Last year my work machine got updated, and I was lucky enough to land a Dell XPS 13 Plus.
Last month I was asked about my experience with it from someone thinking of getting one themselves, and I went so in depth that I thought maybe it was a good idea to take those Twitter DMs and turn them into a longer review.
TL;DR;
This is a long review, so if you are looking for some quick feedback, here it is!
π€© This is an awesome little machine. The screen is spectacular, the performance mind-blowing and the form-factor almost perfect.
It has some issues with heat and drivers, but overall it's that good that when my personal machine is in need of replacement, it'll probably be one of these that replaces it.
Now for the long version!
Specifications
Reviewing a laptop is such a hard thing. When researching a new machine I never seem to be able to find a review of the specifications I am looking for.
And a lot of the time the specs are buried somewhere after you have wasted time reading about the machine π So lets start with what exactly I am reviewing!
Dell XPS 13 Plus
i7-1280p: 14 core, 20 thread processor
32GB LPDDR5 5200MHx Memory
1TB M.2 PCIe Gen 4 NVMe SSD
4K 500 nit screen
Windows 11 Pro
Graphite colour
Tech wise I went for the best that the given budget would handle focussing on the processor and memory as these are not upgradable
Screen-wise I was torn between the beautiful sub 4K OLED and the 4K LCD. I eventually went for the LCD because it has a better brightness. In the summer I work in the garden, and that extra 25% brightness can be really important!
And then there was the colour... The Platinum (silver) is beautiful! However... I've had light coloured, white back-lit keyboards before and find it really hard to work with them
During the day, when the backlight is turned off there isn't a problem. In semi-dark conditions though...
It's like typing on a keyboard without symbols. I can do it, but it's not fun. And seeing some reviews of this machine, the same problems were there for present.
If the backlight had a splash of colour in it then it would be awesome, but as is. Nah. Nor for me at least.
So I went for the Graphite (grey) option. Still pretty, but not as... Sparkly... π
Performance
Wowser. Seriously, wowser.
This is a tiny machine that doesn't weigh much. And yet... It can do things that my almost top of the line 2020 XPS 15 can't.
I give tech talks, both online and in person. My studio setup at home is 2x 27" 4K monitors + the laptop screen, a CamLink 4K for input from my camera for me to talk into, HD webcam for desk shots, and a Scarlet 2i2 MK3 audio interface for my microphone input.
I've not gotten around to building a streaming machine yet so my laptops have to do everything. OBS, multiple Visual Studios, Chrome windows for demos and tools, and whatever streaming platform the conference is using.
Sharing my OBS Virtual Camera and a screen to StreamYard takes a little-bit of a toll. Using Teams brings everything to a grinding halt. On my XPS 15 I generally drop the resolution on all three screens to HD in order to make it workable.
On this little tiny little machine. Nope. 4K * 3 (with 225% DPI on the shared monitor so the viewers can read it) all the way. It's AWESOME.
In fact the only thing that seems to make it stutter just as much as every other machine I have used is when ReSharper starts in Visual Studio. It grinds to a halt for 10 tro 20 seconds each and every time... (For my talks I don't use ReSharper as I try to have as close to the free tooling experience as possible)
Fan Noise
I was terrified for this... I've had a few thin and light laptops that have been spectacular, but when they start to work it's like a jet engine starts on your desktop. And they still throttle too much.
However... In my experience, even when pushing this thing as hard as I can, nope. There is noise, and you can definitely hear the fan, but it's not a loud, intrusive noise. And it's not there all-of-the time. Doable, definitely doable.
Heat
That performance though, in such a small package, from an Intel chip, and without a jet engine, does have costs. One of them is heat.
I swear I can heat my house and fry an eggs with this machine on full tilt. Even when doing something light, the temperature underneath gets bad, quickly.
On the sofa in the summer, wearing shorts, it was literally painful to use - in fact I gave up and now use a large Lego Star Wars coffee table book as a laptop stand when needing the full power of the machine whilst working away from a table.
There is a way around. When using it for lighter tasks (like writing markdown files for blog posts), I can set it to run cool using Dell's performance tool. You lose a little power (though, honestly, not a huge amount) , and it means that working on my lap again is not a problem.
But if you want the full on performance, on your lap, be aware that it's going to get toasty! As a friend said of hers:
On the bed you can iron sheets with it
Maybe Dell should use that as a selling point, multitasking π
Battery life
And here is the other problem with such a small machine with so much power. Battery life.
I have a few machines that I use for different things. My MacBook Pro M1 lasts an absolute age between charges
My XPS 15, even at two years old can still go 6 hours or so with light use
This machine... About 4 hours. With heavy use, 2 or 3. Not great.
Again, there are ways that you can improve this. Dim the screen (that makes a huge improvement, but isn't always ideal for eye strain) and set the machine to use both the Dell Performance Cool setting, and Windows "Best Power Efficiency" setting.
