery automatic mode and PASM mode, the flash can be turned off (scene mode exception).


(B) Turn off auto-zoom. Camera’s default setting is continuous AF zoom, which is the camera around the scene on a continuous zoom, in the setting menu will be a continuous zoom into a single, the icon for the Dell G761battery Dell G5260 battery AF.


(C) Reduce image editing times in the camera . Applications readers up in the computer editing view pictures, if we did not have the camera to edit view pictures, would be able to save half of the electricity.


(D) a change in image format. According to their Latitude D630 Battery actual needs, the pictures taken will be transferred as far as possible into the low-storage format. This camera can speed up time to write disk, naturally a power-saving.


(E) Viewfinder LCD screen when you minimize the use of multi-use Latitude D830 Battery EVF viewfinder.


(Vi) to reduce the number of zoom. Telephoto lens to narrow the disparity is indeed a lot of power Yo!


(7) in the setting menu to switch off Latitude D820 Battery unnecessary switches.


Jack hopes that help you.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Revive dead laptop battery

We buy laptop for our daily life and office work. When we show a demo or PPC for our customers or work on non power supply rooms with laptops. We also worry about its laptop battery. As the all laptop battery have their life, after charging for about 600-800 cycles it cant work, we call them as “dead laptop battery”. When we have no latitude d630 battery replacement, we try to revive dead laptop batteries.


In fact revive dead laptop battery is simple work. You can use some physical methods to activation the dead Dell Inspiron E1405 Battery cells. Usually you can revive dead laptop battery using familiar tools. You only need a refrigeratory, a locked bag, a charger. Then do the following works step by step. You shall revive your dead laptop battery.



  • First put the dead laptop battery in a zip lock.

  • Then put the zip into refrigeratory and keep it in freezer for 14 – 15 hours.

  • Afer waitinf for a long time, take the dead Dell inspiron 1545 battery out of refrigeratory .

  • Using clean and soft cloth to dry the battery and get the battery to room temperature (about 20° – 25°)

  • In the end fully charging and discharging the battery for 3 – 4 cycles.

  • Now you would see that your dead battery holding up charge for 1-2 hours.


What are you waiting for, why not take a try to your dead laptop battery? Good luck.


The article is from : Revive laptop battery


Trackback:


Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Low-cost solar photovoltaic cells

Israel’s Bar Ilan Universitynanotechnology expert has developed a new type of low-cost photovoltaic cells, the photoelectric conversion rate of traditional silicon solar cells are equivalent, but cost can be reduced by 40%%.


Such photovoltaic cells is the use of nano-technology design, and distributed in the plastic plate by sponge-like micro-nano-dot matrix composed of glass installed in the conductive metal wire constitute a fundamental part. In order to enhance the ability to absorb sunlight, the researchers injected to the semiconductor materials dell inspiron 1545 battery, organic dye inside.


Bar Ilan University, Nanotechnology Zabban Professor Director of the Institute, initially they have developed photovoltaic panels photovoltaic cells by small matrices, each photovoltaic film is only one square centimeters, due to photovoltaic films is small, the space between the plate and sheet and more sunlight in the above can not be converted into electrical energy, the conversion efficiency is relatively low. In view of this situation, they will each light the area of dell inspiron 1525 battery solar cells increased to 100 square centimeters, the photovoltaic cell matrix markedly enhanced the ability to capture the sun.


Zabban professor said that in the solar energy research and development, the cost is an important factor. To make solar cells are widely accepted to be its production cost is lower than conventional fossil fuels, while the infrastructure cost and allowing developing countries to accept them. Their results of this study can effectively dell latitude d520 battery reduce the cost of photovoltaic cells for solar cells occupy a much broader market to open up the road. In addition, he is also studying the reduction of platinum use of solar cells in order to further reduce costs.


At present, the Jerusalem a solar energy company is working with the Bar Ilan University Lenovo thinkpad t60 Battery , promoting the commercialization of solar photovoltaic cells. They hope that the next five years, photovoltaic cells can enter the market successfully.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Thin-film silicon solar cells

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries latitude d830 battery, the open tandem thin-film silicon solar cell technology and production planning


Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the open in the second quarter of 2007 volume production of the external dimensions of 1.4m × 1.1m tandem thin-film silicon solar cell technology (Speaker Number: 3DP.2.4 “The Worlds Largest a-Si/mc-Si Tandem Module Production” ). 1.4m × 1.1m of this size in the mass production of tandem thin-filmlatitude x200 batterysilicon solar cells for the world’s largest.


