Dell Precision M6300 Hands On review.
After a week with the Dell Precision 6300 it is right at home with my other laptops and has been my machine of choice while doing my daily routines. It’s magnesium alloy chassis is something new and an improvement over the M90 (it’s predecessor).
Dell™ Home Notebooks
We saw a Core 2 Duo X7900 processor which clocks in at 2.8GHz (800MHz FSB). This bad boy supports up to 4GB of DDR2 memory while we were sporting 2gb. You can only hit the 4gb limit if you run with the 64bit os instead of the normal 32.
And the full flickr set on the Precision M6300 here.
There was no competition in performance over my little Latitude X1 in Photoshopping, rendering video and just in normal operations. But that could have been expected because the M6300 is more than double the weight of the X1.
At first I couldn’t find its 8.5 lbs place in my lap but after a day of working with it, it wasn’t a issue. When looking back on to my X1 screen I found myself missing the large bright screen. Mind you its not LED but that might be an option coming soon! The built in fingerprint reader and smart card reader are great options in business machines but stuff I didn’t use (well, I played with the biometrics a little… ). There are DVI, VGA, S-Video Out, Firewire, usb and the rest of the usuals. The side vents keep this baby cool and there was no lap burn after 3 hours of use.
For video we were were packing NVIDIA’s Quadro FX 1600M with 512MB of TurboCache (256MB dedicated). The Large 17″ screen was great for graphic and video work and watching DVD’s on it was DOPE! It is shiny and reflective, but not enough to annoy you like the Sony’s. I really like it. Pardon me if I am a little smitten with it :). Dell offers the M6300 in WXGA+ (1440×900) and WUXGA (1920×1200) screen resolutions with TrueLife or anti-glare screen coatings. The sound coming out of this beast was also pretty impressive for a laptop. I did not use external speakers or headphones to watch my flicks. We got 2 and a half hours off the battery with DVD and WiFi a-blasting. Without media playback it was closer to 3 and a half hours; not bad for this beast of a screen.
Speaking of WiFi, this lappie has some magic new WiFi powers because it stays connected to my router without an issue – unlike my other machines. I was getting full wi-fi downstairs in front of my crib! I noticed stickers on the bottom of the laptop about WiFi changes and FCC warnings (see the flickr set) … Hmm, that could only mean BIG improvements.
The large keyboard makes me feel like I am right in front of my flat panel (reminder: must get bigger monitor!) As I am writing this I am beginning to think my mobile workforce might really appreciate these machines, as they are always complaining about their fat fingers on the small keyboards. Dell offers imaging services with the precision line to help out you admins eying this machine. The dust resistant keyboard is also a nice add-on, even though we didn’t see it mentioned anywhere.

The solid state drives were not available to me at the time of review but you can only imagine it would boost performance (and cost! ouch) Mobile broadband is available from ATT for you mobile road warriors not up on tethering.
Some people wrote in about Game testing – I was unable to do it, but if you have some other graphic card benchmarks you want me to run give a holler. Let me know in the comments. I will hold onto the machine for a few more days to answer your questions – HIT US UP!
Fro,m Reader Colin on 11/2/2007
Hi guys!
So I got my Dell on the 31st. Woulda posted here earlier but that was the day I was moving out of my apartment. Just in time!
I have to say… this machine is awesome. Absolutely fantastic. I love it.
It’s actually not very heavy, I was pretty surprised. The screen is wonderful, the sound quality is good, the keyboard is nice, the trackpad is good (especially the middle button on there. brilliant!)
In terms of game performance, it’s a beast. I can play the Crysis demo at 1024×768 with some settings on high, and a few on medium, which is actually pretty impressive. I quickly bought Orange Box on Steam, and fired up Portal and Team Fortress 2. No problems there. They aren’t system killers like Crysis, but they sure look good on this screen with all the effects turned up. I’m impressed with the performance of the 1600m.
I was in the process of downloading 3dmark, but I’m on a slower connection while I wait for my broadband to be moved to my new place. I’ll hopefully get it soon… but the server I was downloading from wouldn’t let me resume for some reason. Anyway we already saw those scores.
As Karl mentioned… the wireless performance is excellent. I don’t know what magic they use but the signal strength is really good. I get a good connection with this thing when my fujitsu-seimens is completely out of range.
I got the 7200rpm hard drive in mine, and it’s pretty fast. Definitely see an improvement in so many areas–work, gaming, and general use.