Again, you lose some of that awesome performance, but also again, for most things it still performs admirably.
But be aware that this is not a laptop that you use all day and plug in over the evening to recharge, you are going to be connected to a socket a lot of the time. I actually got my self a large power-bank to ensure that when travelling I wouldn't be caught short on power after a few hours.
For me, this is annoying but not a deal-breaker. Your experiences will vary!
Screen
So... That 4k screen that sucks power. Is it worth it?
OMG, YES! My eyes are starting to show their age and failing a little. And yet. I use that 13" 4K screen most of the time at 150% DPI. And can work with 125% or even native 100% if I need lots of screen real estate for something. Though not for long periods of time. But it is sharp enough to try.
And when I'm tired and bump that DPI up a little, say to 200% during the evening, it is beautiful. This is something that it has in common with the XPS 15. When pretending to be FullHD everything is crisp, sharp and just super relaxing on the eyes.
My Dell screens are by far the best of any laptop I've used in years!
Connectivity
On the face of it, the connectivity of the laptop is not great. There are exactly 2 ports: a left hand Thunderbolt 4 USB C port and a right hand Thunderbolt 4 USB C port.
Not even a 3.5mm socket (another casulty to keeping the 1280p chip cool!).
However, aside from dongle hell (which is a fact with many laptops these days) it's not as bad as it seems. Those ports can work hard!
At home I have a Thumberbolt 3 docking station that everything is connected to (aside from the CamLink 4K because of Windows issues) that also delivers power. So one cable and I get:
- Power
- 2 * 4K output (as I said this machine can drive 3 screens with ease!)
- An audio interface for my microphones
- 1Gb ethernet
- Audio out -A FullHD webcam
- Keyboard and other ancillaries
Whilst you do need those docking stations, the throughput is such that it doesn't get slow when running everything through that port!
You can also plus a Display Port monitor directly into each of those USB C ports to get external monitors without the need for a docking station.
Sound
I've been using laptops since 1994 and the way that laptop sound has changed over the years is mind-blowing. That first machine didn't even have sound. By the late 90's sound was standard, but really only with headphones or external speakers. Tinny, weedy sound that was better than nothing, but not good.
Then larger laptops started to put bigger speakers in, I had a few in the naughties that had base speakers built into the base and were... Acceptable.
But the sound from modern machines makes these look awful by comparison, and the XPS 13 Plus is no exception. Is it a machine that you are going to listen to concerts on, or get deep and explosive soundtracks to actions films from? No. But it is perfectly fine for day to day use if you are alone and don't want to use headphones.
It's different to my 13" MacBook Pro - which I see reviewers say is the standard for laptop sound, but not worse. At least I don't think so.
Then there is the built-in microphone. I can only go via feedback from my colleagues in Teams here, but... I am told that the sound is crisp, clear, and it filters out noise quite well. Keyboard clicks don't come over and there is no echo from the laptop speakers. It does pick up room sound though - I have been muted when working in the living room and someone makes a coffee 4m away...
For what the built in microphone is meant for, I don't think that you can ask for more.
Typing
And speakng of typing sound... A nice segway to the keyboard. This is a standout design feature of the laptop.
From the move to full size keys (away from the Chiclet keyboard) that span the entire width of the chassis. It really gives the laptop presence when open.
They apparently have a slight dish to them to make typing easier and more accurate. For me, it works.
My benchmark for typing is my MacBook Pro. Once I bought that I used it constantly for any lengthy text that I needed to type.
Until I got this machine. Keyboard feel is a very personal thing, but this keyboard has just the right pressure and feedback to the keys to make long typing sessions (like writing this post) comfortable.
I do make typos on it, but I've not had a keyboard where that doesn't happen, so I don't think that I can blame they keyboard for that!
I can touch type on it easily, and it didn't take very long at all to get used to. Top marks!
Except... The arrow keys are a pain. Full size left and right keys, but the up and down are only half height and I hit them wrong all the time!
I do have to mention the function keys. Or rather, that they are not function "keys". Due to needing extra space to shift heat from the processor the physical keys have been replaced with capacitive, OLED touch keys that are much shallower in the chassis.
Think a MacBook Pro touch bar but without the flexibility. Which I know is Marmite (incidentally, for those who know Marmite - I love it!).
This implementation though is a much simpler implementation. There is no screen that changes. You have either fixed F keys, or fixed functions.
For me, they kind of work. Most of the time. If there is one thing that I wish they had it would be haptic feedback so that I know if I pressed the button or not.
I've read of people who accidentally hit them all the time (because they are capacitive and don't need pressure to work), but this hasn't been my personal experience.
The biggest problem is the brightness of those OLEDs. They could be stronger. When working in the garden, or sitting by a window, with bright sun, they can be hard to see!
