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Dell D610

This is a discussion on Dell D610 within the Laptop Support forums, part of the Hardware category; any thoughts on this lappy bought a refurbished for £180. for the ...

  1. #1
    dee
    dee is offline
    VIP Member dee's Avatar

    Dell D610

    any thoughts on this lappy bought a refurbished for £180.

    for the partner

    Dell D610-41kwajipyll._sl500_aa300_.jpg

    Dell D610-71ld6uzvnhl._aa1500_.jpg

    Well-designed case
    Competent performance
    Decent battery life
    Includes all the ports and connections most business users need
    Swappable bay for optical drive
    Solid manageability and security software
    Standard three-year warranty
    Unlimited, toll-free tech support

    Bad

    Somewhat expensive

    In this review

    To take advantage of Intel's new Sonoma platform, Dell has given makeovers to the principal models in its lineup of Latitude business laptops. The revised thin-and-light of the bunch, the Dell Latitude D610, looks nearly indistinguishable from the Latitude D600 model that it replaces, but it features a handful of improvements and new components.

    Design
    Designwise, there's a lot to like about the Latitude D610; it's a dead ringer for the no-nonsense Latitude D600. At 312 by 262 by 34mm, the Latitude D610's dark silver case is just a few millimetres larger than the Latitude D600's; it weighs 2.45kg (2.86kg with its AC adaptor) -- about average for its class.

    We like the sleek, silver case and the firm, full-size keyboard; still, we would have preferred the Delete key placed along an edge rather than floating between the F12 and the End keys. In addition to the modest, rectangular touch pad with its own set of larger mouse buttons, there's a handy pencil-eraser-looking pointing stick anchored in the middle of the keyboard (also with its own small mouse buttons), located directly below the spacebar.

    Though the laptop lacks many of the multimedia controls found on new laptops, there are external volume and mute buttons. New accoutrements include LED status lights that report when Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are activated, as well as case fortifications around the keyboard and the lid that minimise bowing, which can damage the display.

    Features
    The most noteworthy new Latitude D610 spec is its Intel 915 (Sonoma) chipset, which supports PCI Express; in theory, users should expect accelerated data processing and performance. Dell sells the Latitude D610 through its Web site or via phone, and you can choose from a wide range of components to customise your system.

    Our Latitude D610, priced at £1,410 (as of April 2005), featured a 14.1-inch display with a fine 1,400x1,050 native resolution and was configured with a rather high-end selection of components, including a 2.0GHz Pentium M 760 processor, 512MB of 400MHz DDR SDRAM, an ATI Mobility Radeon X300 graphics card with 64MB of its own video memory, and an 80GB hard drive spinning at a brisk 5,400rpm. Also onboard was a CD-RW/DVD-ROM combo drive in a terrifically easy-to-swap bay, an Intel Pro Wireless 2200 b/g wireless networking card (note: not the Sonoma a/b/g card), and Bluetooth.

    Performance
    In our benchmark tests, our Dell Latitude D610, equipped with the ATI Mobility Radeon X300, delivered a solid performance, though its Sonoma platform did not appear to pack much extra punch. In fact, the Latitude D610 was just 6 percent faster than the non-Sonoma Latitude D600 -- a system with a slightly slower clock speed, an inferior graphics card with half the video memory, and a slower hard drive. This isn't to say that the Latitude D610 isn't a good performer; it turned in solid MobileMark scores that were slightly higher than other comparably equipped (and somewhat less expensive) systems we've tested, including the Acer TravelMate 3200 and the IBM ThinkPad T42.

    Likewise, the Latitude D610's battery lasted 249 minutes in our drain test -- a solid showing, but just 3 minutes more than the previous-generation Latitude D600 and an hour and a half short of the ThinkPad T42's remarkable 340 minutes. We also tested a separate Latitude D610 that had integrated graphics (Intel's 915GM Graphics Media Accelerator that drew up to 128MB of system memory) and scored a 208 in our MobileMark test, slightly lower than the Latitude D610 with the Radeon X300, but it lasted 276 minutes in our battery drain test.

    In a nod to the ever-increasing supply of USB-based peripherals, the Latitude D610 now features four USB 2.0 ports. For legacy peripherals, the Latitude D610 still includes serial and parallel ports, headphone and microphone jacks, along with S-Video out, Gigabit Ethernet, one Type II PC Card slot, and an integrated smart-card slot.

    For security, the Latitude D610 features a Trusted Platform Module -- a chip on the laptop's motherboard that encrypts and stores secret information which can be accessed only with a key code that you establish. Our system came preloaded with Microsoft Windows XP Professional and Dell's useful OpenManage software, which lets IS managers observe and update systems remotely. The Latitude D610 doesn't ship with productivity software, as most businesses already have software licenses in place, though Dell throws in CyberLink PowerDVD for DVD viewing and Sonic RecordNow 7.1 Deluxe for disc burning.


    was it worth the money

  2. #2
    Administrator HiTeck's Avatar
    There alright, had one a while back and the on/off button kept going on it, went 3 times with the kids heavy impatient hands, replacement only a 10er off flebay, in fact I have a faulty switch board on my computer desk as I replaced one for a friend a few days ago . I have loads of parts for that model as I stripped it down when it went the third time.

    The price you paid is quite high though!, hopefully you will have got plenty of warranty with it?.

  3. Likes dee Like
  4. #3
    dee
    dee is offline
    VIP Member dee's Avatar
    its because the case is blue but anything for a quite life H

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