Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Dell Vostro V130 laptop reviews


Dell Vostro V130 laptop

Dell Vostro V130 mainframe

The excellent: Well-built, thin design; frivolous; brilliant keyboard; bracing, not glossy cover.
The terrible: Poor array life; high prices at high-range configurations; no optical drive.
The underside line: Dell’s thin and exceptionally portable Vostro V130 is an attractive tiny-affair 13-incher, but an inappropriately poor array life sinks its appeal.
Here’s the not-so-secret secret in this area Dell’s new tiny-affair mainframe, the Vostro V130: it’s not really just for tiny-affair users. Although the Vostro series slots in alongside Dell’s Liberty as non-consumer-oriented laptops, the thin, well-built, compact 13.3-inch Vostro V130 feels more like a more reasonably priced offspring of the original Dell Adamo. The V130 is an upgrade to last year’s Vostro V13, outfitted with HDMI-out and new, quicker CPUs. Unfilled in a wide diversity of configurations ranging from $429 up to a MacBook Air-level $1,073, the Vostro V130 is less of an party manufactured goods than it is the latest in a line of high-concept designs kicked off by the original Adamo.
As a upshot, our recommendations vary based on what cost and specs you’d brilliant from the configuration options unfilled on Dell’s Web site. Certain aspects of the V130 are consistent across the board: the rock-levelheaded aluminum-and-magnesium frame, the 13-inch not glossy cover, and the logic’s lack of an optical drive. Also, the V130 only has integrated Intel graphics.
The configuration we reviewed, a top-of-the-line $918 model, had an Intel Core i5 U470 CULV processor, 4GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard drive. In this configuration, it underperformed compared to the vaguely better but more reasonably priced Toshiba Portege R705, especially in terms of array life.
That’s the pickle with the Vostro V130: especially when factoring in its poor array life, there’s really nothing that distinguishes it when compared with superior tiny laptops such as the Portege R705 and the new Apple MacBook Airs. In the middle configurations, especially nearly $600, the V130 may possibly have been a sweeter extent, especially if its array performed best.

Price as reviewed / early price$918 / $429
Processor1.33 GHz Intel Core i5 U470
Reminiscence4GB, 1,333MHz DDR3
Hard drive500GB 7,200rpm
ChipsetIntel HM55
GraphicsIntel GMA HD
In commission logicWindows 7 Professional (64-bit)
Dimensions (WD)13.0 x 9 inches
Height0.6-0.8 inch
Cover size (diagonal)13.3 inches
Logic weight / Weight with AC adapter4.4/3.7 pounds
Category13-inch

Much like the Dell Vostro 3300 we reviewed before this year, the Vostro V130 is a shiny, angular mainframe that feels very near ThinkPad-like in its interior, but also has some peripheral style that casts it as the offspring of a MacBook Air and an Adamo. An anodized aluminum frame comes in both attractive steel and hard red shades (Lucerne red expenditure an superfluous $40). An integrated array bottom keeps the thickness on the V130 universally slim. The affront axis-forwards design of the top lid leaves a modest back lip jutting out behind the opened-up lid, which is where all the ports and the V130′s heat vents are found. The rear ports are fantastic for desk use but can get confusing on one’s lap, even as the rear heat vents do a nicejob shunting surplus like away from legs and additional delicate parts.
A wide magnesium-alloy palm rest frames a check multitouch upset pad with discrete buttons beneath. The pad’s less vital than what you’d find on Apple’s MacBook Air, but it’s responsive and has all the requisite multitouch gestures enabled.
The keyboard is well-built and feels fantastic, too– Dell Vostro V130 mainframe  a semiraised keyboard that’s akin to persons on additional Dell Inspirons. There are a few annoyances: volume and brightness aren’t gathering-reversed and have no dyed-in-the-wool buttons, and a discussion of page up/page down keys on the right side cramp simple door to the Enter/Shift keys, a trend we’ve seen growing on many laptops. If you’re looking for any dyed-in-the-wool keys additional than what the ordinary keyboard provides, you’re out of luck. A tiny power pin on the top left is all there is.
The 13.3-inch cover has a native pixel resolution of 1,366×768 and has a not glossy coating, which helps care for hostile to brightness. Text and videos both looked very bracing, and even if the cover’s maximum brightness still wasn’t all that bright, the lack of environmental brightness helped make the most of it. A mono lecturer situated not more than the keyboard did a best than probable job with record playback, and it reached an conventional volume. Signal feature wasn’t overly harsh, even with its lack of depth.
An built-in 2.0 megapixel Webcam can confirmation record or snap cinema at resolutions up to 1,600×1,200, but record recorded in AVI plot at that size was exceptionally choppy. We achieved the smoothest results at 640×480.