I can’t say enough good things about it. It’s really just a great, solid machine. If there was ANYTHING I would want to change about it, I would prefer maybe a keyboard with a numpad, since there seems to be quite a bit of extra room on the sides. Don’t their new Inspirons have that? (but I guess that would kind of force you to do most of your typing on the leftish side of the laptop, which might not be that great)
The keyboard itself is pretty far back, but it actually gives you a nice resting place for your wrists once you get used to the ergonomics. That’s actually pretty nice to have if you’re using the laptop on your lap, which is entirely possible given that it is fairly light, and doesn’t get too hot. (I used to have an Acer Ferrari… that thing would burn.)
I haven’t run any battery life tests on it, but it seems pretty good considering the large screen and high-end components. Probably 3 hours for web browsing if you turn the brightness down a bit.
Overall, I’m happy. Brilliant machine that lets me game and work.
Hows your order coming along Adrian? I have to admit I was pretty peeved to be in that situation considering it was a business order too… but in the end I only waited just over 4 weeks. Perhaps they are also experiencing problems getting those high-end CPUs on top of everything else… it’s a pity. But after all the time you’ve invested already waiting is the smart thing. :P
From Reader AG 10/19/07: Config: 2.4Ghz with biometric scanner/4 GB RAM/160 GB @ 7200rpm/WUXGA 1920 * 1200 with true life.For people who don’t like to work with tiny fonts may consider a lower resolution display. Though 1920*1200 gives you a LOT of real estate but at the cost display size. You can lower the resolution but the display quality suffers. So, it’s better to get a native lower resolution in that case.
From Reader AG 10/21/07:
Feedback on M6300 (after two days with the machine). Please note my notes will have major references to Operating Systems (Xp and Vista) as a part of the hardware feedback.
Configuration : 2.4 GHz with biometric scanner/4 GB RAM/160 GB @ 7200rpm/XP 32-bit pre-installed/
It’s a very powerful machine; some may call it heavy but with all the raw force, it’s worth every ounce.
M6300 is supposed to be a “business” notebook and comes with ISV Certification, which means (as quoted on the Dell web site) “Application vendors run tests to insure the hardware platform and its individual components work without error”. If you have business-critical applications, then it’s better to have it come with Xp, and upgrade to Vista later when you are certain that nothing will break or you wouldn’t have to waste time dealing with compatibility issues. More on this comes later in the feedback below.
I got a separate copy of Vista Business 32-bit with an intention of dual booting. It’s important to have multiple partitions for dual booting. If your system comes with a single partition with all the disk space in that partition and you intend to dual boot, then you will have to format the system, create two partitions, install Xp in the first, and then install Vista in the second. You could use Partition Magic or something to avoid this, and partition the disk directly but success is not guaranteed.
[I configured my system with a 50% Primary / 50% Secondary partition while placing the order.]
4 GB of RAM is not usable by a 32-bit system and Xp “detected” around 3.5 GB. I wanted to test Vista and make sure all my application run on it before I invest time fully setting up Xp so I started the Vista installation. I inserted the Vista DVD while I was already booted in Xp. (You can also boot using the Vista DVD and take it from there). Vista installer gave me a “recommended” option of upgrading Xp to Vista but I chose a clean install. I selected the second (empty) partition, answered a couple of very basic questions and that’s it. I actually had a meeting with someone, so I left the system running and the installation completed before I returned, so I have no idea how long Vista Installation took. The stock drivers in Vista were not good for some of the hardware components like Graphics Card, NIC etc. So, the Dell Resource DVD came in handy. It has all the drivers and utilities for Xp/Vista 32-bit systems. I upgraded most of the drivers with the ones on the Dell Resource DVD as it has an “update” stamp of August 2007 and most Vista stock drivers would be older.
Setting up the fingerprint in Vista was a little challenge as the suite to configure the prints etc. (Security by Wave Systems) kept crashing. Once we install this Wave Systems suite, it takes over the Windows authentication protocol, and gives an option on how the user wants to authenticate. To make a long story short, after several installs/uninstalls, fingerprint reader chip driver rollback, spy ware software un-installation etc., I got it to work. By the time it worked, I forgot the successful sequence of events.
The feedback may be becoming too OS specific but I think users could face similar problems and I just want to share my experience. There were no issues in Xp as it was factory installed.
