Light Luxury Laptops
Light luxury laptops have been around for a while (think: Sony Vaio and Toshiba Portege ultraportables) but the age of head-turning ultra-thin designs dawned with the 13-inch light-and-wide MacBook Air, HP Voodoo Envy 133, and the ThinkPad X300.
Now the Dell Adamo joins the stable of conspicuously-consumed luxury laptops. The Adamo soars along with Apple's Air in the rarefied pricing altitudes of $1,799 to $2,699.
At the other extreme are Asus and Acer, practical working-class designs which offer portability for a lot less. Though both companies offer expensive laptops too, they have gained prominence with their inexpensive Netbooks: the Eee PC and Aspire One, respectively. These typically fall into the sub-$500 range.
Dell's entry into the luxury laptop market was replete with all the trappings of a high-end product rollout, including a lavish, overdone Adamo Web site (as in, I couldn't click on "skip intro" fast enough) of beautiful people clutching computers. (And viewing the site, this question comes to mind: Is the Adamo meant more as a Dell showcase item--like a piece of fine ware set in a vitrine, to be admired but not purchased?)
Juxtapose this with what's happening in the Netbook space: inconspicuous but slow-but-steady creep into a higher performance bracket. This trend is being driven by better Intel graphics (the GN40 is now capable of 720p HD video), with some Netbook designers entertaining the idea of adding even higher-performance Nvidia graphics. Reports also claim the Atom processor will be ratcheted up to 2.0GHz.
Will one design philosophy eventually prevail? Gravitating to a sweet-spot somewhere in the middle?
Let's do a little comparison shopping.
Dell Adamo (Admire)
But they don't best the Netbooks in some important respects: First and foremost, portability--Netbooks win here; wireless options are essentially identical; battery life is a toss-up; higher-capacity storage is available on Netbooks; and running everyday applications is not necessarily that much faster on luxury laptops.
Source : news.cnet.com
Now the Dell Adamo joins the stable of conspicuously-consumed luxury laptops. The Adamo soars along with Apple's Air in the rarefied pricing altitudes of $1,799 to $2,699.
At the other extreme are Asus and Acer, practical working-class designs which offer portability for a lot less. Though both companies offer expensive laptops too, they have gained prominence with their inexpensive Netbooks: the Eee PC and Aspire One, respectively. These typically fall into the sub-$500 range.
Dell's entry into the luxury laptop market was replete with all the trappings of a high-end product rollout, including a lavish, overdone Adamo Web site (as in, I couldn't click on "skip intro" fast enough) of beautiful people clutching computers. (And viewing the site, this question comes to mind: Is the Adamo meant more as a Dell showcase item--like a piece of fine ware set in a vitrine, to be admired but not purchased?)
Juxtapose this with what's happening in the Netbook space: inconspicuous but slow-but-steady creep into a higher performance bracket. This trend is being driven by better Intel graphics (the GN40 is now capable of 720p HD video), with some Netbook designers entertaining the idea of adding even higher-performance Nvidia graphics. Reports also claim the Atom processor will be ratcheted up to 2.0GHz.
Will one design philosophy eventually prevail? Gravitating to a sweet-spot somewhere in the middle?
Let's do a little comparison shopping.
Dell Adamo (Admire)
- $1,999 (Dell Web site)
- 4 pounds
- 13.4-inch screen
- 1.2GHz Core 2 Duo
- Intel GS45 Integrated Graphics
- Internal optical drive: no
- Wi-Fi 802.11n wireless
- 128GB solid-state drive
- One year warranty
- $430 (PC Connection)
- 2.6 pounds
- 10.2-inch screen
- 1.6GHz Atom processor
- Intel 945GSE-based graphics
- Internal optical drive: no
- Wi-Fi 802.11n wireless
- 160GB hard disk drive
- One year warranty
- $1,799 (Apple Web site)
- 3 pounds
- 13.3-inch screen
- 1.6GHz Core 2 Duo
- Nvidia GeForce 9400M graphics
- Internal optical drive: no
- Wi-Fi 802.11n wireless
- 120GB hard disk drive
- One year warranty
But they don't best the Netbooks in some important respects: First and foremost, portability--Netbooks win here; wireless options are essentially identical; battery life is a toss-up; higher-capacity storage is available on Netbooks; and running everyday applications is not necessarily that much faster on luxury laptops.
Source : news.cnet.com
0 Responses to "Light Luxury Laptops"
Post a Comment