In the non-crystalline silicon and overlapping micro-crystalline silicon thin-film silicon tandem solar cell structure, the film thickness to 2μm above the micro-crystalline silicon film-forming speed is crucial. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, micro-crystalline silicon film latitude X300 battery in order to improve the speed, using a 60MHz frequency through the imposition of a means to generate the plasma. 13.56MHz available when this film 10 times the speed.


However, with the floor area increases, the uneven distribution of topics such as plasma also be constituted. To this end, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has developed at the same time in the phase modulation imposed by 60MHz frequency PMM (Phase Modulation Method) technology, which obtained a 1.4m × 1.1m of the floor stable, high-speed formation of micro-crystalline silicon results. Micro-crystalline silicon film achieved a speed of 2.3nm / s, available in volume production line in 3 minutes a frequency of manufactured productsDell inspiron 1545 battery. The current module conversion efficiency in achieving stabilized after 9.5% or so. In order to achieve 10.4% of the goal, the company is to continue to improve.


Mitsubishi Heavy Industries latitude d830 battery, the open tandem thin-film silicon solar cell technology and production planning


Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the open in the second quarter of 2007 volume production of the external dimensions of 1.4m × 1.1m tandem thin-film silicon solar cell technology (Speaker Number: 3DP.2.4 “The Worlds Largest a-Si/mc-Si Tandem Module Production” ). 1.4m × 1.1m of this size in the mass production of tandem thin-filmlatitude x200 batterysilicon solar cells for the world’s largest.


In the non-crystalline silicon and overlapping micro-crystalline silicon thin-film silicon tandem solar cell structure, the film thickness to 2μm above the micro-crystalline silicon film-forming speed is crucial. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, micro-crystalline silicon film latitude X300 battery in order to improve the speed, using a 60MHz frequency through the imposition of a means to generate the plasma. 13.56MHz available when this film 10 times the speed.


However, with the floor area increases, the uneven distribution of topics such as plasma also be constituted. To this end, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has developed at the same time in the phase modulation imposed by 60MHz frequency PMM (Phase Modulation Method) technology, which obtained a 1.4m × 1.1m of the floor stable, high-speed formation of micro-crystalline silicon results. Micro-crystalline silicon film achieved a speed of 2.3nm / s, available in volume production line in 3 minutes a frequency of manufactured productsDell inspiron 1545 battery. The current module conversion efficiency in achieving stabilized after 9.5% or so. In order to achieve 10.4% of the goal, the company is to continue to improve.


Mitsubishi Heavy Industries announced the Dell Latitude D520 Battery release of this future production plans. At present, the company’s tandem thin-film silicon solar cell capacity of an annual output of 40MW. The future plans to increase this capacity to 50MW, combined with the second quarter of 2007 started construction of the annual output of 50MW of new factories, and strive to achieve during the year 2008 annual 100MW. Because the non-crystalline silicon solar cell production capacity has also been improved, so the company’s solar cell production capacity will be combined to reach an annual output of 128MW. In addition, the company also plans to build new factory the size of an annual output of 100MW. However, to achieve this goal, still faces shortages of experienceddell inspiron 1525 batteryechnical problems which require a variety of passing through acquisitions to be addressed.

Energy-saving environment-friendly vehicles

The energy security latitude d830 battery and environmental protection consciousness more and more deeply embedded corner of every society, whether it be prime minister metric bus, or there are numerous private cars, cars as a necessity for a modern city, how far away from energy-saving environmental protection do ?


Since 99 years, the support and leadership of the State Department latitude x200 battery, the National Science and Technology and other relevant ministries have been committed to promoting low-emission fuel our cars, gas and other alternative fuel vehicles and electric vehicles, hybrid vehicles and fuel cell vehicles and other new energy sources Automotive technology development and applications.