One problem I found with the fingerprint reader was that the reading surface gets hot (beyond the comfort range sometimes) when playing with the scanning options or installing/uninstalling related software; proximity to the exhaust vent may be the culprit.
The WUXGA 1900*1220 screen is brilliant. I have a 19 inch Sony external monitor hooked up to the DVI port, and the difference speaks for itself. The clarity and the quality are FAR superior in the Dell display. As I pointed in one of my earlier posts, the higher resolution quality comes at the cost of size of things. While I get a lot of space to place things but the font size of web sites, icons etc. gets very small, at least for my comfort. I may get used to it eventually but it’s definitely annoying. Folks may want to consider a native lower resolution display. If I fix the resolution from the adapter settings, then the quality suffers.
The DVD writer is a little noisy; not that I’ve used any quieter ones but just a note.
Some of my Xp-fine software/applications did NOT work on Vista. Symantec Antivirus 9.0 Corporate Edition was a major disappointment. I’ve had it for 4 years and I love it. I had to get the Vista-capable version of Zone Alarm security suite for my anti-virus/anti-spy ware needs. The newer Symantec products are Vista capable but use more resources. I lost Adobe Acrobat Professional 6.0, too, in an attempt to migrate to vista.
The speakers are great. After using Toshiba Satellite for a while, it was a pleasant surprise. It’s not an audiophile-level quality but very good coming from a notebook.
Hard disk is quiet and fast. I don’t think M6300 has any 5400 rpm option but go for 7200 rpm.
WiFi is phenomenal. My machine came with Intel 3945 a/b/g and it connects like glue. I have not used a wired connection so far. It gives consistent 54 Mbps transfer rate.
My computer generated Vista Experience score is 4.8.
The keyboard is well laid out; gives sufficient palm support. I don’t use touch pad much (unless I’m really mobile, I’m always with a USB mouse) but it’s pretty responsive. Surprisingly, I didn’t miss the numeric keypad. Insert/Delete/Home/End keys may take a little getting used to; their peculiar location at the top is new, for me at least. Function key to turn on/off the wireless is nice; you can adjust brightness and perform other mundane tasks using the function keys.
Vista uses a lot of RAM. Running a minimal system will take up 1 GB. Add Yahoo Widgets (I didn’t like Microsoft Gadgets), Outlook, couple of browser windows, music player and you are approaching 2 GB. If you can get a Dell deal, go for 4 GB from day one. Obviously, you will not get M6300 to surf the web; so, invest in RAM. You may upgrade it from newegg.com or some other store but it may be a necessity for most users running Vista.
The 4 USB ports at the back is nice thinking; this way, you can hook up devices without having to see the dangling cables and use the 2 side ports for pen drives or other unobtrusive devices.
Gamers: whatever little time I’ve spent on games so far has pretty good feedback. I played Age of Empires 3 with all the game settings on “maximum”, enabled the shaders, full reflections etc. and the machine did not wince. I played at the maximum resolutions and the display was fantastic.
Dell™ Home Notebooks
Reader AG 5 Days In:
Overall experience has been very good so far. Vista adopters, be careful as your “paid” Xp-compliant software may not function. I’ve seen some forums where people have rubbished M6300 against HP 8710 because of staid looks. I don’t know how “pretty” HP 8710 is but you will have to pay an arm and a leg extra for the same configuration if you select HP. Plus, I really DO NOT think M6300 is ugly or anything. It may be a personal opinion but for folks who will simply reject M6300 because of the looks should rethink.
I have pretty much covered my 2 day experience with the machine. I’d be happy to address any specific questions about the same save 3D Mark or other scores.
Apart from the problems I’ve already mentioned with Vista w.r.t. software compatibility issues, I couldn’t get my NIC card to connect to my router for wired connections. Wireless was fine. Maybe, there was something I didn’t do right with the drivers while loading Vista but it was a real PIA. I tried Linksys and D-Link routers but no luck. I disabled the IP6 protocol stack, too, and it still didn’t work. All this coupled with other issues had me return to Xp. Things may be different for Vista pre-installed as the Dell guys will, hopefully, make sure that everything works but it simply didn’t work out for me. If you are a developer or depend on your machine for bread-n-butter, I’d recommend Xp.
Regarding speed, Vista was not slow. In fact, save the boot time, which went a little up after I loaded security suite and other items that open at start up, Vista is pretty quick. Outlook, Excel, Word etc. open in an eye blink. Vista uses the graphics hardware (for gaming) better as well. There are some settings regarding shaders, polygons etc. that can be enabled in Vista only.
