Dell’s XPS 11 convertible and refreshed XPS 13 now available starting at $1,000

Dell’s Yoga competitor, the flexible XPS 11, has made its way into availability in the US and other select countries, with the refreshed XPS 13 also tagging along. As we mentioned in our hands-on, the 11.6-inch ultrabook’s keyboard folds all the way back to transform into a tablet with an impressive 2,560 x 1,440 IPS display. The updated XPS 13 laptop, on the other hand, has gained a touchscreen option, as well as new Haswell processors like those in the XPS 11. Both devices are now up for sale on Dell’s own site for at least $1,000, depending on specs. As always, the bigger the SSD storage space and the RAM, the more expensive it is. Almost all the laptops will ship with Windows 8.1 preinstalled, except the non-touch XPS 13 that’s keeping things dated with Windows 7 Home Premium. If you like your PC hardware a little cheaper (or costlier), the company’s also releasing the OptiPlex 3020 desktop ($499) and the Precision M3800 business laptop ($1,799). For a reminder of the XPS 11’s acrobatic ways, we’ve added our hands-on video right after the break.

[Thanks, Louis]

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MacBook Pro late-2013 hands-on

It’s all-change in Mac land, and after the MacBook Air got its Haswell refresh earlier this year – to great effect – it’s the turn of the MacBook Pro with Retina display to be brought up to speed. Apple’s pixel-dense desktop replacement was always a powerhorse, at least in 15-inch form, but now gets Intel […]

New MacBook Pros Get Battery Boost With Haswell

New MacBook Pros Get Battery Boost With Haswell

As anticipated, Apple upgraded its high-end MacBook Pro line of notebook PCs with the latest Intel Haswell processors.

    



Cheap Haswell Based Tablets And Notebooks Expected Around The Holidays

Cheap Haswell Based Tablets And Notebooks Expected Around The Holidays

The holiday season sees customers clamoring to get the best deals on the latest gadgets, tablets and notebooks are certainly on many shopping lists. This holiday season, customers might have a number of such device to choose from at a reasonable rate. Talking with analysts recently, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said that he expects manufacturers to release cheap Haswell processor powered tablets, notebooks and tablet/notebook hybrids around the holidays, which might be priced around $99, $299 and $349 respectively.

In the center of this year’s holiday PC lineup, Krzanich expects to see notebooks with touchscreen displays powered by Intel’s Haswell processors. According to Intel’s claims, Haswell processors offer 50 percent more battery life and double the graphics performance, at a relatively affordable price. OEMs benefit from this, which will ultimately allow them to manufacturer tablets that go for as low as $99 and notebooks with touchscreen displays for just $299. It remains to be seen just how many OEMs get their devices out in time for the holidays, a season where sales of Android and iOS mobile devices are particularly strong. $99 tablets might be able to put a dent into the consumer interest that almost similarly priced Android tablets rake in. The holiday season isn’t far off, so its only a matter of time before we see some of these new devices being announced.

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    Intel Beats The Street In Q3 2013 With $13.5 Billion In Revenue And $0.53 EPS

    Image (1) intell.jpg for post 129872

    Well, it’s that time again — famed chipmaker Intel has just reported its fiscal Q3 2013 earnings and they’re just a bit better than expected. The company reported quarterly revenue of $13.5 billion (which is pretty much flat compared to its performance last year) and earnings of $0.58 per share (again, same as last year).

    To put that in a little perspective, the analyst consensus as per Yahoo! Finance was for the company to report $13.47 billion in revenue for the quarter, along with earnings of $0.53 per share. It’s not the biggest beat you’ll ever see (Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said this quarter saw “modest growth in a tough environment”), but it’s a beat nonetheless.

    Still, that’s not to say everything is downright peachy in Intel’s world. Industry analysis firm Gartner said that global PC sales were down 8.6 percent this past quarter, making the sixth consecutive quarter of decline. Granted, that’s not as big a dip what we saw last quarter, but it’s further proof that the traditional PC market isn’t done contracting just yet. That shift is reflected in the performance of the company’s PC Client group, which raked in a respectable $8.4 billion in Q3… though it’s still down some 3.5 percent year-over-year. As such, it’s no surprise to see Krzanich point out the fact that Intel is steadily increasing its focus on “ultra-mobile devices and 2 in 1 systems.”

