[UPDATED] REVIEW: Dell Latitude D600

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
Updated - see bottom of thread for some remarks.

I posted this at Ars OpenForum, and I though I'd post it here as well It's my first total system upgrade since 1999, so without further comment, here are my thoughts on the

Dell Latitude D600

Major System Features:
1.4 GHz Pentium-M
512 MB DDR-SDRAM, PC2100
i855PM Chipset
40 GB, 5400 RPM (Hitatchi (formerly IBM) TravelStar GNX40, I believe)
Mobility Radeon 9000 Graphics, 32 MB DDR, 64-bit interface
CD-RW/DVD combo drive (CD-RW rated at 24x)
Dell TrueMobile 1300 802.11b/g wireless card
10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet, 56K modem
Windows XP Pro, SP1

First Impressions:

General Construction (4/5):
Overall I found the construction quite good. The monitor assembly consists of magnesium alloy. It feels metallic to the touch and does not flex or exhibit screen distortions when I press on the back or adjust the angle of the screen. Two hinges connect the monitor assembly to the base unit, and a single, button spring latch holds the screen in place when the unit is closed.
The base consists of a combination of plastic, magnesium, and aluminum parts. Unlike my previous notebook, an old Dell Latitude CPi, the base does not creak or feel fragile when I lift it or move it around. However, despite the obvious improvements, the construction is still not as solid as the IBM ThinkPad T series notebooks. The Latitude?s plastic parts have less heft to them (for example, the silver trim around the keyboard is a bit thin and flimsy) than the T30, but the construction is still very good overall. Unlike Latitude C6x0 or Inspiron 4100 series machines, I don?t get the bad feeling that something is going to fall off the notebook ever time I lift it.

Input Devices (2/5):
The keyboard is downright annoying. I was pleased to see that Dell has been consistent with the Latitude?s keyboard layouts ? it was the same layout as my old CPi; There is a decent amount of key travel, but I was very disappointed with the flimsiness of the keyboard. The entire board bounces a bit when I type quickly. I also noticed that the letters on the keys seem to be stickers that were fused to keys. Against the T30 it?s no contest. The D600?s keyboard sucks. And sucks some more.
Cursor input was thankfully a much better experience. The pointing device works through a dual trackpoint / trackpad system. The trackpad has a grainy but pleasant surface texture, and the two sets of buttons have a decent amount of feedback. The trackpoint has a very rough texture, but is also quite easy to use. Dell was kind enough to include 2 extra eraserheads for the trackpoint device. Dell got this part just right.
Other input devices include a mute button next to a volume up/down control. These buttons and the power button respond with decent feedback and clicks. The power button also lights up when the system is on.

Output Devices (4/5):
I configured my D600 with a 14? 1024x768 TFT. Brightness and clarity are excellent (this is very subjective I realize), but the difference between this LCD and my Dell E151FPp desktop LCD is quite apparent. Though the E151FPp is a decent LCD, the D600?s LCD tops it in visual quality.
There are four LED status indicators embedded in the right monitor hinge ? HDD activity, Power On, Battery Charging, and Blue Tooth. I do not think this system is equipped with Blue Tooth, but I will check later to make sure.
Just above the keyboard area are Caps Lock, Num Lock, and Scroll Lock indicators. All the LEDs in this system are a nice green color.
The speakers sound pretty awful, but that?s pretty much what I expected.


Noise, Heat, and other Problems (4/5):
The area under the left palm rest houses the hard disk enclosure. It does get warm, while the right palm rest remains cool. However, this warmth is really only noticeable during periods of sustained HDD activity, and it certainly does not get hot enough to be uncomfortable. I noticed that the HDD became really hot while I installed Windows XP, but cooled down noticeably during normal use. I have not yet put the laptop on my lap, but on the surface there appear to be no other hotspots in the input areas.
The system fan is virtually silent ? I didn?t notice it was on until I felt cool air being pulled through the keyboard. Several tiny rubber feet keep the system a couple of millimeters off the table to allow for adequate air circulation underneath the unit.
The laptop itself is extremely quiet, but I have one major problem with the power adapter ? it makes very annoying buzzing sounds when plugged in. A quick visit to support.dell.com forums reveals that I am not alone. Some people who use PA-12, Revision A00 adapters are also having the same problem. Dell tech support was unable to resolve the problem.