If you don’t already know, Vista has serious memory leaks problem. When you get your machine, try moving 4-5 GB of data to or from an external device (pen drive, external hard disk) or even between partitions for that matter. Guess what – Vista gives “Out of memory” error. Apparently, Vista caches the files or something, and there’s a flaw with this mechanism. It’ll eat all the memory and give up after copying some 20 odd files. I researched this issue and Microsoft is offering a hotfix “on request” i.e. you send an email to Microsoft and they send you a personalized download link with a disclaimer that the hotfix has not been thoroughly tested and we are not responsible etc. crap. They are working on this and will introduce the proper fix in a service pack.
So, it didn’t make much sense to fight with Vista woes. I spent way too much time on Vista (more than I could afford) – only to realize that Xp is the best bet for now.
From Tommy 10/26:
I got my m6300 today.
I would say the machine rocks. I hated the aero performance compared to my 7800gtx in Inspiron 9300.
3dmark2005 9994
3dmark2006 4807
this is with default drivers and lot of things running in background. So you can do better.
I saw the reviews above but for me nothing much to mention apart from it’s magnesium alloy body. I had WUXGA before and I had the same laptop (form factor) before so for me a seemless upgrade. I have been using Vista since it launched and I don’t know why people complain about it. I have found it so much better than XP that I would never go back to XP.
People who bash Vista just doesn’t want change in life.
Screen is 10-15% brighter than my 9300. Same resolution so it is no change for me.
Let me know if you have any questions.
Bhavya
The Dell PrecisionTM M6300 is a mobile performance workstation, optimized to provide the brute force computing power of a desktop workstation and the mobility of a notebook. Featuring uncompromising graphic performance, the M6300 is an ideal tool for digital content creators and CAD users who have a need for mobility. Designed for reliability, the Dell Precision M6300 offers the freedom, flexibility and performance needed to run demanding applications at home, in the office, or while traveling wherever you need to go.





December 17, 2007 - 11:35 am
that fixed me up! thank you remko!
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December 17, 2007 - 11:36 am
Thank you for the finger printer fix! it worked good for me to after i flash the bios it works! horay!
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December 17, 2007 - 7:26 pm
I also had the problem with the fingerprint reader. After installing the software, the laptop died (well 2 of them actually). Dell sent over a technican who replaced 2 mainboards. Now they told me this problem is related to the A01 BIOS. Either flas back to A00 or wait until A02 comes out (should be this week).
I haven’t tried it yet, but it should work. I guess I’ll try it this weekend, because I need my laptop this week.
Remko
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December 17, 2007 - 7:35 pm
that fixed me up! thank you remko!
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December 17, 2007 - 7:36 pm
Thank you for the finger printer fix! it worked good for me to after i flash the bios it works! horay!
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January 11, 2008 - 8:59 am
Hi guys, I just placed an order to my M6300, and I went to the best config available, extreme processor, 4 Gigs of ram , too bad that there`s no better gx option available for M6300…Initially I ordered M90 with 3500m, but I find myself waiting 4 months in vain , so I replaced my order with a brand new M6300…can`t wait to lay my hands on this baby…ps. my primary work is 3d modeling and animation in Maya, and that`s why I was so keen to order M90 with stronger graphic insteadI know there`re still not posts on the net about M6300 and it`s performance in Maya, but I`ll keep you posted when I got mine
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January 11, 2008 - 9:05 am
Great to hear the comments still coming in! Anyone else have any good or bad experiences with the M6300?
