Version: 2008

April 18, 2006 6:00 AM PDT

Dell's gaming power now in red or black

  • 40 comments
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Dell introduced a flashy new notebook Tuesday in a bid to capture a gamer's sense of style.

The XPS M1710 features the horsepower needed to stay afloat while playing demanding games, with Intel's Core Duo processor and Nvidia's GeForce Go 7900 GTX graphics chip. Its predecessor, the M170, used Intel's single-core Pentium M processor.

Dell XPS M1710
Credit: Dell
The Special Edition Formula Red and Black versions of the XPS M1710.

The new notebook looks a bit like the XPS M170 but is available in either black or red. The Special Edition Formula Red model actually costs more than the Metallic Black notebook, but it also comes with a faster processor and 512MB of memory dedicated to the graphics processor.

Dell has stepped up its pursuit of the gaming market over the last few quarters with the introduction of its XPS line. Gamers tend to splurge on tricked-out systems beyond the needs of average PC buyers, making them a more profitable and highly coveted customer. Dell recently increased its investment in the gaming community by snapping up boutique PC vendor Alienware in a rare acquisition designed to boost Dell's standing in the gaming community.

The Metallic Black M1710 costs $2,600 with Intel's Core Duo T2400 processor, 1GB of DDR2 memory, and a 60GB hard drive. The Formula Red model will be available in the U.S. and Canada only. The price with the T2500 processor and an 80GB hard drive is $3,400. Both notebooks feature Microsoft's Windows Media Center Edition operating system.

More detailed specifications are available on Dell's Web site.

To see the CNET review of the XPS M1710, click here.

See more CNET content tagged:
Intel Core Duo, Dell, notebook computer, games, gamer

Add a Comment (Log in or register) (40 Comments)
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Where to laptops come from?
by aabcdefghij987654321 April 18, 2006 6:45 AM PDT
See picture.
Reply to this comment
Humina Humina
by umbrae April 18, 2006 6:56 AM PDT
If the desk is rockin, don't come a knocking... :)
Well, you see...
by ericfish April 18, 2006 7:21 AM PDT
When a processor and a motherboard love each other very much...
View reply
Where to laptops come from?
by aabcdefghij987654321 April 18, 2006 6:45 AM PDT
See picture.
Reply to this comment
Humina Humina
by umbrae April 18, 2006 6:56 AM PDT
If the desk is rockin, don't come a knocking... :)
Well, you see...
by ericfish April 18, 2006 7:21 AM PDT
When a processor and a motherboard love each other very much...
View reply
Where do laptops come from?
by aabcdefghij987654321 April 18, 2006 6:45 AM PDT
See picture.
Reply to this comment
Where do laptops come from?
by aabcdefghij987654321 April 18, 2006 6:45 AM PDT
See picture.
Reply to this comment
just curious
by Jambi3 April 18, 2006 8:59 AM PDT
how the INtel MacBooks stack up . . .
Reply to this comment
Im guessing
by Rolndubbs April 18, 2006 12:26 PM PDT
I would guess they post comparable scores in CPU intensive tasks, not so comparable scores in GPU intensive tasks(assuming they both are running the same amount of ram). A 512 7900 in a laptop makes me want one very badly though.
Im guessing
by Rolndubbs April 18, 2006 12:26 PM PDT
I would guess they post comparable scores in CPU intensive tasks(assuming they both are running the same amount of ram), not so comparable scores in GPU intensive tasks. A 512 7900 in a laptop makes me want one very badly though.
just curious
by Jambi3 April 18, 2006 8:59 AM PDT
how the INtel MacBooks stack up . . .
Reply to this comment
Im guessing
by Rolndubbs April 18, 2006 12:26 PM PDT
I would guess they post comparable scores in CPU intensive tasks, not so comparable scores in GPU intensive tasks(assuming they both are running the same amount of ram). A 512 7900 in a laptop makes me want one very badly though.
Im guessing
by Rolndubbs April 18, 2006 12:26 PM PDT
I would guess they post comparable scores in CPU intensive tasks(assuming they both are running the same amount of ram), not so comparable scores in GPU intensive tasks. A 512 7900 in a laptop makes me want one very badly though.
Great hardware. Now if only it was supported
by Vegaman_Dan April 18, 2006 12:10 PM PDT
I've had several of these systems come through my office now. The hardware is fantastic and very nice indeed. If you're going to play a game, then these are really nice systems.

