Saturday, March 26, 2011

Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?

Hi All



Can anyone confirm whether or not the new XPS 17 is sata III? Been looking everywhere and the only clues are that on dells hard drives product pages all the XPS drives are ATA-150, whereas the alienwear, inspiron,etc are ATA-300.



Dell - Search - All Dell.com



Thanks

Reply 1 : Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?

I've asked a lot of Dell reps and all say SATA II.

Reply 2 : Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?

It does support SATA III (6Gbps).

Reply 3 : Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?


Quote:








Originally Posted by webcivilian
View Post

It does support SATA III (6Gbps).



Nice!!!!



10chars

Reply 4 : Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?


Quote:








Originally Posted by webcivilian
View Post

It does support SATA III (6Gbps).



Thats great, thanks for showing some proof. Shame Dell can`t be a little more elaborate with their specs.

Reply 5 : Dell XPS 17 L702x is sata 3?


Quote:








Originally Posted by webcivilian
View Post

It does support SATA III (6Gbps).



Wow this is awesome. Thanks Webcivilian... I had set on going with a SATA II because looking through the huge Dell L702x thread I couldn't find anything about it and all Dell Reps kept telling me SATA II.



Thank you for the confirmation!!

upgrading Vista to Windows 7

I own 2 Toshiba laptops a X305 Q701 and a X505 Q892. I still have the default Vista 64 that came with the X305 and now since I have the newer X505 with windows 7, I want to know how I can transfer Windows 7 from the X505 onto the X305, but without deleting the "reformat to factory settings" partition on the X305, just incase something goes wrong and I need to format the system to how I bought it.



I burned a backup disc for both systems when I got them, but I'm not sure how where to start or how to use the burned back up discs I made.



Could someone walk me step by step through the procedure, since I have no experience having done this before. Thanks

Friday, March 25, 2011

E6420 Owner's Thread

Well, I am back to do the initials on the E6420.

After the unboxing and testing for image building the machine is pretty much a mixed bag.



You can see in the comparison shots, Dell made a good effort in using high quality materials compared to the E6410. The problem is they did not use them to effectively enough to make the machine look any better.



First glance at the bottom of the 6420 it looks and feels like plastic right down to the texture. But clearly they knew this and stamped the Mg logo on it.

The top lid texture is very nice but again instead of making it a single slab it looks like a swappable cover, detracting from that sharp gun metal style.



The unit I have requires two hands to open the lid and the latch sticks badly.

Build quality is better than the E6410 all around but it certainly does not look it. It does not have that look it needs to separate it from the home user machines which is my largest complaint.



Also I don't know what happened to the power supply but if this is the new design but it certainly seems like they went back to the old C series style power supplies. I hope this is a mistake.



But regardless here is the initial batch of photos.

Reply 1 : E6420 Owner's Thread

You can see the build quality in these pictures.

Reply 2 : E6420 Owner's Thread

Here are more of the chassis

Reply 3 : E6420 Owner's Thread

Here is a partial tear down. Its not as easy to drop the back panel.

Hard disk is 4 screws and the back panel an additional 5 screws.

Reply 4 : E6420 Owner's Thread

More teardown pics

Reply 5 : E6420 Owner's Thread

You can see the speakers are back to the palmrest.

Reply 6 : E6420 Owner's Thread

Final compare to E6410

Reply 7 : E6420 Owner's Thread

In conclusion, the initial feeling is that the build quality and durability are much improved over the E6410, and that is the most important thing here. But I think they missed a major opportunity to really make this piece of hardware look as slick as it could have been. I am a huge fan of the M6500 design style and I think with just a little bit of tweaking making the lid a continuous gunmetal slab or even the aluminum silver of the surrounding metal the laptop would look very serious and sleek.



I also don't like the ring around the Dell logo, screams "home user."



The keyboard and palm rest is a large improvement so far and anyone coming from a 6410 will appreciate the larger touch pad.



16:9? Love it or hate it, its here to stay for a while.



So, in conclusion, the new design is a mixed bag you will likely either like it or just fall asleep looking at it and that's where Dell missed the boat on the design.

Reply 8 : E6420 Owner's Thread

Awesome, thanks for the mini review Dezoris, really appreciate it!

Reply 9 : E6420 Owner's Thread

Last two pictures, forgot to pull the keyboard.

Take it for what it is worth but its a lot more effort to pull it out compared to the E6410 and they went back to a ribbon cable to connect it.



The surrounding bezel will be easily broken when removing.

Four screws to secure the keyboard on top and two smaller ones on the bottom next to the docking port.

I can assume this was to curb keyboard flex, but I can barely see much difference both the e6410 and e6420 have deflection.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

X220T specs are out

the latest ThinkPad PSREF Sheets are out and the official X220T specs are listed.



http://www.lenovo.com/psref/pdf/tabook.pdf



Reply 1 : X220T specs are out

BAH, I was praying to see the HD+ screen. Too bad.

L502x construction, anyone open it up?

What is the bottom of laptop made out of? Metal? Plastic?

If you open up the bottom to access the drives, memory, etc., what is the chassis that everything is attached to made out of? Metal?, plastic?



Thx in advance

Reply 1 : L502x construction, anyone open it up?

refer to this thread, should be the same design though

XPS 15 Repaste, step-by-step and temps



page one

Reply 2 : L502x construction, anyone open it up?

All plastic.

"Power off display" after locking computer on PM 3.40

On Windows 7 Professional 64-bit, I used to have Power Manager 3.25 on my x200 before it was upgraded to 3.40 through Lenovo's System Update. With 3.25, I would be able to lock my computer so it shows the login screen with "Locked" under my user name and picture, then press Fn+F3 to turn off the display at the login screen.



With 3.40, I'm not able to do that anymore. Instead, when I press Fn+F3 after locking, it shows the regular power plan menu on the login screen and even if I select "Power off display," nothing happens. I was able to change the setting to turn off display upon hitting Fn+F3, but it still does nothing. Curiously, when I logged back in, the Fn+F3 setting still showed the power plan menu, as if I could control what the key combination does at the login screen and on the desktop.



The only way I can turn off the screen is to select "Switch User" and then dim it, but that gets annoying when I used to be able to just turn it off right after locking my computer if I needed to step away for a quick second and didn't need to put it to sleep. Can anyone else with Power Manager 3.40 please test out the Fn+F3 combination after locking their computer (doesn't matter if it's with Fn+F2 or Windows key+L) and report what happens?

White dots issue on HL-T4675S

I am having a snow storm of white dots on this TV (50+). I understand there is a fix for this problem. Please contact me with any steps I have to take to resolve this issue.