    This is also one of the first quarters where we’re getting to see what sort of impact Intel’s new Haswell chips are having — they’re already seeing widespread use in devices across OEM borders, especially in devices that seek to bridge the performance gap between more traditional PCs and newfangled ultraportable designs like Ultrabooks and Surface-esque tablets. As it happens, Haswell has helped the situation somewhat but perhaps not as much as Intel had hoped right now. To quote CFO Stacy Smith from his commentary addendum, “the worldwide PC supply chain saw a small increase in inventory levels in the third quarter as customers continued to build inventory of Haswell based PCs but inventory levels are still being managed well below historical averages.” Fortunately, things looked a little brighter for the company’s Data Center group as it saw revenues surge just over 12 percent since last year.

    All in all, this has been a solid (if admittedly unremarkable) quarter for Intel, and the company’s share price has surged slightly in after-hours trading as a result. What’s really interesting here though is that Intel has offered up some guidance for the next quarter which is lower than what analysts had previous called for, but we’ll tackle that when the time comes. For now, I’ll be sitting in on the customary earnings call in just a few moments and will update this post with any interesting tidbits that come up.

    Steam Machines to sport AMD Graphics Next Year

    When Valve revealed the specs for its Steam Machine prototypes last week, the name of one major chip manufacturer was absent, which undoubtedly led to many a speculation and discussion over the Internet. It seems, however, that such musings may have been premature as Valve is now confirming that come 2014, Steam Machines will also […]

    Acer C720 Chromebook taps Haswell and SSD for 8hr battery

    It’s obviously a week for Chromebooks, with Acer’s new C720 Chromebook joining HP’s Chromebook11 offering cloud-centric mobile computing, this time at the even lower price of $249.99. Sticking with Intel’s x86 chips rather than the ARM-based processor in the HP machine revealed on Tuesday, the Acer C720 steps up to a Haswell-generation Celeron 2955U for […]

    Toshiba Upgrades Portege, Tecra Line Of Business Laptops With Haswell CPUs

    Toshiba Upgrades Portege, Tecra Line Of Business Laptops With Haswell CPUs

    Toshiba has been announcing new laptops here and there over the past month as the company announce both its Satellite NB15T laptop and Qosmio X75 gaming laptop just a few weeks ago. Today, Toshiba ups its lineup of business laptops as they announce refreshed versions of its Portege Z30, Tecra Z40 and Tecra Z50 that now only give these machines a new look, but also improves their specs and displays to something a bit more modern. (more…)

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    Dell Venue 8 Pro and 11 Pro Windows 8.1 tablets trounce Surface Pro 2

    Dell has taken the wraps off two new tablets in its resurrected Venue range, the Venue 8 Pro and Venue 11 Pro running Windows 8.1. The Venue 8 Pro puts Windows 8.1 on an 8-inch HD IPS touchscreen with an optional digitizer pen and the chance to add integrated LTE, with Intel Atom Baytrail under […]

    Dell’s XPS 11 foldable Ultrabook coming in November for $1,000 and up

    Dell's XPS 11 foldable Ultrabook coming in November for $1,000 and up

    We first met the Dell XPS 11 back at Computex, but at the time Dell wasn’t ready to go into much detail on its Yoga-like foldable Ultrabook. At a press conference today in New York, however, we learned a little more about the XPS 11 — including the price. For starters — and this should surprise no one — the company’s offering Intel’s Haswell chips, and all-solid-state storage. We’re told the final product doesn’t look any different from the prototype we played with, which is to say it’s an amalgam of machined aluminum and carbon fiber, with a sheet of Gorilla Glass NBT covering the pixel-packed 2,560 x 1,440 “IGZO-based” touch display. That’s what you’ll be poking at when you’re in tablet mode, having folded the solid-surface keyboard back round the 180-degree hinge. Speaking of the keyboard, it will have 0.5mm travel and customizable feedback options. There will also be optional NFC and unspecified “voice options” available when the XPS 11 is finally up for grabs, but when that will be, and at what price, won’t be known for a few weeks yet. Look for it in November for $1,000 and up and in the meantime, we encourage you to revisit our hands-on from June.

    Update: At last, Dell has announced pricing and availability for the XPS 11. We’ve just learned it will be available in November, starting at $1,000.

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    Dana Wollman contributed to this report.

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