For the heating, I kind of get to that in a practical way. I run the benchmark loop for a couple of hours and check for performance drops. That said, the benchmarks are GPU-centric and the CPU is nearly idle, so it is not a perfect test for heat. For battery tests, I have not done that in the past, but it is a good idea. Part of the reason why is that (1) I focus on the maximum performance and that is not available if on a battery, and (2) from my own travel experience, I never find myself far from an electrical outlet for very long, even in a train or a plane. Thanks for the comments.
thanks for the video nice comparision ... my question is out of subject hope u dont mind...did u edit the start and end of video via preset or a project file ? and which software u used to edit it ?
The intro/outro and the rest of the video was done with DaVinci Resolve 17. In this case, I had just switched over to Resolve from PPro and I used a template. It was helpful for getting a feel for the new program. :)
Roughly $3000 to a bit more than $5000 for reasonable configs of the new models, the 5560 and 5760, respectively. I won't go for less than 32 GB of RAM and 2 TB of SSD, and increasing both is a good idea depending on your apps. I never go for a FHD display either. Getting the fastest CPU is probably a good idea for most of us ... it pays off in the long run.... you will have the machine for 3-4 years. And frankly, either you get a 5560 with the A2000 and the rest like you need it or you go for the A3000 in the 5760 with the rest of the config remaining as it is. The size and weight difference is so small that I think this approach makes the most sense. Be aware that when you look on the Dell site that you have to hunt for the system which is 100% configurable. If you choose the wrong option, then your configuration choices will be constrained and then you may not be able to configure the machine the way that you want it.
The Keyboard is a Decorative item... 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Always use an External Piece if you are a Typing-Smart person 😎 For a Scratching Specialist the Trackpad is Perfect...... 😝😝😝😝
Thanks for the comment - It seems that for mobile workstations, keyboards, touchpads, touch sticks, external mice, etc, are a very personal choice. Personally, I think that a nice large, sensitive touchpad without extra buttons is most productive for me. In this regard, MacOS does a much better job than Windows (IMHO).
I agree about the display! Regarding the keyboard, I am used to a flat, low-travel keyboard, and this one seemed OK to me... OTOH, I only used it for a relatively short time - thanks for the comment.
Can i buy this laptop for architecture studies
Yes because i am also used this laptop as an architecture student
Your videos are great! Keep up the good work.
Can u add battery test and heating test for the same.. Great work
For the heating, I kind of get to that in a practical way. I run the benchmark loop for a couple of hours and check for performance drops. That said, the benchmarks are GPU-centric and the CPU is nearly idle, so it is not a perfect test for heat.
For battery tests, I have not done that in the past, but it is a good idea. Part of the reason why is that (1) I focus on the maximum performance and that is not available if on a battery, and (2) from my own travel experience, I never find myself far from an electrical outlet for very long, even in a train or a plane.
Thanks for the comments.
thanks for the video nice comparision ... my question is out of subject hope u dont mind...did u edit the start and end of video via preset or a project file ? and which software u used to edit it ?
The intro/outro and the rest of the video was done with DaVinci Resolve 17. In this case, I had just switched over to Resolve from PPro and I used a template. It was helpful for getting a feel for the new program. :)
Can you use the dell pen, on the screen?
To be honest, I did not test the touch screen versions.
Does it take windows softwar ? My all software like adobe premier run on windows, can they run on this one to ?
Yes. Windows or Linux run on these.
Prices??
Roughly $3000 to a bit more than $5000 for reasonable configs of the new models, the 5560 and 5760, respectively.
I won't go for less than 32 GB of RAM and 2 TB of SSD, and increasing both is a good idea depending on your apps. I never go for a FHD display either. Getting the fastest CPU is probably a good idea for most of us ... it pays off in the long run.... you will have the machine for 3-4 years. And frankly, either you get a 5560 with the A2000 and the rest like you need it or you go for the A3000 in the 5760 with the rest of the config remaining as it is. The size and weight difference is so small that I think this approach makes the most sense.
Be aware that when you look on the Dell site that you have to hunt for the system which is 100% configurable. If you choose the wrong option, then your configuration choices will be constrained and then you may not be able to configure the machine the way that you want it.
The Keyboard is a Decorative item... 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Always use an External Piece if you are a Typing-Smart person 😎
For a Scratching Specialist the Trackpad is Perfect...... 😝😝😝😝
Thanks for the comment - It seems that for mobile workstations, keyboards, touchpads, touch sticks, external mice, etc, are a very personal choice.
Personally, I think that a nice large, sensitive touchpad without extra buttons is most productive for me. In this regard, MacOS does a much better job than Windows (IMHO).
Beautiful screen horrible keyboard ...
I agree about the display! Regarding the keyboard, I am used to a flat, low-travel keyboard, and this one seemed OK to me... OTOH, I only used it for a relatively short time - thanks for the comment.