Thin, Light Alienware 13 Gaming Notebook Coming With Intel Core Processors And NVIDIA 860M Graphics
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Laptops
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Gaming
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Notebooks
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Dell
- Alienware
Last response: in News comments
exfileme
August 8, 2014 2:49:22 PM
Alienware has introduced its lightest gaming notebook to date.
Thin, Light Alienware 13 Gaming Notebook Coming With Intel Core Processors And NVIDIA 860M Graphics : Read more
Thin, Light Alienware 13 Gaming Notebook Coming With Intel Core Processors And NVIDIA 860M Graphics : Read more
More about : thin light alienware gaming notebook coming intel core processors nvidia 860m graphics
airborne11b
August 8, 2014 4:18:37 PM
Blazer1985
August 8, 2014 4:32:46 PM
jasonelmore
August 8, 2014 5:36:19 PM
envain
August 8, 2014 7:36:40 PM
I have the r2 of the mx14 and its a great laptop. I run multiple vms for testing, some gaming and it holds up quite well my one gripe was the weight. Dell seems like they have indeed improved over the past few years from what i experienced in the past and i buy a lot of their stuff for my clients. Would love to trade in mine for something like this.
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0
Kraszmyl
August 8, 2014 8:44:03 PM
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dear oem's.... please stop using killer nic. Intel nic much better, intel wireless much better.Thanks
And how do you figure? Every review of it shows it beating or equaling intel nics. Not a huge fan of the software so I don't load it but the nic itself and their firmware/drivers seem rather good minus some of the weird problems that seem to crop up with Intel nics and tethering.
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-1
razzb3d
August 9, 2014 4:52:25 AM
There's nothing "gaming" about the 860M. It's miles away (performance wise) from it's desktop counterpart - being closer in performance to the GT 750 (non-Ti). See for yourselves. http://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-860M.10...
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-4
edwd2
August 9, 2014 5:57:53 AM
chicofehr
August 9, 2014 7:42:56 AM
These would be great for those who are traveling allot and not home much and live in hotel for work like me. But if you go home everyday, then use a proper 3 monitor desktop setup and nice sound system. I miss my desktop and something like this will never be used when I am home but great when I'm not.
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1
soldier44
August 9, 2014 8:09:57 AM
iknowhowtofixit
August 9, 2014 2:11:11 PM
TheinsanegamerN
August 9, 2014 4:37:39 PM
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There's nothing "gaming" about the 860M. It's miles away (performance wise) from it's desktop counterpart - being closer in performance to the GT 750 (non-Ti). See for yourselves. http://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-860M.10...the desktop counterpart of the 860m Is the 750ti. they are LITERALLY the same chip, just clocked a little lower. a desktop 860 does not exist. do some research next time.
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2
It's perfectly fine to call an 860M a "gaming" laptop because it is. It's common knowledge that laptop GPU's don't have the same performance but an 860M in a laptop is probably within the top 1% of currently sold laptops for game performance (comparing all).
I don't get why people think laptops have to compare in performance to a top-end desktop to be considered "gaming" machines especially considering the limited space. This GPU will play any game on the market quite nicely provided you've properly tweaked the settings.
I don't get why people think laptops have to compare in performance to a top-end desktop to be considered "gaming" machines especially considering the limited space. This GPU will play any game on the market quite nicely provided you've properly tweaked the settings.
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2
airborne11b
August 9, 2014 8:06:37 PM
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It's perfectly fine to call an 860M a "gaming" laptop because it is. It's common knowledge that laptop GPU's don't have the same performance but an 860M in a laptop is probably within the top 1% of currently sold laptops for game performance (comparing all).I don't get why people think laptops have to compare in performance to a top-end desktop to be considered "gaming" machines especially considering the limited space. This GPU will play any game on the market quite nicely provided you've properly tweaked the settings.
This is true, but I'd also add that 860M GTX is still more capable than the next gen consoles are (considering XboxOne and PS4 games are rocking 790p - 1080p, no AA, high settings, 30fps / 60fps) which an 860m GTX is capable of delivering on a mobile laptop, I'd say that qualifies it as a "gaming" laptop.
FFS the 860m GTX gets 55fps on BF4 on high at 900p.
That's pretty damn solid for a laptop.
