No, it apparently cannot do that according to the article I read.Can't you just plug two chargers into it?
No, it apparently cannot do that according to the article I read.Can't you just plug two chargers into it?
Have you looked at the prices of the "creator's edition" versions of the XPS 17? They start out at nearly $3000 and go well North of that when certain options are upgraded. If that doesn't qualify as "higher end" then I don't know what does. I was looking at a getting a notebook in the $3500-$4000 price range after all the upgrades had been applied (after market 64 DDR4 RAM and a 2TB PCIe M2 SSD).
As I said before, the real deal-breaking problem is the system continuing to suck on the battery even when it's plugged into a wall outlet. Again, THAT SUCKS. No laptop computer should ever draw from the battery while plugged into a wall outlet regardless of its price category.
BTW, the "higher end" sister to the XPS 17, the Precision 5750 Mobile Workstation, has the same battery draw problem.
Notebook computer batteries have a limited life span. You get only so many charge cycles on them before they have to be replaced. It's more difficult and expensive to replace batteries in newer notebooks. The prevailing product design mantra has been thinner and lighter above all other priorities. So all the batteries are "integrated;" you have to crack open the case with a spudger and use special tools for all the tiny screws used to mount the battery to the chassis. My old, circa 2011 Dell XPS notebook had a battery that could be removed externally.
Important point: computer companies stop making replacement batteries for a given notebook model after only a few years. If you continue to use the machine, like I did with my 9 year old Dell XPS, it has to just stay plugged into a wall outlet. But it still works! With a machine like the 2020 Dell XPS 17 it wouldn't do so well in the same plugged-in scenario if the battery was dead or removed. It would throttle way down, that is if the machine would even work at all.
I think my game plan for the time being is to upgrade the hard drive in the old notebook and keep using it. Thankfully they're still making 2.5" SATA notebook hard disks and form factor SSDs.
The condition many users are witnessing is the XPS 17 is drawing the battery way down while plugged into a wall outlet. This isn't a once in awhile sip while the CPU or GPU is under max loads. It's happening frequently. That's going to translate into a battery wearing itself out over a short period of time. And ultimately it means a far shorter product life.
I've looked at the 7740. It runs into the same problems as gaming notebooks. A decent configuration yields horrible battery life. Add in super high cost for good measure. The 2020 XPS 17 does not come with top tier video boards in exchange for greater portability and battery life. The machine hits the sweet spot big time in terms of balancing performance with portability and battery life. But Dell made a giant mistake by pulling an Apple-style move by ditching the dedicated AC port and forcing AC over USB-C.
As I said before, the real deal-breaking problem is the system continuing to suck on the battery even when it's plugged into a wall outlet. Again, THAT SUCKS. No laptop computer should ever draw from the battery while plugged into a wall outlet regardless of its price category.
BTW, the "higher end" sister to the XPS 17, the Precision 5750 Mobile Workstation, has the same battery draw problem.
unclebun said:According to an article I read, the system is supposed to be able to draw 130W from the Thunderbolt charger, but stops at 105W and won't draw more. They have the same charging system in their XPS 15 9500, and it is able to draw 130W in that system. So it appears that they meant for it to be able to keep from discharging the battery, but there is a defect in the XPS 17 9700 that keeps it from drawing the full power.
Pauly said:why are you so focused on the XPS 17 when theres other better 17" laptops out there.
The key thing is BALANCE of priorities.
One person's definition of "better" is going to vary widely depending on what he or she wants out of a notebook computer. Budget is also a valid consideration (especially for me after my recent hospital stay). The key thing is BALANCE of priorities.
There are several far more powerful 17" notebooks than a fully tricked out 2020 Dell XPS 17. But in return for more powerful CPUs, video cards, etc they're giving up battery life and portability. For example, the Alienware Area 51 notebook is arguably the most powerful gaming notebook on the market, but I think it's a stupid (and overly costly) product because it can't survive away from a wall outlet for more than an hour. Notebooks fitted with Core i9 CPUs (and similar Xeon CPUs) are often a waste of money since they're typically put into notebooks too thin and limited on thermals to dissipate the heat. The CPUs throttles down to prevent cooking itself to death. There are notebooks that get amazing amounts of battery life and are very portable, but often those machines include trade-offs like small screens and anemic performance.
The 2020 Dell XPS 17 offers a very good balance between computing power and portability. Six or so hours of battery life in a UHD+ large screen notebook is really pretty good. That's what makes the battery draw issue seem so stupid and frustrating. Dell literally snatched defeat from the jaws of victory with that power adaptor blunder.
