Picking the perfect portable
laptop can be a trying task for both head and heart (and wallet). Some
sentimental longtime favorites, such as the 13-inch MacBook Air, are still good general-purpose laptops, but with each year that goes by, the design gets older, and features fail to keep up with the times. Slick hybrids like the Lenovo Yoga 900 are powerful, slim, and play at the tablet game, too, but you'll pay for the privilege of folding the screen all the way back. Even the new Razer Blade Stealth manages to nail a lot of functionality for a decent price, but the gamer-centric design skews toward Call of Duty players. Shoppers
are stuck between choosing based on price, features, or design -- and
generally speaking, settling on two out of those three is the best one
can hope for. The Dell XPS 13
came close to nailing the perfect formula last year, with an
eye-catching barely there screen bezel, decent power, and a sub-$1,000
starting price in the US. But, that entry-level model skipped the touch
screen, a must-have feature for a premium Windows laptop (while the more
expensive touchscreen model also had less battery life).
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Despite this, the XPS 13 became one of our favorite 13-inch class laptops, and the recent 15-inch version (naturally called the XPS 15) impressed with its own large screen and minimal bezel. Rather
than continuing to try squeezing out features to hit a more mainstream
price, the latest version of the XPS 13 takes a more premium approach.
The processor is a current-gen Intel Core i7, paired with 8GB of RAM and
a big 256GB of solid-state storage. The touchscreen display has a very
high 3,200x1,800-pixel native resolution, and the same very narrow bezel
(Dell calls it the Infinity Display) that made last year's original
such a standout. Graphics get an upgrade, too, adding the Intel Iris
GPU, which isn't as good as having a discrete graphics card from Nvidia
or AMD, but is a big step up from standard laptop fare. Finally,
as if to drive home all the premium features and upgrades, the aluminum
outer shell is now gold-colored. And it's got a price to match, topping
out the XPS 13 line at $1,649 in the US.
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Yes, it's a premium price (for example, we've even seen some Oculus Rift-ready gaming desktops
for less), but the gold XPS 13 has a great design, a fantastic
keyboard, and even more than one year later, no one else has come close
to matching the striking no-bezel look. If it's just too expensive,
dropping the gold design, downgrading to a Core i5 CPU and losing the
Iris graphics gets you down to a much more reasonable $1,399
configuration.
Dell XPS 13 (Gold Edition)
Price as reviewed
$1,649
Display size/resolution
13-inch 3,200 x 1,800 touchscreen
PC CPU
2.2Ghz Intel Core i7-6560U
PC memory
8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz
Graphics
128MB Intel Iris Graphics 540
Storage
256GB SSD
Networking
802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating system
Windows 10 Home (64-bit)
Going for the gold
While the gold chassis
is a selling point, the look is actually rather muted in person. It's
gold-ish, rather than bright and in your face. It's also not the first
time we've seen this in a laptop, as gold hues are available as an
option in the Apple MacBook and LG Gram,
although it's still rare. Still, it's a nice break from the usual
silver/gray look of most laptops, just don't expect it to read as
especially bling-y. Color aside, this new update doesn't stray
much from the original. It's still a wedge-shaped laptop with a wide
touchpad and generous keyboard, with enough ports and connections to
keep most users happy. New is a USB-C port, used for data and video, but
not power (other systems such as the 12-inch Apple MacBook and Razer
Blade Stealth also use USB-C for power).
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Just
as it the original XPS 13 did, this system has a relatively small
footprint -- largely because there's no thick border around the display.
The end result is that the XPS 13 has smaller dimensions than a MacBook Air,
Lenovo Yoga 900 or Microsoft Surface Book, while weighing just about
the same, 2.8 pounds (1.27kg) in this case. That makes the XPS 13 feel a
little heavy when picked up, because you're packing the same weight
into a smaller volume of space. Plus, recent lightweight laptops such as
the Razer Blade Stealth and Lenovo LaVie have really spoiled me when it comes to laptop weight.
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