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January 11, 2008 - 9:17 am
Hi Karl, thanks for a fast reply,…I have a question for you, or maybe some other could reply…As I was waiting so long for my M90 the guy in Dell (it`s a local store – yes there are some in my country LOL)gave me a brand new out of the box Dell Latitude D830 15.4" 1920×1200 Wuxga, T7500, 2Gb ram,…as replacement till my order gets here…It`s bundled with all the widgets, and win vista 32bit.The problem I confronted is that after some time of using the wireless connection to my ADSL router, the Intel PRO wireless 3945 card just stop working, and I find it impossible to connect again without rebooting,… I tried connecting using PCMCA Dlink wireles card and it doesn`t seem to have the same problem,….Is this a win problem or maybe the card itself,…..I`m asking this cos I ordered the same wireless as part of my new M6300thanks for your help
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January 11, 2008 - 4:59 pm
Hi guys, I just placed an order to my M6300, and I went to the best config available, extreme processor, 4 Gigs of ram , too bad that there`s no better gx option available for M6300…
Initially I ordered M90 with 3500m, but I find myself waiting 4 months in vain , so I replaced my order with a brand new M6300…
can`t wait to lay my hands on this baby…
ps. my primary work is 3d modeling and animation in Maya, and that`s why I was so keen to order M90 with stronger graphic instead
I know there`re still not posts on the net about M6300 and it`s performance in Maya, but I`ll keep you posted when I got mine
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January 11, 2008 - 5:05 pm
Great to hear the comments still coming in! Anyone else have any good or bad experiences with the M6300?
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January 11, 2008 - 5:17 pm
Hi Karl, thanks for a fast reply,…
I have a question for you, or maybe some other could reply…
As I was waiting so long for my M90 the guy in Dell (it`s a local store – yes there are some in my country LOL)gave me a brand new out of the box Dell Latitude D830 15.4″ 1920×1200 Wuxga, T7500, 2Gb ram,…as replacement till my order gets here…
It`s bundled with all the widgets, and win vista 32bit.
The problem I confronted is that after some time of using the wireless connection to my ADSL router, the Intel PRO wireless 3945 card just stop working, and I find it impossible to connect again without rebooting,… I tried connecting using PCMCA Dlink wireles card and it doesn`t seem to have the same problem,….
Is this a win problem or maybe the card itself,…..
I`m asking this cos I ordered the same wireless as part of my new M6300
thanks for your help
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January 12, 2008 - 7:05 am
I ordered an M6300 back in October 2007 — it was supposed to arrive within 21 days… after two months of waiting, with no new confirmed date of delivery, I canceled my order (Dell seems to be in some type of serious supply problems).I purchased an IBM T61p instead — (only draw-back is the size of the screen not being 17"), other than that it is an excellent computer — I'm running SolidWorks and Pro/E on it, and am very pleased… and this computer arrived within 14 days days exactly as promised!
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January 12, 2008 - 7:52 am
Ofer, can you tell us what was the actual T61p config, and have you tried running Maya on this machine?
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January 12, 2008 - 3:05 pm
I ordered an M6300 back in October 2007 — it was supposed to arrive within 21 days… after two months of waiting, with no new confirmed date of delivery, I canceled my order (Dell seems to be in some type of serious supply problems).
I purchased an IBM T61p instead — (only draw-back is the size of the screen not being 17″), other than that it is an excellent computer — I’m running SolidWorks and Pro/E on it, and am very pleased… and this computer arrived within 14 days days exactly as promised!
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January 12, 2008 - 3:52 pm
Ofer, can you tell us what was the actual T61p config, and have you tried running Maya on this machine?
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January 12, 2008 - 4:15 pm
64608YG
see following link:
http://www5.pc.ibm.com/europe/products.nsf/$wwwPartNumCompare/_NH38Zxx?OpenDocument&compare=NH38Yxx
haven’t tried running Maya on it, but I imagine if it runs SW and Pro/e, it shouldn’t have a problem running Maya. There is a 3D settings preset specifically for running Maya on the video card (among many other 3D packages), so that it is supported. IBM is a much better build than Dell, has much better support, more reliable, and they don’t jones you on replacement parts (such as batteries etc.) — see the promos for the computer, they stand behind every word.
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January 12, 2008 - 10:53 am
@Ofer – Would love to hear a detailed review on your new machine… Any interest in sharing your experiences with our readers?Been thinking about what to get next for a lappie!
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January 12, 2008 - 11:26 am
Karl, I've only had the computer for a couple of weeks, so I haven't had the opportunity to put it through extremely difficult task like running very large assemblies. If there are some bench marking tests you'd like me to run on the computer, let me know where I can find them and I'd be happy to run them and post the results.One problem I ran into was SW freezing up every once in a while. What appeared to be a problem with the video card drivers, turned out to be a problem with the Microsoft mouse software. I uninstalled the software and the computer returned to running just fine. I was surprised to find that the mouse software could cause the computer to freeze up, but apparently this is not an uncommon problem (especially with 3D packages, and especially with Microsoft mice…)
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January 12, 2008 - 6:53 pm
@Ofer – Would love to hear a detailed review on your new machine… Any interest in sharing your experiences with our readers?
