Archive for the 'Dell XPS 420' Category

Problems with the Dell Wireless 1505 802.11n Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

wireless

The Dell Wireless 1505 is an internal Wireless solution for Desktop PC’s.

It consists of two parts

1) The internal card.

2) The cable box out antenna.

This one shipped in a Dell XPS 420 running a factory installed Windows Vista SP1.

So I connect the PC to my secure wireless router. All goes well for a few seconds (I browse the web) then it all stops.

I open the command prompt and try and ping the router and it can’t.

So I reboot the PC and try again browsing worked then stopped again.

Back at the command prompt I do a recursive ping on the router and see there is intermittent packet loss.

The distance between the PC and the Router is negligible.

The wireless security and IP settings are correct because it can ping but just not consistently.

So I give in and grab an ancient cheap 802.11g dongle that connected in seconds and has worked perfectly ever since.

I will revisit the Dell Wireless 1505 as I can’t believe this is the intended out of the box experience.

It may well be an incompatibility with by Wireless Router. The joy of tech.

Dell XPS 420 Owners Review Thursday, February 21st, 2008

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Dell Finally Delivered my Dell XPS 420.

Now its very rare for me to get a PC for myself. The last time was May 2004.

At the time (2004) a Pentium4 3.0 Ghz was considered speedy, but it doesn’t cut it in today’s world of multi core and HD content.

What I wanted was speed and a large form factor machine to accommodate multiple hard disks and full length video cards. It also needed to be relatively quiet.

Basically I needed a “Big Box” of a computer, out my available choices the XPS 420 is aesthetically one of the nicest. It has the “Piano Black shiny look” to it, like you find on Samsung LCD’s these days.

Some thought has been given to the design but lets be real its more evolution than revolution.

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In the Speed department I could have got away with any Intel Dual Core CPU. The machine’s primary purpose is HD playback and any Dual Core CPU above 1.8Ghz can do it.

So when I saw an offer for a Quad Core CPU at a very enticing price point I jumped at the chance.

The Machine Shipped with Windows Vista Home Premium I am new convert to Windows Vista Media Centre so my initial intention was to stick with Vista.

However my first out of the box experience was marred by how Vista was performing on what I knew to be a powerful machine.

The first issue was all the Dell installed software: Adobe, Roxio, McAfee etc. I don’t want any of it. So I slowly remove these one by one hoping the performance I was expecting would appear.

I took all of 45 minuets to decide Vista had to go.

I know what I need this machine to do and all of it can be done in Windows XP. At this point I look at Windows XP as Lean and Mean. It does the job without any flashy stuff you don’t need.

Now here is the problem. Dell don’t offer Windows XP Drivers for the XPS 420. But its not rocket science all the parts are pretty standard: CPU Chipset, Network Card, Sound, etc.

I would lose access to the MiniView the display on the front of the machine, but I saw through the usefulness of that in my first half an hour.

This link here points you in the right direction for locating the Windows XP Drivers.

So reinstalling an operating system is no biggie for me. So about an hour later I have completed the Windows XP machine and I managed to get for the first time a glimpse at how fast the machine could perform.

What I am looking for is a machine that can cold boot and then be ready for use in a very short time.

The XPS 420 seems to linger in the bios screen for 5 to 7 seconds and my Windows XP build is totally usable 30 seconds later. This is something I would find very difficult to match in Windows Vista land.

Problems

This machine shipped with a ATI 2600XT and for some reason during HD playback it would blue screen with a watchdog.sys error. This is video card/driver related.

I am tight on time at the moment so I elected to replace the 2600XT for a 2600Pro that I know was rock solid on the driver front.

Observations

Operating System: Most people could live with Vista, I couldn’t for an easier but slower life stick with Vista.

Build Quality: Pretty high standard, very similar to Precision I use, nice and neat inside. The cables are managed properly.

Performance:  In my scenario this performs amazingly well. I looked at the CPU usage while playing back HD. It idled at around 8%. This computer handles HD like older computer manage DVD, with ease in other words.

Other: Something I am not best pleased about is on the motherboard. The following capacitor being so close to the blue plastic release of the video card.

why_s Replacing a video card is something an end user might do and Dell are asking for trouble placing a Capacitor in that location.

Summary: I am very pleased with my choice, Quad Core was a bonus. This machine now purrs relatively silently and handles all my HD requirements with ease.

Link: http://www.intel.com/products/processor/core2quad/specifications.htm

Link: Dell 420 Page

Dell See Sense, Swap Money for Tech Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

xps_420_side_2 (Small)

My Dell XPS 420 order has now been cajoled back into life.

I ordered it online 01-02 and got the official order confirmation 11-02. Not exactly speedy.

In anticipation I did some research about the XPS 420. A fair few people have issues with raid configurations other than Raid0.

My machine is a single 500gb in Raid0 so I should be fine.

Most people describe the XPS 420 as the quietest computer they have used (bodes well.)

I didn’t go OTT with the Spec

Quad Core 2.4 / 3gb Ram / ATI Radeon 2600XT

Now I don’t play games but I do watch Hi-Def so the Radeon 2600XT with it’s onboard HD video processing is going to be sweet and it helped keep the cost of the machine down.

No doubt I will be creating a few posts about the XPS 420 so I have created a category for it.

Category: http://www.colindiponio.com/category/dell-xps-420/

A Mini Farce trying to order a PC at Dell Friday, February 8th, 2008

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I placed an order online on Friday 01-02-2008 for a Dell XPS 420

Now I have had a busy week with Children being born, Networks being installed, so I wasn’t in a mad rush for the PC.

So  I thought I wonder how my XPS 420 Order is progressing.

So I email my account manager (Paul A McBride), I instantly get an Out of Office message from him.

Contained in the Out of office email is the e-mail address of another contact at Dell. This Chap is Called Patrick Furlong

So I email Patrick asking for an update on my order only to receive an Out of Office from him as well.

But in this Out of Office it contained the details of yet another person Fiona Lacy.

So just for her hell of it I email her and ask for an order update.

I haven’t heard anything from Fiona.

If anyone at Dell can find out what is going on I would appreciate it.

The web order reference number is 292774

Right now I should be telling the world how Great the Dell XPS 420 is.

Peer Review of the Dell XPS 420 Monday, December 17th, 2007

xps420

I love it when the other bloggers I read get the technology I am interested in.

Keith Combs, a Microsoft Infrastructure Architect has recently purchased a Dell XPS 420 to carry out various media encoding tasks etc.

He chose a quad core CPU and is going to be running Windows Vista Ultimate x64

He just created his first impressions post about the XPS 420.

The XPS 420 is proving to be quite popular, so lots of people are looking for reviews etc.

Keith’s Link: Dell XPS 420 First Impressions

Other Non Peer Reviews:

Cnet: http://reviews.cnet.com/desktops/dell-xps-420/4505-3118_7-32716531.html

Cnet UK: http://crave.cnet.co.uk/desktops/0,39029426,49294629,00.htm

ZD-Net: http://review.zdnet.com/desktops/dell-xps-420/4505-3118_16-32716531.html?tag=pdtl-list