New Dell Vostro Notebooks Powered by Latest Intel Chips
Dell's two announcements on March 9 reach toward different audiences - SMBs, with a new line of Vostro notebooks, and high-performance demanders, with the M4500, a 15.6-inch mobile workstation that Dell is calling the world's most powerful and the first to combine new Intel processors with Nvidia Quadro FX 1800M graphics.
Dell is targeting different audiences with new products rolled out
March 9. With the new lineup of Vostro notebooks and the high-end M4500
workstation, Dell is addressing the needs of both small business
customers requiring secure, reliable and nimble solutions, and
professionals in areas such as media and entertainment, oil and gas,
architecture and engineering, who need the most robust offerings on the
market.
For the former comes the Vostro 3000 series, a line of 13-, 14-, 15- and 17-inch notebooks designed as "big sister" products to the 13-inch Vostro V13 introduced in December.
Where the V13, which starts at just $449, offers a choice Intel
ultra-low voltage processors, the 3000 series feature full-performance
hard drives that scale up to Intel Core i7 processors, support up to
6GB of DDR3 (double-data rate 3) SDRAM memory and, in the instance of
the 17-incher, the 3700, offers the option of up to 1GB of Nvidia
GeForce discrete graphics.
And still, Peggy Kaley, Dell's senior product manager for Vostro, told
eWEEK, "This series is far less spec focused and more pain focused.
Small business professionals have limited resources and their time
should be spent on the focus of their businesses."
Kaley said that Dell identified three significant pain points that pose
challenges for SMBs, and which her company is addressing with the 3000
series.
The first is the need to stretch a budget, and Kaley pointed to
features such as the possibility of eight hours of battery life and the
option of a backlit keyboard, which previously was only offered in
Dell's Latitude line. The 13-inch 3300, despite being "one of the
industry's thinnest commercial laptops," includes an optical drive, all
models come with webcams and microphones, and all but the 3000 include
an HDMI port.
Pricing for the three smaller models starts under $600, while the 3700 starts near $650.
Support is the second point, and the 3000 series features Dell's
ProSupport, with which, for a one-time annual fee, customers can choose
a level of 24/7 support, which includes having a single point of
contract and a promised two-minute call pickup time.
Data security and safety, the third point, are huge issues for SMBs, Kaley added.
"We try to resolve this," she said, "by offering the right features,
like optional encrypted hard drives, fingerprint readers, free-fall
sensor-enabled hard drives and software called Dell DataSafe," an
online solution that users can set once and forget about, assured of
regular backups at their designated internals.
Staff and infrastructure, however, aren't major issues for the second group Dell addressed today, also with product updates.
The Texas computer maker introduced refreshes to three of its tower
workstations - the Dell Precision T7500, T5500 and T3500, which will be
among the first to feature Intel's Xeon 5600 processors. More details
on these are still to come.
Additionally, it introduced the M4500, which follows from the M6500, introduced in February, and is the first 15.6-inch mobile workstation to offer SSD MiniCard storage.
The M4500 is the world's most powerful 15.6-inch mobile workstation,"
Mano Gialusis, a Dell senior product marketing manager, told eWEEK.
"We're able to make that claim due to a couple of key pieces [including
that] we're the only manufacturer to have Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition
and next-generation Nvidia FX 1800M graphics. We were also able to get
1GB of memory on a 15-incher, which we're pretty happy about."
The optional 64GB SSD MiniCard plugs into the M4500's PCI port, and is another point of pride.
Dell's competitors, said Gialusis, have to remove their optical drive to offer a similar solution.
"We can keep our optical drive, keep our primary drive, and have the SS
MiniCard in the system," he said. "A typical use case for me is someone
who has separate hard drives for separate jobs, or needs to lock up a
file. You could fill up one hard drive, with say animation files, and
you can pull it out and put it away, and maybe pop in another hard
drive for another project."
Other features on the M4500 include an optional HD+ sRGB LED 15.6-inch
display with a 100 percent user-selectable color gamut support; an
optional 3-megapixel camera; mobile broadband support and Qualcomm's
Gobi 2.0 technology; a weight of 6 pounds and support for 32- and
64-bit versions of Microsoft Windows 7.
Also included are Dell Precision ON technology. Precision ON Reader
offers a quick look at email or calendar apps, without powering up the
operating system, while Precision ON Flash - focusing more on security
than quick convenience - lets users, over WiFi or mobile broadband,
connect to the enterprise backend without connecting to the OS.
Pricing and a timetable for the M4500 and new tower workstations are
still being hashed out. The Vostro 3000 series, however, and which
comes in silver, red or brown, is now available in United States and
parts of Asia, with availability extending to Europe, Latin America and
other geographies after March 16.