Been thinking about what to get next for a lappie!
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January 12, 2008 - 7:26 pm
Karl, I’ve only had the computer for a couple of weeks, so I haven’t had the opportunity to put it through extremely difficult task like running very large assemblies. If there are some bench marking tests you’d like me to run on the computer, let me know where I can find them and I’d be happy to run them and post the results.
One problem I ran into was SW freezing up every once in a while. What appeared to be a problem with the video card drivers, turned out to be a problem with the Microsoft mouse software. I uninstalled the software and the computer returned to running just fine. I was surprised to find that the mouse software could cause the computer to freeze up, but apparently this is not an uncommon problem (especially with 3D packages, and especially with Microsoft mice…)
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January 12, 2008 - 4:15 pm
I dont really care about Benchmarks as much as usablilty – likes and dislikes. THings that make you either love or hate the machine.Good old fashioned bashing or ranting/raving :)When ever you get a chance hit me up.
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January 13, 2008 - 12:15 am
I dont really care about Benchmarks as much as usablilty – likes and dislikes. THings that make you either love or hate the machine.
Good old fashioned bashing or ranting/raving :)
When ever you get a chance hit me up.
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January 16, 2008 - 2:45 pm
I got this information from a guy in Dell, but since I haven`t seen something similar before I have to assume that this info is not yet released in public…
“M6300 with 256MB FX1600 outperforms M90 with 512MB FX3500 in all key ISV applications”
[URL=http://img406.imageshack.us/my.php?image=m6300ze2.jpg][IMG]http://img406.imageshack.us/img406/1082/m6300ze2.th.jpg[/IMG][/URL]
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January 16, 2008 - 4:47 pm
New Link
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January 30, 2008 - 12:09 pm
I have received my M6300 allmost 2 weeks ago.My M6300 config:1440×900 non-glare screenIntel Core 2 Duo T7700 2.4GHz4 GB memory200 GB 7200rpm diskDVD WriterIntel AGN network adapterBluetooth(Without fingerprint reader)Windows Vista Ultimate 32-bitI selected Vista Ultimate 32 bit instead of 64 bit because some of the programs I daily use still have issues with 64 bit (i.e. Visual Studio 2008). WIth Vista 32 bit I can use 3.581 GB of the full 4 GB memory.I selected the 1440×900 screen resolution because this is the optimal resolution for a 17" screen when doing a lot text-based work (programming) and browsing. A higher resolution makes fonts much smaller and much harder to read especially when using the system for daily work.I went for non-glare because it reduces eye-strain in most (normal/office) conditions.I do not really miss the numerical keypad. The keyboard is now nicely centered with the screen which is more balanced. Experiences/opinions:PRO's: -Good quality build.-Good performance.-The keyboard is really good for a notebook: the keys require just enough strength to be pressed (not too soft) and the keyboard does not bend at all.-DVI connector (in addition to VGA)-Placement of connectors is well thought-out. Power, video, network and most of the USB connectors are all on the back nicely out of site and not conflicting with your mouse. And Memory card, cardreader audio and 2 USB ports are on the sides for easy access.CON's:-Very disappointing LCD screen:'Non-glare' is actually more like semi-glare.I have (almost) never seen a lcd screen which such narrow viewing angles (the vertical viewing angle is actually too small for normal use).The problem is: when the upper part of the screen is OK then the bottom part is too light. If I tilt the screen until the lower part is ok then the upper part is way too dark.If the upper left corner is ok then the bottom right side is all shadowed etc.If I move my head just a little then large part of the screen changes intensity, looks washed-out and a little unsharp.If you prefer a good quality notebook screen then don't buy the M6300 (at least not with this screen).This system is targeted at CAD users but this screen is actually very unsuitable for real graphics work. -No built-in microphone.-No possibility to record audio output channel.-Currently the audio is distorted when playing music. I tried several quality headphones but the problem stays. It sounds like there is some 'hall' effect added to the audio which changes/distorts the signal (fluctuations in volume/phase): absolutely unsuitable for normal listening to music and mp3's.Dell support is still looking into this (I installed the latest BIOS and Audio driver whitout any improvement).I compared with my older Dell Latitude which does not have these problems.I sure hope this is a bug they can fix otherwise the audio is usable for beeps and voice only, but not music.- I am still unable to put the system in sleep mode. If I try it allways hibernates. Dell is still looking into this.- Bigger to carry around than I expected, but for me it's worth it.- The system looks somewhat dull, it does not have a modern design.Although the M6300 is a powerfull notebook, for it's price you might expect at least a quality screen and quality audio features.bsharp
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January 30, 2008 - 8:09 pm
I have received my M6300 allmost 2 weeks ago.
