Final Words

Dell’s XPS lineup is one of the strongest in the PC industry. The InfinityEdge display was a revolution, allowing laptop sizes to shrink considerably, while providing the same display size. The new XPS 13 improves on an already excellent pedigree by moving to a 16:10 aspect ratio on the display which further reduces the bezel and keeps the new XPS 13 looking as fresh as ever.

The two color choices are both great, but the Arctic White, with its woven fiber keyboard deck, is really striking. Dell has tweaked this slightly from their original 2-in-1 design by moving back to black display borders, which can help hide the admittedly small bezels even further. The older soft-touch carbon fiber black color is still a great look as well. The refreshed XPS 13 is simply one of the nicest looking notebooks in its class.

The move to Ice Lake in the 2020 refresh is also a welcome addition, mostly thanks to the significantly improved integrated GPU performance, but also because it allows the laptop to support 32 GB of RAM. Coupled with the maximum 2 TB of SSD storage, and the XPS 13 offers plenty of performance for its size. There will be those that lament the lack of an AMD option, as AMD’s latest Renoir is a very potent platform, but the lead time on a notebook like this would preclude that option.

Dell’s decision to move to a 16:10 aspect ratio means that you get a bit more vertical space, which should be beneficial in most productivity scenarios. Of the two display options, unless the wider P3 gamut support of the 3840x2400 display is something critical for a specific workflow, the extended battery life of the 1920x1200 is likely the better option for most people. And, just so it is not forgotten, Dell’s anti-glare coatings are a shot in the arm for the PC industry, providing just 0.65% reflectivity, and when coupled with the very bright display, makes for a winner in almost any lighting condition.

Even the bottom of the XPS is well thought out. Torx screws surround the bottom which allow access inside if needed, and Dell continues to utilize rubber feet which span almost the entire width of the notebook, providing an incredibly solid footprint across a range of surfaces.

Open or closed, the XPS 13 is a fantastic looking device. It backs that up with excellent performance, and plenty of options to fit almost any budget. It is somewhat rare for a premium notebook to start at under $1000 USD, but Dell manages that, if only barely, but the base model now provides 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage, which is much better than some of the XPS 13’s of old, which started with half that RAM and storage for the same price. Dells options are also very reasonable priced, so upgrading from the base model does not instantly launch the price into the stratosphere.

It is great to see Dell update their XPS 13 clamshell notebook to the same internals and design of their previously released 2-in-1 version. It is also great that you can opt for either the clamshell XPS 13, or the convertible 2-in-1, depending on your needs. The convertible offers some increased functionality that you cannot get in a traditional notebook, but there is also a large market that prefers the simplicity of the traditional design. With the XPS lineup, it is your choice.

Finally, in a very rare move, Dell offers not only Windows, but also Linux, giving buyers their choice on what operating system they get. It goes without saying that this is an incredibly uncommon thing on a premium notebook, and very welcome to see. In the case a buyer does opt for Linux, then the the XPS 13 Developer Edition, as it's called, comes from the factory with Ubuntu 18.04LTS.

Overall there is a lot to like about the new XPS 13, and very little to detract from. Dell has yet another winner. With an updated 16:10 display, class-leading battery life, and a fantastic design, the XPS 13 is easily one of the best notebooks around.

 
Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • GreenReaper - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    So frustrating that Dell made yet another XPS hamstring by its thermal dissipation ability. The see-sawing ruins these systems for my brother, who happens to like to play a few games after work. It used to be possible to undervolt to fix this, but now I Tel has sent out firmware updates to disable that because it's protecting SGX enclaves from the Plundervolt vulnerability. I certainly won't be recommending this new version to him.
  • flowingbass - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    I see dell is still under intel's payroll
  • haukionkannel - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    Ofcourse! It is the best way of making money. People buy Intel laptops. It does not matter if Intel cpus Are bad, people still buy them. Amd can make better cpus and people still don`t buy AMD laptops... so They Are making the only sensible thing... by usining intel cpus. They want to make money and sell laptops...
  • sonny73n - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    I’m buying an AMD laptop. Bite me.
  • Spunjji - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    I love it when people use the results of a tilted system to justify the continued existence of a tilted system. Circular arguments are so *neat*! 😐
  • trivik12 - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    I hope we see a tigerlake version this year and an AMD version soon as well. Quality of display and build quality is great.
  • Deicidium369 - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    Tiger Lake will be in the premium Dells - AMD won't

    Lenovo's new systems are Tiger Lake and there is an almost identical system with the top end Renoir - the Tiger Lake system wrecks the Renoir iGPU and with 4C vs 8C only 17% slower - those are benchmarks on Jul 3 2020.
  • Korguz - Friday, July 17, 2020 - link

    still touting that cherry picked BS, huh ?
  • mrvco - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    Other than gaming I'm primarily a Mac user, but the XPS 13 DE has been on my radar as a Linux machine. I'm still surprised that Apple hasn't been more aggressive with their updates to the 13" MacBook Pro to better compete with the XPS 13.
  • Deicidium369 - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - link

    XPS13 is the benchmark in that segment

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