My Dell XPS 15 (2013) review

UPDATED: 29 Nov 2013 - A lot of the DPI issues mentioned are fixed in Chrome 33 (dev channel at the time of writing)

UPDATE: 29 Nov 2013 - Updated the battery section.

I have had the new Dell XPS 15 (2013 model) for a few days and wanted to
share my experiences with it.

I have been looking for a laptop for approximately 9 months. The key
aspects I was looking for are below:

  • Powerful - I do not want to compromise on speed.
  • 12GB RAM or higher - My work requires that I run Hyper-V and do some fairly intensive work.
  • Touch Screen - This is a bit of a religious debate, but I am convinced that touch is a very important method of interacting with Windows 8.1. I already have a Surface RT and didn't need convincing that I needed touch.
  • High Resolution (Retina) - After using my iPhone, it always shocks me bad my Dell Ultrasharp monitors look.
  • Size & Weight - Whilst I am not in the market for an ultrabook specifically, I do not want to carry around some huge monstrosity. It needs to be a reasonable weight. Regarding size, I am looking at 14 - 15 inch displays.

For 9 months, I was unable to find a suitable candidate.

In all honesty, I didn't really look at Dell too much. I have bought
Dells and always recommended them for years, but I felt sure that Dell
did not make a laptop that suited my needs. For a long time, the Mac
Book Pro was the closest match and had the 2013 model come with a touch
screen, I probably would have bought it.

I then saw someone on Twitter mention the new Dell XPS 15, so I went a
took a look and was pleasantly surprised.

Specs

I have the top end machine and the specs are as follows:

  • Haswell i7-4702HQ Processor
  • 512GB SSD
  • 3200 x 1800 Resolution display (touch screen)
  • 16GB DDR3 RAM
  • Bluetooth 4.0

For the full specs, go here:
http://www.dell.com/uk/p/xps-15-9530/pd?oc=cnx9503&model_id=xps-15-9530

Feel

This laptop feels fantastic. It feels extremely high quality and I love
the keyboard. I don't have much experience with ultrabooks, so I don't
know how it compares weight-wise, but 2kgs (4.4lbs) for a 15.6" display
seems very good.

Dell XPS 15 (9530) notebook computer.

dell-xps-15-keyboard-580-90

In my opinion, the feels is in the same league as a Macbook Pro and is
£500 cheaper.

Screen

The screen on this thing is incredible. It is most noticeable after you
have been using it for a while and then you go and use a "normal"
monitor. The difference is unbelievable.

A while ago Scott Hanselman did a review of the Lenovo Carbon X1. After
reading that review, I was very close to buying one, but I am pleased
that I managed to hold off. In the
review, Scott mentions the divisive screen on the Lenovo. He also took a few
pictures of it. I am going to try and recreate those photos with the
Dell XPS 15 and show them side by side.

comparison

The picture on the left is Scott's original picture, and the right is
mine. I took my picture with my iPhone 5S and I almost didn't post it
because the resulting picture is significantly worse than what I see in
real life. I don't know enough about photography to explain it, but the
image shows visible pixels which do not exist in the flesh.

The high resolution display (3200 x 1800) is absolutely gorgeous.
However, it seems like the windows platform is just not ready for it.
There are numerous issues with running Windows at this resolution. I
will go into these in a lot more detail later.

Cooling

For the first two days of owning the laptop, the fan did not start at
all. It was like using an iPad; completely silent. This includes running
Visual Studio, Outlook etc. The first time I heard the fan, I was
copying files from an old laptop that I have over wifi. I put the Dell
in High Performance power mode so that it wouldn't go to sleep and
interrupt the transfer. I then put the laptop on the floor and the fan
started up within 5 mins. I am presuming that the fan started because I
told it to go into "High Performance" mode which effectively tells it to
change from passive cooling (lower CPU speed etc) to active cooling
(higher CPU speed). When on, the fan is not loud, but it did shock me at first, mainly because I had not heard it before.

Battery Life

I haven't had the device for long enough to really talk too much about
battery life, but what I can say is that it's the best laptop battery
life I've ever had. No, it's not in Macbook territory, but it's pretty
decent. Currently I'm seeing 5-6hrs of normal use. I would imagine I can
extend that, by turning off various things and putting it into a power
saving mode. But I will wait for my next long haul flight for that... or
maybe I'll just use the iPad.