System Responsiveness: (5/5)
The 1.40 GHz Pentium-M had no trouble with Windows XP. Everything feels very snappy and instant. SpeedStep kept the processor running at 585 MHz most of the time, though the speed would go up to 785 MHz or higher (according to System Properties) if I was opening many applications or Explorer windows. I played a DVD of ?The Princess Bride? to see if it would stress the CPU (using WinDVD), but the CPU usage never went above 35% so far as I could tell, and the CPU speed seemed to stay at around 585 MHz.
Other things I tested were the CD-RW drive and the built in gigabit Ethernet port. I didn?t time the CD-RW drive but it was certainly much faster than the old 8x in my Dell tower. I was unable to determine if the Ethernet was faster than a standard 10/100 card because my university does not support gigabit Ethernet connections.

Things That I Have NOT Tested:

Gaming capabilities of the Mobility Radeon 9000 (32 MB DDR, 64-bit interface)
Performance of the Dell TrueMobile 1300 802.11b/g card
USB2.0 and other ports.

Overall, I'd give this system a 3.75/5. It's got its flaws, namely (I suspect) a noisy A00 revision power adapter and a lousy keyboard, but it's a fair value overall. The features are excellent and the construction is very good. For $1700, I doubt I could have gotten a faster system. I've sent Dell tech support an email concerning the buzzing power adapter, so we'll see how good (or how bad) their support team treats an average guy like me

I will post updates from time to time detailing how the system holds up over the next few weeks and months. It pretty much has to last me the next three years, so I'm hoping I made the right choice.

Post any questions you might have - if I have time later this week I will post some pics, but for now you can find decent pics here at CNET
 

JZilla

Senior member
Feb 11, 2003
630
0
0
Great review. Thanks for mentioning the heat "problem", which apparently isn't a problem.
 

cbagz

Junior Member
Apr 12, 2003
24
0
0
I myself have a D600 also.... and Old Spooky hit the nail on the head with his review. Good JOB! I also experience the problem with the power adapter buzzing and humming away. I should be recieving my replacement adapter today (I hope it corrects the problem) along with a CD/CDRW/DVD combo drive that failed to get recongized in XP.....what a bummer.
 

ndee

Lifer
Jul 18, 2000
12,680
1
0
Can you use some standard SO-DIMMs on that notebook? (like not get the expensive RAMs from Dell itself?)
 

crzylgs

Member
Apr 6, 2003
86
0
0
nice review. Quick question
the p-m proc is suppose to be able to scale up speed if it is required right? ie: my future laptop is 1.6 and has a ti4200 so if i fire up ut2k3 the proc speed should jump up right? Just wondering, thanks in advance.
 

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
Can you use some standard SO-DIMMs on that notebook?
I actually purchased mine with 128 MB of RAM, and separately purchased 2x 256 MB of Dell Certified Memory (there was sale, coupon, and free ship) for $70. (I wans't about to pay $120 for them to upgrade the RAM for me). Any 200-pin, PC2100 so-DIMM should work fine. Crucial is good.



Quick question -the p-m proc is suppose to be able to scale up speed if it is required right?
That is correct. You can check the current and max CPU speed udner "System Properties" in the Windows control panel. When running 3DMark 2001SE the speed went to 1.40 GHz. So far, these are the speeds I have observed:

585 MHz (System Idle)
785 MHz
933 MHz
1.06 GHz
1.40 GHz

I am sure there are a few others in between. 3DMark 2001 was able to detect that the max CPU speed was 1.40 GHz. Interestingly enough, it showed that my FSB was running at 133 MHz (the P-M has a 400 MHz bus), so I am wondering if the FSB scales in frequency as well.
 