In the government sector latitude X300 battery, under the supervision and promotion, there are already in Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Chongqing, Sichuan, Hainan Province in 19 cities (regions) become the country’s focus on the promotion of car cleaning city (region). The end of 2004, 19 cities in the development of gas vehicles 215,000, of which direct production by OEMs number of new cars reached 6.4 million units, accounting for gas vehicles retain 30% of the total. Single-fuel vehicles have been certain development, and retain reached 1.5 million units. 19 cities (regions) have been completed and 712 filling stations in 2004, total annual sales of automotive LPG 35 Wan Dun, CNG 9.4 billion cubic meters, achieved annual fuel substitution, 1.2 million tons Dell inspiron 1545 battery. At the same time, focusing on promotion of urban air quality were improved to varying degrees.


In Beijing, for a successful host a “science and technology, Green Olympics”, Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee in conjunction with Ministry of Science and organize the implementation of the “Olympic Science and Technology (2008) Plan of Action” will be zero-emission electric cars and ultra-low emission hybrid vehicles as an important science and technology Dell Latitude D520 Battery projects, by 2008, Beijing, 90% of buses and 70% of taxi use of cleaner fuels.


If you can see here, on the view that energy-saving dell inspiron 1525 battery environmental protection belongs only to acts of state, can only affect the power delivery as the city’s main public transportation, then you are wrong.


After several increases in fuel prices after the adjustment in the economic levers, the less it is not burning oil or oil-burning vehicles with more and more by the vast number of consumers concerned about the private drive. In addition to the major automobile manufacturers have introduced in response to market demand for fuel-efficient small-displacement than in 2005, landing first hydrogen hybrid dynamic Chinese market, since FAW, Dongfeng, SAIC, Chang’an dell inspiron b130 battery, Chery, also will launch this brand new energy new car. There are a variety of fuel to add technology, the traditional vehicle to promote the combustion of fuel to reduce emissions.


It is not difficult to see the vehicles around us are one step close to the energy-saving environmental protection, if you know of these careless, then you should go to Chong Chongdian of. October 25, 2007 ~ 28, the Fifth Beijing International Energy Saving dell inspiron 6400 battery and Environmental Protection Exhibition car can give you a chance, you can visit the site, learning, and test drive the new energy vehicles, that, with three free tickets and waste Batteries can also exchange gifts.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

dell latitude d830 laptop review

Overview


The Dell Latitude D830 is the successor to the Latitude D820 (apple a1175), a mid sized business notebook with a 15.4" screen and the new Santa Rosa platform. Weighing in at nearly six pounds it tips the scales at the upper end of the thin-and-light category. Pricing as of this writing starts at $899, and like most Dell notebooks there are plenty of customization options available.


My Latitude D830 is configured as such:



  • Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, 2.00GHz

  • 15.4 inch Wide Screen WUXGA LCD

  • 2.0GB, DDR2-667 SDRAM, 2 DIMM

  • 256MB NVIDIA Quadro NVS 140M

  • 80GB Hard Drive 9.5MM 7200RPM

  • 90W AC Adapter

  • 8X DVD+/-RW w/ Roxio Creator and Cyberlink

  • Intel 4965 WLAN (802.11a/g/n)

  • 9-Cell/85 WHr Primary Battery

  • 6-Cell/48-WHr Modular Battery

  • Vista Business, with media English

  • Dimensions are 1.39" x 14.2" x 10.34"

  • Weight is 6.5lbs with 9-cell battery and optical drive


Reason for Buying


When I began looking for a laptop (dell latitude d620 battery )nearly a month ago my primary objective was to find a solid machine that would last me through four years of college. My last notebook was an old Inspiron 500m which I deemed sufficiently thin-and-light for heavy travel and light tasks so I began looking into a larger, more powerful machine though I did not want a full-out desktop replacement. As this notebook would also be a graduation gift, price was not an object and I wanted something that was really something!


Being a long time Dell user, my initial inclination was towards a Dell, but I looked into machines of other brands as well. HP (dell latitude d820 battery )and Asus dropped out early on due to cosmetic preferences, but I put some consideration on the 14 and 15 inch Lenovo T60 series.


A few of my friends own older Thinkpad models and have nothing but praise for them. Indeed, Lenovo is known for superior build quality though typically at a price. By all means the T60 is a beautiful machine, but I was put off by a couple of small details. My biggest qualm is that I cannot stand having a battery stick out. Apparently that seems to be the current trend with a lot of smaller machines sporting bigger batteries and the 14-inch T60 was no exception. I wasn't terribly fond of the port configuration either, particularly the positioning of display and telecom ports on the side of the chassis and the lack of an S-video output. The small touchpad and some very minor aesthetic points also put me off. The 15 inch T60 was a bit better but it still lacked an s-video output and was a tad bit too heavy.