UPDATE 29 Nov 2013

I have read reports online reporting an 11 hour battery life in this
laptop. My experience is no where near that. I would say you would be
very lucky to get > 8 hours. In normal usage I still stand by my
original estimate of between 5-6 hours.

WiFi

Some other users have commented that they are experiencing slow download
speeds over wifi. I must admit, I haven't seen this to be the case and
actually have observed the opposite. The default power settings for the
laptop say that when on battery the wifi should "Maximise battery
life" and when plugged in should "Maximise performance".

Below is a screenshot from
www.speedtest.net. This was taken whilst running on battery (WiFi set to maximise battery life) and on WiFi.

speedtest

Yes... that is showing 110mbps download over wifi! This also proved that
the Wifi 802.11ac features work well.

The Good

  • This laptop is lightning. The i7 has 8 cores as shown below.

taskmanager

  • The 512GB SSD gives you the performance of an SSD, but without compromising on space. Below is the result of running HD Tune.

hdtune

That seems like some pretty solid performance to me. I will say that
when the room is silent, there is a very slight audible whining that
comes from the HDD when it is being stressed, but the room has to be
very quiet for you to hear it.

  • The backlit keyboard is a really nice touch.

keyboard small

  • Did I mention the screen?
  • It has both HDMI and Display Port outputs.
  • There are 4 x USB ports (3 x USB 3.0)
  • There is a battery level indicator on the side of the side of the device, which can be really useful to see at a glance whether you need to charge.

The Bad

  • I find it very hard to right-click the touchpad. It seems I have to do it 3-4 times before it registers. I think I will learn where I have to press, but ideally I shouldn't have to.
  • Windows is definitely not high resolution friendly. I am going to dedicate a whole section to this later on.
  • Lack of hardware volume controls.
  • Taking screenshots with the Snipping Tool is a bit of an issue due to the huge native resolution. You need to remember to scale them down if you want to post them online or send them via email.

Windows high resolution issues

The Dell XPS 15 runs a monstrous 3200 x 1800 native resolution. This
all sounds fantastic until you actually try to use it. Windows 8.1
detects the resolution and applies font scaling automatically. These
settings are shown below.

scaling preferences

As you can see Windows defaults it to the largest option. With this set,
80% of the system is absolutely fine, however 20% really is not. Issues
range from minor cosmetic issues, to fundamental show stopping issues.

Chrome

UPDATE: 29 Nov 2013 - Most of these issues are fixed in Chrome 33 (dev channel)

The first program I noticed with issues was Chrome. It just looked
wrong. The text was all blurry and was virtually unusable. I followed
this blog
post

to resolve the issues and whilst it has helped enormously, the issues
are still not resolved. Some examples are below.

The right click menu does not appear where I right clicked.

Chrome high resolution issues

As you can see in the image above, the downloads bar looks very funky.
Not a major issue, but just another annoyance.

All sorts of odd things like this happen

The search box appears in the wrong place

Dropbox

The Recently Changed window in dropbox is tiny. You have to get very
close to the screen to read what it says.

Dropbox does not scale the text correctly

Remote Desktop (Not an issue per se, but a side effect)

When you Remote Desktop into an Operating System that does not support
scaling, it is very hard to use indeed.

Remote Desktop into an OS that does not support scaling (2003)

SQL Server Management Studio

Parts of SSMS are unusable, but it generally just looks bad.

Parts of SSMS are unuseable.

SSMS Object Explorer

Powershell / Any console window

Powershell is unuseable. Command Prompt is better, but still difficult to use.

Tiny powershell window

Others

There are lots of issues in all sorts of different programs. Visual
Studio is one of the best programs. Generally speaking it is excellent.
The same can't be said for the current (8.0) version of Resharper.
JetBrains are aware of the issues, but most of their dialog windows and
text generated by Resharper looks terrible.

Conclusion

This is an epic laptop. I think the laptop is virtually perfect. Sadly
it is Windows letting it down. The display is simply astonishing,
however Windows support for high resolution displays is not quite there
yet.

I do think that the support will get better so I wouldn't use it as a
reason to avoid high resolution displays.