Trackpad
The other major design decision. The trackpad has no moving parts, like a MacBook. Instead, it is a sheet of glass with multiple haptic feedback motors underneath.
The idea is that whilst the Apple implementation has a single haptic motor to "click", the Dell puts the click close to your fingers with multiple engines. Click with two fingers? Multiple haptic engines fire and if you feel a local click for each finger.
It's also an edgeless trackpad. Looking at the machine you cannot see where the trackpad starts and ends. Which, whilst looking awesome, also looks like it could be a pain to use. But that hasn't been my experience. It's big enough that it lies nicely under your hand and it there when you need it.
A bigger shock for me is that it's almost as usable as that of the MacBook pro. That sounds like a backhanded compliment, but the Apple is the only machine that I never use with a mouse.
The XPS 13 Plus is almost at the same level. When I use it on my lap I never use a mouse with it. There are one or two functions that are then more difficult (but those are Outlook issues, not hardware).
Proximity Sensors and Windows Hello
These are wonderful!
The machine knows when you are looking at the screen. If you look away for an amount of time it locks automatically. When you sit behind it again it unlocks (using the Windows Hello camera).
It's maybe not a major thing, but it's enough that it makes the machine just that bit nicer to use!
And speaking of logging in. That Windows Hello camera recognises you in the light, dark, with or without glasses and hasn't needed the retraining that a lot of my other machines have to work consistently.
The same with the fingerprint scanner. It works almost flawlessly for me. Perfect!
Anoyances
There are some issues though.
Trackpad Issues
The haptic engine of the trackpad relies on drivers to make the haptic feedback work. And mine went very odd one time.
I suddenly lost most of the feedback from the trackpad. Went into the settings to increase the level of feedback and... Clicking suddenly took 5 seconds.
I'd click, and you heard the engine fire, but then the trackpad stalled, and about 5 seconds later it clicked a second time and would respond again.
Turn off the feedback completely, and it worked fine, but wasn't as usable.
It took me uninstalling the drivers completely, restarting and reinstalling them to fix the issue. Annoying. Only once in 6 months, but it is one of those things that makes you wonder when it's going to happen again.
Proximity Sensors
Those proximity sensors are also controlled in the most ridiculous way.
They don't are not included in any of the "normal" tools/bloatware you get with a Dell. They can (as far as I can find) only be controlled using the "My Dell" application.
Great when the machine is new out of the box, and it's available. Not so much if you ever have to clean install the machine, even using the recovery partition of the machine!
You cannot download this from the Dell site, you have to use the Windows store. That is an annoyance - I'd like to have it as a simple download and available to install at will.
However... After a clean install it's more than just an annoyance. It simply refuses to install from the Windows store.
You can see it in the store, it even says it's compatible with the machine, but there is no install button visible and no information on why it's not available.
Look at the Dell site and all instructions just say go to the Windows store and install from there. Infuriating!
This took a look of Googling for different terms, reading that the machine works fine without it (which it doesn't, not if you want to use those proximity sensors) I finally found the solution.
For the Windows Store to allow you to install the machine you need to add a couple of registry keys that mark your machine as a Dell laptop.
The commands below are the first that I found, link to the original post below. They set 2 keys for the Windows Store.
- 1 to let Windows Store know that you machine is made by dell
- 1 to let Windows Store know that it is an XPS machine
C:\WINDOWS\system32>REG ADD "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Store" /v OEMID /f /t REG_SZ /d DELL
C:\WINDOWS\system32>REG ADD "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Store" /v StoreContentModifier /f /t REG_SZ /d "DELL_XPS"
However... This didn't quite work for me, rather I had to set the StoreContentModifier
to DELL_INSPIRON
before it would let me install the software
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Store]
"OEMID"="DELL"
"StoreContentModifier"="DELL_INSPIRON"
Once there everything starts to work again as you would expect. But users should not have to play with the Windows Registry to get a machine doing what it is supposed to do!
Scuff Marks
The final disappointment with the machine is how quickly it got scuffed. That graphite colour is a coating on an aluminium chassis, and it does not stand up to day-to-day use.
The leading edge has chips in the paint where it's put into a laptop bag frequently.
Not a show-stopper, but for the price of the machine I would have expected better.
It's worth saying that my use case here is not normal. I generally have more than one machine, and a portable screen in the bag at the same time when travelling.
But even then, other machines I've done the same with haven't suffered the same issues, so I really think it's a problem with the coating Dell use.
Overall
The list of gripes that I have with the machine might make you think I regret choosing this machine, but absolutely not!
The performance, screen, keyboard and sheer joy of use (most of the time) more than make up for the slight issues I've had.
Buying a machine for work is one thing, but I think the best praise that I can give this machine is that if I needed to replace my current home laptop right now it, it would be one of these. No question.
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