My M6300 config:
1440×900 non-glare screen
Intel Core 2 Duo T7700 2.4GHz
4 GB memory
200 GB 7200rpm disk
DVD Writer
Intel AGN network adapter
Bluetooth
(Without fingerprint reader)
Windows Vista Ultimate 32-bit
I selected Vista Ultimate 32 bit instead of 64 bit because some of the programs I daily use still have issues with 64 bit (i.e. Visual Studio 2008). WIth Vista 32 bit I can use 3.581 GB of the full 4 GB memory.
I selected the 1440×900 screen resolution because this is the optimal resolution for a 17″ screen when doing a lot text-based work (programming) and browsing. A higher resolution makes fonts much smaller and much harder to read especially when using the system for daily work.
I went for non-glare because it reduces eye-strain in most (normal/office) conditions.
I do not really miss the numerical keypad. The keyboard is now nicely centered with the screen which is more balanced.
Experiences/opinions:
PRO’s:
-Good quality build.
-Good performance.
-The keyboard is really good for a notebook: the keys require just enough strength to be pressed (not too soft) and the keyboard does not bend at all.
-DVI connector (in addition to VGA)
-Placement of connectors is well thought-out. Power, video, network and most of the USB connectors are all on the back nicely out of site and not conflicting with your mouse. And Memory card, cardreader audio and 2 USB ports are on the sides for easy access.
CON’s:
-Very disappointing LCD screen:
‘Non-glare’ is actually more like semi-glare.
I have (almost) never seen a lcd screen which such narrow viewing angles (the vertical viewing angle is actually too small for normal use).
The problem is: when the upper part of the screen is OK then the bottom part is too light. If I tilt the screen until the lower part is ok then the upper part is way too dark.
If the upper left corner is ok then the bottom right side is all shadowed etc.
If I move my head just a little then large part of the screen changes intensity, looks washed-out and a little unsharp.
If you prefer a good quality notebook screen then don’t buy the M6300 (at least not with this screen).
This system is targeted at CAD users but this screen is actually very unsuitable for real graphics work.
-No built-in microphone.
-No possibility to record audio output channel.
-Currently the audio is distorted when playing music. I tried several quality headphones but the problem stays. It sounds like there is some ‘hall’ effect added to the audio which changes/distorts the signal (fluctuations in volume/phase): absolutely unsuitable for normal listening to music and mp3′s.
Dell support is still looking into this (I installed the latest BIOS and Audio driver whitout any improvement).
I compared with my older Dell Latitude which does not have these problems.
I sure hope this is a bug they can fix otherwise the audio is usable for beeps and voice only, but not music.
Does any of you have experienced the same problems with the audio?
- I am still unable to put the system in sleep mode. If I try it allways hibernates. Dell is still looking into this.
- Bigger to carry around than I expected, but for me it’s worth it.
- The system looks somewhat dull, it does not have a modern design.
Although the M6300 is a powerfull notebook, for it’s price you might expect at least a quality screen and quality audio features.