Dell Vostro V130 mainframeAverage for category [13-inch]
RecordVGA-out, HDMIVGA plus HDMI or DisplayPort
AudioMono lecturer, earphone/microphone jacksStereo speakers, earphone/microphone jacks
Data3 USB 2.0 (1 combo eSATA port), SD card booklover3 USB 2.0, SD card booklover
Additional roomNoneNone
NetworkingEthernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, mobile broadband, Bluetooth 3.0Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, optional mobile broadband
Optical driveNoneDVD burner

 Dell Vostro V130 mainframe

Due I don’t know to its size, the Dell Vostro V130 mainframe doesn’t have a fantastic choice of ports. Most of them are tucked along the back end of the Dell Vostro V130 mainframe, except for an SD card on the right side of the mainframe and earphone/mic jacks and a SIM card slot on the front end. In addition to mobile broadband readiness, the Dell Vostro V130 mainframe also has Bluetooth ordinary.
Dell offers a huge choice of configurations of the Dell Vostro V130 mainframe on Dell Vostro V130 laptopsmall affair Web site, early at the seemingly bargain-basement price of $429 and climbing well privileged than $1,000. That’s a vast range for a 13-inch mainframe, but a peek under the hood of various configurations reveals that the low-end $429 Dell Vostro V130 mainframe has a paltry 1GHz Celeron processor, 2GB of RAM and a 250GB hard drive. A more reasonable configuration–and one we’d recommend–would be a $628 model with a Core i3 ULV CPU, 2GB of RAM and a 320GB hard drive. Our version has a high price largely because of its CPU, its doubled RAM, and the upgraded Windows 7 Professional OS. One nice plus: the 500GB hard drive is a quick 7,200rpm. A 128GB SSD drive is also unfilled for an superfluous $228, but if you’re really hungry for SSD in a thin mainframe, you force as well go with a 13-inch MacBook Air instead.
The Core i5 ULV processor in our configuration of the Vostro V130 is an ultralow-voltage processor, in commission at only 1.3 GHz. It’s a less commanding processor than a ordinary-voltage Core i5 found in most mainstream laptops, and it also underperforms compared to any ordinary voltage Core i3. It’s best, even if, than the Core 2 ULV CPUs found in many last-generation thin-and-illumination. Apple’s MacBook Airs still map Core 2 Duo ULV processors, but in our benchmarking tests the 11.6-inch MacBook Air came out yet to be in a few categories. Functionally, you can guess a near mainstream encounter from a Core i5 ULV, bounty to do most responsibilities, although when it came to multitasking the V130 engaged its fans and got quite warm.
Record streaming looked fantastic on the Core i5 ULV Vostro V130; both full-cover Hulu and Netflix were smooth and very watchable. The V130 only has Intel integrated graphics, but that’s more than adequate for any record playback needs. The V130 won’t handle sports meeting well, but that’s not a upset a Dell Vostro V130 mainframe customer would really be looking for.

Dell Vostro V130 mainframe

Related Technology Reviews

No comments:

Post a Comment