Posted in Tech
3449
12:16 am, March 8, 2019
 

Dell Inspiron 13, 7380 Laptop Specs and Insights

The Dell Inspiron 13, 7380 comes at the top of my list when getting a new laptop.

I was originally looking at the new XPS 13, but the price of that is around $2000 with the same specs as the discounted Inspiron.

I know its not as cool as it does not have carbon fibre on the keyboard, or the XPS logo on the bottom, but spec wise its awesome!

CPU - i5-8265U

I went for the 8th Generation Intel® Core™ i5-8265U Processor, Im upgrading from an earlier model XPS 15 which runs the i7. The old XPS runs loud and hot and the i7 is slower than this new i5 CPU, so the new one should run quieter and cooler. I would prefer less beefy processing power and less noise and heat in a laptop. 

You can get the i7 in this one as well, but I dont really need that much power the i5 the better selection for me. 

Here is the comparison from the old XPS i7 to the new insperon i5. 

Intel Core i7-4702HQ vs Core i5-8265U
Userbenchmark Effective CPU Speed: 52.8% vs 66.6%
Intel Core i7-4702HQ - 312th / 1146
Intel Core i5-8265U - 182nd / 1146

Ram - 8 Gig

I Opted to get 8GB of the DDR4, 2400MHz, whis is the same speed as the XPS 13's ram. 

The XPS had 16 gig and this has 8, will i notice the difference. Im not really sure, i had a look at my normal ram usage during daily use and i never really used over 8 gig of ram. Chrome was taking up about 4 gig sometimes, but really i think 8 gig will be fine to start, and if its a real issue i can always upgrade it. I think that this one has upgradable ram anyway.

Ram Type: DDR4, 2400MHz (not sure what brand)

Hard Drive - 256 Gig

The hard drive's now have finally started making the ssd's more common, rather than the hybrid options or the old terribly slow spinning drives. I had to switch out the hybrid option in the XPS about a year after i had it with a SSD, and it made the PC fly compared to the old drive. SSD makes such a massive difference. 

Drive Type: 256GB M.2 PCIe NVMe Solid State Drive.

Screen

I went for the FHD screen, which is 1920x1080, and you know what i think i will prefer it, the XPS had a 3200 x 1800 res, and still today its annoying having that res. Just little things are annoying with old apps, an icon will be miniscule or a popup window will be unreadable due to the scaling that windows has to do to make things fit.

Yes having a massive res is nice to look at depending on what your doing, but for most day to day stuff, i would prefer to have a lower res, in games you have to turn it down anyway. 

Plus having the lower res screen is better on battery life. 

 

Sources

https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i7-4702HQ-vs-Intel-Core-i5-8265U/m297vsm566107 

View Statistics
This Week
111
This Month
451
This Year
1070

No Items Found.

Add Comment
Type in a Nick Name here
 
Search Articles
Search Articles by entering your search text above.
Welcome

This is my test area for webdev. I keep a collection of code here, mostly for my reference. Also if i find a good link, i usually add it here and then forget about it. more...

Subscribe to weekly updates about things i have added to the site or thought interesting during the last week.

You could also follow me on twitter or not... does anyone even use twitter anymore?

If you found something useful or like my work, you can buy me a coffee here. Mmm Coffee. ☕

❤️👩‍💻🎮

🪦 2000 - 16 Oct 2022 - Boots
Random Quote
All of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone, wrote Blaise Pascal.
Unknown
Random CSS Property

mask-image

The mask-image CSS property sets the image that is used as mask layer for an element. By default this means the alpha channel of the mask image will be multiplied with the alpha channel of the element. This can be controlled with the mask-mode property.
mask-image css reference