Subsequently I went to Dell. After deciding against Inspiron and XPS notebooks - I hated those big white Inspiron bumpers and there isn't a 14 or 15 inch XPS - my choices came down to the Latitude D630, D830 and Precision M65. The D630 was the thin-and-light of the group but suffered from the same issue as the 14 inch T60 in that the battery stuck out and it was missing an S-video port. Reviews I read about the D630 (dell xps m1530 battery )also mentioned poor sound and a loose battery. The D830 addressed most of my concerns with the D630 but I fretted over the weight of a 15 inch notebook. After changing my mind several times, the D830 finally won me over.


Shopping


After deciding on a machine I poked around the Internet for coupons and discounts, though I did not find many for the Latitude line. I did discover that Dell (dell latitude d600 battery )was offering $400 off the price of each Latitude configured over $1,600 and figured it wouldn't get much better than that. Dell's customization and order process is very straightforward and I made sure to spend plenty of time agonizing over choices like integrated versus discrete graphics or 9-cell versus 6-cell batteries. All in all it was a smooth and pleasant shopping experience. The machine arrived just over a week after I ordered it.


First Impression


The computer shipped with everything shown here. The container was divided into two sections, a cardboard container for the power supply, media bay battery, resource disks and documentation and a styrofoam crate for the actual computer. I was actually somewhat surprised that the notebook came with printed documentation; the last few Dell machines my family bought came with a short pamphlet telling you how to plug in the computer in several different languages.


When I first pulled the D830 out of its protective envelope boy was I impressed. Things have changed since the days of my 500m. I expected the build quality to be good, but it was unexpectedly good. It's really quite solid. It's also very pleasant to look at it; I think the rather subdued appearance is much nicer than the flashy white-bumper Inspiron.


When I first opened up the machine I found the hinges quite stiff with pretty much no play. The outer shell of the notebook is made of a magnesium alloy though the inner surfaces are still made of plastic. The chassis has no flex whatsoever; I can pick it up by a corner without a problem. Unfortunately though there is a bit of flex in the screen and palmrest, but it is much less than that of older Dell machines. The latch is a bit loose but the travel is very small. The overall build quality might not be on par with that of the Thinkpad series but it is getting close.


Like I said before, I'm very fond of the somewhat simplistic Latitude design. Save for the small curves that make up the corners of the machine the lines of the laptop (ibm thinkpad t60 battery )are straight and parallel forming a nearly rectangular solid. I think this gives it a more rugged and balanced appearance than wedge shaped notebooks which seem to be appearing more and more these days. The two tone color scheme also contributes to the smart appearance of a business laptop.


Input Devices


The keyboard looks like a typical Dell keyboard; it's very similar in appearance to the keyboard on my 500m (dell inspiron 1720 battery ). I found that the keyboard is generally more pleasant to use; the keys have a slightly greater travel and a greater amount of feedback as well. There isn't any flex in the keyboard as far as I can tell, though I am not a terribly hard typist. Overall it's a decent keyboard, good, but nothing special.


The touchpad feels the same as the one on my 500m(dell KD476). It's responsive and easy to use, but again, nothing terribly special. I really like the buttons under the touchpad. Instead of having a short, hard click the D830 has buttons that have a longer, softer click to them which I just find to be rather nice. The same can be said for the power button and media buttons.


I don't use a pointing stick very often; in fact there isn't one on my 500m (Dell gd761), but I found it to be less responsive than the touchpad and harder to use. I tended to overshoot where I was aiming much of the time. It may just be because I don't have much experience with the trackpoint. The buttons for the trackpoint are the same as those for the touchpad with that same long, soft click.


I don't like having a bunch of multimedia buttons cluttering up the front of my computer, so I am glad that the D830 only has three. There are three buttons to control the speaker volume: higher, lower and mute.


Sound


One of the reasons I turned down the D630 was a that speaker quality was reported to be pretty bad. I usually use headphones when listening to movies or music but I'd like to have a decent set of speakers for the rare times I don't. That being said, the speakers on the D830 (12" 15" 17" apple powerbook g4 battery )are pretty good as far as laptop speakers go. Being set on the sides of the keyboard means they are quite clear when I am sitting at machine and the sound carries itself pretty well even across the length of a living room. The sound does start getting fuzzy at really high volumes, but my ears usually start to ring before it gets to that point.