bsharp
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February 2, 2008 - 6:55 pm
Hi guys,I received my M6300 yesterday and I did a few benchmarks as promised…few thoughts first:I love the screen,… (WUXGA 1920×1200 non glare)very bright, suitable also for outside work, almost zero reflection, highly recommendedKeyboard, only one word – great, it would be nice if the people in Dell integrated keypad, but I wont cry about it…Noise level: what noise,.. it`s so quiet, even with all fans working fullheat: no problem also,.. even after one hour of hard benchmarking it was cold as ice, a few degrees above room temperatureI read on some forums about whine noise coming from inside notebook ( various Dell models), I locked myself in toilet with M6300 and heard nothing (I was listening for 20 minutes)the looks: some says it`s ugly, but I love it,…CONS: nothing really , ok,.. they could put the microphone in the unitand now the benchmarks:
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February 3, 2008 - 2:55 am
Hi guys,
I received my M6300 yesterday and I did a few benchmarks as promised…
few thoughts first:
I love the screen,… (WUXGA 1920×1200 non glare)very bright, suitable also for outside work, almost zero reflection, highly recommended
Keyboard, only one word – great, it would be nice if the people in Dell integrated keypad, but I wont cry about it…
Noise level: what noise,.. it`s so quiet, even with all fans working full
heat: no problem also,.. even after one hour of hard benchmarking it was cold as ice, a few degrees above room temperature
I read on some forums about whine noise coming from inside notebook ( various Dell models), I locked myself in toilet with M6300 and heard nothing (I was listening for 20 minutes)
the looks: some says it`s ugly, but I love it,…
CONS: nothing really , ok,.. they could put the microphone in the unit
and now the benchmarks:
Cinebench 10 (render time with both cores was 2:44)
3Dmak06 online results
SPECviewperf 10 (Vsync OFF)
Maya-2 test (Vsync OFF)
Sandra Processor arithmetic
Sandra Power Managment Efficiency
Sandra Processor Multimedia
Sandra Multi-Core Efficiency
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March 7, 2008 - 10:14 am
Mine finally arrived 3 weeks ago and i couldnt be happier thank you admin guys for the reco!
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March 20, 2008 - 9:52 pm
How is the price of the IBM compared to the M6300. I need to run Inventor and Soliworks.
Thanks
Sam
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March 21, 2008 - 5:59 am
both around $1,880.00 depending on your config.
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March 27, 2008 - 3:59 pm
Maya animation scores is where the Quadro 1600 or 3500 could/will lag. In the tests on: http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/video/display/qu...“> “>http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/video/display/quadrofx-...
the ATI FireGL cards ATI FireGL V7350, ATI FireGL V7200, ATI FireGL V5200 & ATI FireGL V3400 out performed all the top Quadro cards!
However in any other tests (such as: SPECviewperf 8.1, 3ds max 7, SolidWorks 2005, AutoCAD 2006, PRO/Engineer Wildfire 2.0, CINEBENCH 2003 & 3DMark06 all the Quadro cards pretty much spanked all the ATI high-end cards.
This site is mainly for the high-end cards that are found on desktop workstations but gives all the 3d rendering data needed to determine if the Quadro 1600/3600 card is ideal.
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March 27, 2008 - 3:59 pm
Maya animation scores is where the Quadro 1600 or 3500 could/will lag. In the tests on: http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/video/display/qu...“> “>http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/video/display/quadrofx-...
the ATI FireGL cards ATI FireGL V7350, ATI FireGL V7200, ATI FireGL V5200 & ATI FireGL V3400 out performed all the top Quadro cards!
However in any other tests (such as: SPECviewperf 8.1, 3ds max 7, SolidWorks 2005, AutoCAD 2006, PRO/Engineer Wildfire 2.0, CINEBENCH 2003 & 3DMark06 all the Quadro cards pretty much spanked all the ATI high-end cards.
This site is mainly for the high-end cards that are found on desktop workstations but gives all the 3d rendering data needed to determine if the Quadro 1600/3600 card is ideal.
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May 13, 2008 - 3:31 am
You seem to be the only one to own a WUXGA matte display! Any others? I'm about to recommend this laptop to a friend, but he needs a high-quality screen and the 1440×900 has been qualifified as mediocre (http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Dell-Precisio...“>and “>http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Dell-Precisio...and WUXGA TrueLife screens are not available in Spain. I'm very interested to know any opinions abots about the WUXGA matte display!
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May 13, 2008 - 3:31 am
You seem to be the only one to own a WUXGA matte display! Any others? I'm about to recommend this laptop to a friend, but he needs a high-quality screen and the 1440×900 has been qualifified as mediocre (http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Dell-Precisio...“>and “>http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Dell-Precisio...and WUXGA TrueLife screens are not available in Spain. I'm very interested to know any opinions abots about the WUXGA matte display!
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June 24, 2008 - 5:57 am
I have the M6300 with the X9000 CPU (2,8 GHz). It also have 4 Gb of RAM, but I use XP so it can only handle 3 Gb of RAM. The graphic card is the nVidia Quadro FX 3600M (512 Mb).
The 3D Mark 06 scores with the current drivers is 8036. This mashine really rocks…
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March 3, 2009 - 5:09 am
which laptop can i use into bulding and design..
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April 12, 2010 - 10:37 am
what bios are you using ? i was planing on getting the core 2 duo X9000 of my buddy my bios is A11
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