For graphic design, sales, internet, accounting and correspondence I use Apple laptops. If you buy into the Apple ecosystem, everything works exceptionally well (iPhone, Macs, tablets, iCloud).
Pauly said:Sorry to hear about the hospital stay! hope you're well mate.
kcollinsdesign said:Trying to get a laptop to do everything is false economy.
kcollinsdesign said:I would advise not being dissuaded by the Mac haters. Once you become comfortable with the Mac OS and Apple ecosystem, you will likely spend less time fussing with computers and more time getting things done. The initial cost becomes irrelevant.
I guess I just look at it differently. It costs about $60/month for my MacBook Pro (quad core i5/16GB/512GB SSD) with AppleCare. In three years I can buy a new one, or just keep using the old one until it breaks. It runs all the design software I can throw at it with ease. That's less than $2/day. Doesn't require much thought.Thanks. One of my girlfriend's former co-workers passed away this week from a very aggressive infection that moved from his arm and into his chest. They amputated his arm below the elbow in an attempt to stop the infection. That gave me a new perspective on why they kept me in the hospital overnight on IV antibiotics after I partially shredded my finger. Not too many people sterilize their lawn care tools.
I'm not trying to get a laptop to do everything. But I do want something that is going to be powerful enough to do a lot of graphics tasks, but not top of the line powerful where it has to be near a wall outlet 100% of the time. The 2020 XPS 17 looked like just the thing I needed, until that stupid AC power issue pretty much killed the deal. I'm seeing other complaints in the field about XPS 15 and 17 systems running way too hot as well.
Stressing this again: I'm NOT buying a desktop system. I have my leg chained to a computer desk most of the day. I'm not going to sit at another desk in some back room when I need to do computer related tasks at home. I want to at least be able to see the TV in the living room or even have the option to leave the house and do that computer work somewhere else. If I have to sit at a computer desk I'll just stay at the office and work late.
If I didn't use CorelDRAW at all or any other sign industry specific software at all it would be easier going the Mac route (I have a lot of old Windows-specific Postscript Type 1 fonts I still use too). The sign industry is now more Windows-centric than ever. Corel has compounded its own Mac vs Windows situation by not allowing cross platform upgrades. That's not even figuring in the ridiculous pricing, upgrades and subscription policies.
I'm not anti-Apple. I have large iPad Pro that's great for certain tasks. But I am definitely not a fan at all of Apple's notebooks. Next to nothing in them can be upgraded at all. The notebook stays in the configuration in which it was ordered for the life of the product. And Apple sure makes the customer pay a GIANT premium on any upgrades. The RAM and most other components are soldered into the chassis. The 2020 Dell XPS didn't do that. You could order one with a modest amount of Dell's junky RAM and replace it with far better quality after market RAM and save a lot of money in the process. Same goes for the SSDs.
I guess I just look at it differently. It costs about $60/month for my MacBook Pro (quad core i5/16GB/512GB SSD) with AppleCare. In three years I can buy a new one, or just keep using the old one until it breaks. It runs all the design software I can throw at it with ease. That's less than $2/day. Doesn't require much thought.
The NUCs are nice, but I have an abundance of old PC carcasses that I can make into what I need (lots of fans and bays). If I were starting new with PCs, I would want a NUC for the form factor!Those specs match my NUC, which comes out to $45.83 per month. Well, I do have a 1TB SSD, but otherwise it's the same. Without actually knowing performance specs that is, just based on what you gave. I can run Blender on it, but doing renders (especially 4k) may have some issues, just depends on the scene.
Jester said:Since we are all airing our opinions and preferences, I'll chime in with another viewpoint. By my way of thinking the 17" laptops I've owned are just too large and heavy.
rjsigns said:My two cents, not that anyone wants to hear it. Regarding the MacBook Pro I agree with KCollins. There is another PC that I've seen in action and I like. It's the Surface Pro.
Aside from my previous gripes, I wouldn't risk buying a new Apple desktop or notebook computer until well after their transition from Intel to ARM is complete. Just even on the topic of CorelDRAW getting a Mac at this current time is bad news. Corel is having a hard enough time as it is getting its Mac version of CorelDRAW fixed properly. Now they're looking at the prospect of having to maintain Intel and ARM-based versions for OSX. I don't think Corel has the resources to do that.
When they pull the plug that will mean no more running Windows natively on Apple-branded hardware.