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5
PossumJones
August 9, 2014 11:58:38 PM
Not bad for a modern laptop, I wonder what materials the body is made out of. Those like myself who have or are currently working in a shop know just how common it is to see laptops with broken plastics and cracked screens. The cooling is likely better than most that it has dual fans with a proper cooler layout. If the coolers are like anything before the fins are aluminum and there is likely only two copper heatpipes.
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0
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Still on the not so thin-and-light side imho but at least for now the cooling department of the alienwares has always been flawless so the small added weight and size compared to the competition could proof itself more than worthy.I don't know how you figure that. If you had any idea how many of the Alienware so called "Gaming" laptops we've seen with overheating issues, I don't think you would make that statement. Even stock clocked units with no turbo core or turbo boost enabled have presented heat issues. Fix the heat issues BEFORE you cram more, better, faster and hotter components inside the cases.
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0
shobab
August 10, 2014 9:10:57 PM
Thin gaming notebooks are great. I have the GS60 3k Edition from MSI and it is the best thing for me. I am not a fan of Razer's keyboards on their laptops, but the MSI's Steelseries is very nice. I work overseas, and travel around a lot so it helps having a powerful computer that is 4lb.
http://www.msi.com/product/nb/GS60-2PE-Ghost-Pro-3K-Edi...
http://www.msi.com/product/nb/GS60-2PE-Ghost-Pro-3K-Edi...
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0
jimhood82
August 12, 2014 1:33:32 AM
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And how do you figure? Every review of it shows it beating or equaling intel nics. Not a huge fan of the software so I don't load it but the nic itself and their firmware/drivers seem rather good minus some of the weird problems that seem to crop up with Intel nics and tethering.
It is obvious you have never used a Killer nic card. The limited testing done for reviews doesn't show the weaknesses that show up under constant usage. For example, I often find the Killer software memory usage growing to out of control levels. After about 2 weeks without restarting the machine, you end up at nearly 750MB of ram used for the nic cards. And by that point, the software is simply unusable. The "packet prioritization" is entirely garbage. I tried it a couple times, including over different software versions. In the end, the system was nearly unusable due to buggy software blocking random things from using the internet entirely.
Trust the people who have used recent Killer products; they aren't worth it.
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0
jimhood82
August 12, 2014 1:35:10 AM
jimhood82
August 12, 2014 1:40:36 AM
Quote:
Quote:
Still on the not so thin-and-light side imho but at least for now the cooling department of the alienwares has always been flawless so the small added weight and size compared to the competition could proof itself more than worthy.I don't know how you figure that. If you had any idea how many of the Alienware so called "Gaming" laptops we've seen with overheating issues, I don't think you would make that statement. Even stock clocked units with no turbo core or turbo boost enabled have presented heat issues. Fix the heat issues BEFORE you cram more, better, faster and hotter components inside the cases.
As an owner of the AW 14, I strongly disagree with you. The temps on this machine are more than reasonable. In fact, the Bios/Firmware are explicitly set up to keep the machines temps too damn low for my own taste. 80C on the CPU is an immediate throttle to a 70C target, and 67C is the limit on the GPU.
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0
Kraszmyl
August 12, 2014 7:18:31 PM
jimhood82 said:
Quote:
And how do you figure? Every review of it shows it beating or equaling intel nics. Not a huge fan of the software so I don't load it but the nic itself and their firmware/drivers seem rather good minus some of the weird problems that seem to crop up with Intel nics and tethering.
It is obvious you have never used a Killer nic card. The limited testing done for reviews doesn't show the weaknesses that show up under constant usage. For example, I often find the Killer software memory usage growing to out of control levels. After about 2 weeks without restarting the machine, you end up at nearly 750MB of ram used for the nic cards. And by that point, the software is simply unusable. The "packet prioritization" is entirely garbage. I tried it a couple times, including over different software versions. In the end, the system was nearly unusable due to buggy software blocking random things from using the internet entirely.
Trust the people who have used recent Killer products; they aren't worth it.
Actually most of my Asus and Alienware laptops use KillerNic products and I've been actively replacing the Intel cards in several latitudes and precisions with them due to the better stability for connections.
I already said the software was garbage and that I didn't use it. So perhaps you should try unloading their software if it is giving you that much of an issue. However even with the software never had a problem , just don't like it.
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0
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