Processor and Graphics


In high school I did quite a bit of CAD work on my 500m for my school's robotics team. Autodesk Inventor 8 took more than a minute to load. Inventor 10 took twice that and ran at a crawl once it started. It was rather frustrating. As I would be majoring in engineering in college, I figured I could use a discrete graphics solution which led me to select the NVS 140 GPU as I read that it was optimized for "business" applications such as CAD. I have not done anything GPU intensive since purchasing this machine so I'm not certain about the real world performance of the NVS 140.


The single core AMD Barton processor in my desktop is clocked at 2.3GHz and I have not known it to really struggle with anything I threw at it. Subsequently I did not think I'd need the fastest processor I could get and went with the 2.0 GHz Intel T7300 because it was a nice round number. Recently I needed to do a fair amount of video encoding and I split the task between the D830 (dell latitude d600 battery )and my desktop. I daresay I was somewhat surprised as to how much faster the T7300 was compared to the older AMD processor. Encoding a certain video file was nearly twice as fast on the D830. I guess there's no doubt that multiple cores are the wave of the future.


Operating System and Software


I'll come right out and say that I'm not very fond of Vista. I'm even less fond of the fact that Microsoft really isn't giving me a choice as to what OS I want to use. I bought my D830 with Vista in the event that I would be forced to upgrade in the near future but with the intention of using XP until then. I chose Vista Business because it is supposed to be the Vista equivalent of XP Pro which I have been happily using for a long time.


Vista came preinstalled along with Roxio Creator and Cyberlink, neither of which I need or use.


While waiting for my D830 I learned that Dell's stock drivers for the NVS 140 (15" 17" apple macbook pro battery )were rather poor. Indeed, there was a noticeable amount of lag every couple seconds when opening and closing tabs or moving windows around. It was recommended that I should use Nvidia's Forceware drivers in place of the stock drivers, so I looked around for a compatible version. Revision 160.05 did not officially supporting the NVS 140, but it definitely improved my system's graphical performance. It was not free of problems though; I noticed that standby stopped working properly after the driver update and I'm sure there were bugs that I did not notice.


Afterwards Vista ran quite smoothly. A cold boot took just under a minute.


Installing a fresh copy of XP was a pain. My XP installation CD cannot recognize SATA drivers. I had to switch the HDD controller to ATA mode, install the OS, install the SATA drivers and switch the HDD controller back to its default setting. Dell's resource CD only included drivers for Vista so I downloaded XP drivers for the D830 (dell xps m1730 battery )from Dell's technical support site. Some of these XP drivers did not want to work with my machine and I had to use the corresponding Vista drivers. All in all the installation process took a full morning, but I eventually got the system in working order with Windows XP.


Heat and Noise


When the laptop is idling it is very quiet. I can only hear it if I try to. When going about my normal business, it's very easy to ignore. Under a heavy load such as video encoding or benchmarking, the fan will start running at higher speeds. At this point a significant amount of noise is generated, but I believe it is from the moving air rather than the fan itself. Also, the optical drive makes a bit of noise when it is running, though that is pretty typical for optical drives in general.


When the laptop is idling it is also quite cool. The lower half of the keyboard and palmrest stays at room temperature while the upper half just gets a tad bit warmer. Under a heavy load the upper half will heat up a noticeable amount, but the fan does a good job of keeping the temps at a reasonable level. The bottom of the laptop and the air coming out the back can also get pretty warm under these conditions.


Battery Life


I did a simple test to emulate light use of the D830 under battery power. I turned the screen down to half brightness and let windows media player play music at a relatively low volume. This test was also done under the default Vista setup, prior to the installation of ForceWare drivers.


The 9-cell primary on its own reached 10% in a bit under three hours. Together with the media bay battery it reached 10% in just over four and a half hours.


Considering that my 500m could do three and a half hours on its one primary battery, I was a bit disappointed with the battery life at first, especially when owners of D620s and D630s were claiming battery lives of up to five hours. But considering I have a 15 inch WUXGA screen and discrete graphics I guess a drop in battery life is expected.