If you want to use them for any other purpose, then save $2000 and buy anything else.

The hardware is *very* Windows Media Center specific, even to the point that if you want to install XP because you're silly and want to join a domain or something (Media Center doesn't support domains), then you'll find that most of the customized hardware that makes the system so neat *isn't* supported driver-wise for XP. That's not surprising, since this was designed from the ground up to be a Windows Media Center system instead.

Most of the time XP drivers can work, but for hardware specific items, you'll find you have a lot of dead buttons on the system.

For Windows Media Center, it's a great system. For games, it'sa great system. For anything else, it will be crippled.
Reply to this comment
I Must be getting old
by April 18, 2006 2:44 PM PDT
What actually IS Windows Media Center ?
View reply
what a piece of junk
by microsoft slayer April 18, 2006 3:48 PM PDT
why would anyone waste money on a crippled operating system?
Great hardware. Now if only it was supported
by Vegaman_Dan April 18, 2006 12:10 PM PDT
I've had several of these systems come through my office now. The hardware is fantastic and very nice indeed. If you're going to play a game, then these are really nice systems.

If you want to use them for any other purpose, then save $2000 and buy anything else.

The hardware is *very* Windows Media Center specific, even to the point that if you want to install XP because you're silly and want to join a domain or something (Media Center doesn't support domains), then you'll find that most of the customized hardware that makes the system so neat *isn't* supported driver-wise for XP. That's not surprising, since this was designed from the ground up to be a Windows Media Center system instead.

Most of the time XP drivers can work, but for hardware specific items, you'll find you have a lot of dead buttons on the system.

For Windows Media Center, it's a great system. For games, it'sa great system. For anything else, it will be crippled.
Reply to this comment
I Must be getting old
by April 18, 2006 2:44 PM PDT
What actually IS Windows Media Center ?
View reply
what a piece of junk
by microsoft slayer April 18, 2006 3:48 PM PDT
why would anyone waste money on a crippled operating system?
ugly laptops
by microsoft slayer April 18, 2006 3:45 PM PDT
urghh...who would be in their right mind to waste money on such crap!
Reply to this comment
FUGLY
by Llib Setag April 20, 2006 6:43 PM PDT
Dell lame attempt to be more like Apple & less like Walmart of PC Industry...

Dude, you're getting a FUGLY Dull.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
"loser"...
=8-)
ugly laptops
by microsoft slayer April 18, 2006 3:45 PM PDT
urghh...who would be in their right mind to waste money on such crap!
Reply to this comment
FUGLY
by Llib Setag April 20, 2006 6:43 PM PDT
Dell lame attempt to be more like Apple & less like Walmart of PC Industry...

Dude, you're getting a FUGLY Dull.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
"loser"...
=8-)
Yah..I think my neighbor had the same siding on his house.
by Jonathan April 18, 2006 6:00 PM PDT
Just not in red or black. Seriously how freaking hard is it NOT to make a fugly laptop?
Reply to this comment
Yah..I think my neighbor had the same siding on his house.
by Jonathan April 18, 2006 6:00 PM PDT
Just not in red or black. Seriously how freaking hard is it NOT to make a fugly laptop?
Reply to this comment
MacBook Pro Cheaper + WIN XP Boot Camp
by Llib Setag April 18, 2006 6:37 PM PDT
Apple MacBook Pro:

2.0GHz Intel Core Duo
1GB 667 DDR2 - 2x512 SO-DIMMs
100GB Serial ATA drive @ 5400 rpm
SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW)
AirPort Extreme Card & Bluetooth
Backlit Keyboard/Mac OS - U.S. English
15.4-inch TFT Display
BootCamp Software FREE (XP on Macintel)
Mac OSX + iLife Suite + Front Row Media
built-in iSight Internet Video Camera & software (AOL AIM compatible)
$2399.00
DELL BLACK $2600.00

2.16GHz Intel Core Duo
2GB 667 DDR2 - 2x1GB SO-DIMMs
100GB Serial ATA drive @ 7200 rpm
SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW)
AirPort Extreme Card & Bluetooth
Backlit Keyboard/Mac OS - U.S. English
15.4-inch TFT Display
BootCamp Software FREE (XP on Macintel)
Mac OSX + iLife Suite + Front Row Media
built-in iSight Internet Video Camera & software (AOL AIM compatible)
$3199.00
DELL RED $3400.00 (80 GB HD & 1GB DDR2)