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
As requested, here is my latest 3DMark 2001SE score:

Graphics Card: Mobility Radeon 9000, 32 MB DDR on 64-bit bus
Settings: 1024x768, 32-bit color, no AA, Compressed Textures, Hardware D3D
Score: 4857

Keep in mind that this is the weakest Radeon 9000 available. The 64 MB Radeon 9000 has a full 128-bit DDR bus. Nevertheless, the performance is good enough for me since I don't game all that much.

Edit: I should also add that this score was attained using the Dell OEM drivers (digitally signed 01/2003). The latest ATI Catalyst drivers may very well boost performance.
 

Jejunum

Golden Member
Jun 19, 2000
1,828
0
76
Do you know what the differences in casing between the D600 and the 600m are? Im just curious as I just bought a 600m...


Edit: I should also add that this score was attained using the Dell OEM drivers (digitally signed 01/2003). The latest ATI Catalyst drivers may very well boost performance.


Where would one get those catalyst drivers - fyi there are new ati dell drivers online (like dated in april i think...)
 

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
Do you know what the differences in casing between the D600 and the 600m are?
The D600 is different in a few ways:
Gigabit Ethernet
Smart Card Reader
Trackstick in addition to trackpad
No option for 64 MB Radeon 9000

I have also read that the D600's LCD assembly is a bit sturdier than the 600m's LCD assembly.

Where would one get those catalyst drivers

ATI.com has them available for download.
 

ChaosX2

Member
Apr 17, 2003
28
0
0
Yes the 600m has both the Gigabit Ethernet and the Smart Card Reader.

I just bought the 600m w/ the 64mb Vid card. This laptop rocks!!!
 

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
Here's another benchmark for you 3D Gamers, although its a relatively meaningless one:

3DMark 2001SE at 640x480, 16 bit color, Hardware D3D: 8652
 

Jejunum

Golden Member
Jun 19, 2000
1,828
0
76
another question for all with the 600m/d600 laptops - anyone change that annoying dell background boot up screen? if so too what (link me to an image that i can use ) and how did u do it without a floppy drive (i assume most dont have the floppy drive)

thanks all!
 

ChaosX2

Member
Apr 17, 2003
28
0
0
How about running that benchmark at the default specs. I'd be interested to know how the D600 compares to the performance of the 600m. I would assume they'd be pretty simular but I'm still curious.
 

Jejunum

Golden Member
Jun 19, 2000
1,828
0
76
performance assuming identical specs should be absolutely identical...some 600m's (Mine!) have 64 meg video - also 600m ships w/ xp home so that MIGHT make a speed difference

so yah theres no real need unless u wanna see the benchmarks on some specific specifications
 

ChaosX2

Member
Apr 17, 2003
28
0
0
Sounds about right, thanks. BTW, I'm assuming you have the 32MB Graphics Card when I say that.
 

OldSpooky

Senior member
Nov 28, 2002
356
0
0
Update: After a week of usage, I returned this machine to Dell. There were two outstanding issues that caused me to do this.

1) Faulty power adapter - the buzzing of the A00 PA-12 made the machine a pain in the @ss to use. I emailed Dell tech support and specifically requested an L02 PA-12, which people at support.dell.com forums said was silent. Whatever clown handled my service request had another A00 PA-12 in a ripped up bag sent to me. This one was worse than the first one. Completely unacceptable service.

2) Keyboard keyboard keyboard. I gave the D600 a (3/5) for input devices. I'm revising it to a (2/5). And it would be a (1/5) if it weren't for the excellent trackstick/trackpad combo. If rattling, bouncing keyboards annoy you, DO NOT get the D600. The keyboard was a significant downgrade from my 1998 era Latitude CPi.

It's a shame that these issues were not taken care of prior to the launch of the D600. I would gladly have paid an extra couple bucks for a nice, solid keyboard, and the faulty power adapter thing was just inexcusable. Haven't these people at Dell heard of quality control?

I suspect the D600 may be a better choice in a year or so. Everything else was great (build quality, speed, etc).

Moral of the story: First release products are rough around the edges. Don't do Dell's beta testing for them.
 
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