Apple MacBook Pro ALUMINUM body + can run MacOSX Unix/Linux/WinXP on Intel Core Duo.
Reply to this comment
Macbook not a gaming rig
by Rolndubbs April 19, 2006 6:02 AM PDT
The macbook is a fine notebook, but it wasn't designed with gaming in mind. The XPS line is designed for gaming and media, hence the premium price on the units. I mean, 512 7900 vs 256 1600. The macbook is a fine unit, but it would get spanked in any gaming benchmark by a wide margin.
MacBook Pro Cheaper + WIN XP Boot Camp
by Llib Setag April 18, 2006 6:37 PM PDT
Apple MacBook Pro:

2.0GHz Intel Core Duo
1GB 667 DDR2 - 2x512 SO-DIMMs
100GB Serial ATA drive @ 5400 rpm
SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW)
AirPort Extreme Card & Bluetooth
Backlit Keyboard/Mac OS - U.S. English
15.4-inch TFT Display
BootCamp Software FREE (XP on Macintel)
Mac OSX + iLife Suite + Front Row Media
built-in iSight Internet Video Camera & software (AOL AIM compatible)
$2399.00
DELL BLACK $2600.00

2.16GHz Intel Core Duo
2GB 667 DDR2 - 2x1GB SO-DIMMs
100GB Serial ATA drive @ 7200 rpm
SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW)
AirPort Extreme Card & Bluetooth
Backlit Keyboard/Mac OS - U.S. English
15.4-inch TFT Display
BootCamp Software FREE (XP on Macintel)
Mac OSX + iLife Suite + Front Row Media
built-in iSight Internet Video Camera & software (AOL AIM compatible)
$3199.00
DELL RED $3400.00 (80 GB HD & 1GB DDR2)

Apple MacBook Pro ALUMINUM body + can run MacOSX Unix/Linux/WinXP on Intel Core Duo.
Reply to this comment
Macbook not a gaming rig
by Rolndubbs April 19, 2006 6:02 AM PDT
The macbook is a fine notebook, but it wasn't designed with gaming in mind. The XPS line is designed for gaming and media, hence the premium price on the units. I mean, 512 7900 vs 256 1600. The macbook is a fine unit, but it would get spanked in any gaming benchmark by a wide margin.
dell power
by April 19, 2006 6:19 AM PDT
The only game dell is good at is called,"shaft the customer."
Reply to this comment
but they're so very good at it...
by booboo1243 April 19, 2006 6:47 AM PDT
When you've played the game for as long as Dell has, you start learning all the little tips and tricks that only the seasoned pros pull off with any regularity.

As an example, how many people can grenade-jump in Counterstrike?
dell power
by April 19, 2006 6:19 AM PDT
The only game dell is good at is called,"shaft the customer."
Reply to this comment
but they're so very good at it...
by booboo1243 April 19, 2006 6:47 AM PDT
When you've played the game for as long as Dell has, you start learning all the little tips and tricks that only the seasoned pros pull off with any regularity.

As an example, how many people can grenade-jump in Counterstrike?
whoops...
by booboo1243 April 19, 2006 6:31 AM PDT
"The Special Edition Formula Red model actually costs more than the Metallic Black notebook, but it also comes with a faster processor and 512MB of memory dedicated to the graphics processor."

So, in order to get the faster machine, I have to buy the red one? What gives? I can't believe Dell would make that kind of marketing mistake... To be quite honest, every gamer I know is totally into customization, making their box unique... Forcing them into a "red notebook" just isn't going to work. Try again next year, Dell, we'll stick with our "homegrown" solutions - for half the cost, I might add.
Reply to this comment
whoops...
by booboo1243 April 19, 2006 6:31 AM PDT
"The Special Edition Formula Red model actually costs more than the Metallic Black notebook, but it also comes with a faster processor and 512MB of memory dedicated to the graphics processor."

So, in order to get the faster machine, I have to buy the red one? What gives? I can't believe Dell would make that kind of marketing mistake... To be quite honest, every gamer I know is totally into customization, making their box unique... Forcing them into a "red notebook" just isn't going to work. Try again next year, Dell, we'll stick with our "homegrown" solutions - for half the cost, I might add.
Reply to this comment
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