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CNET editors' rating:
4.0 stars
Excellent
Detailed editors' rating - Average user rating: 2.0 stars out of 53 reviews
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Product summary
The good: Striking new case design; clean interior; includes Intel's new Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Extreme chips; Nvidia chipset boosts performance.
The bad: A few design issues; limited graphics card selection; Dell's support continues to unimpress us for a system in this price range.
The bottom line: Dell's XPS 700 high-end desktop lives up to our expectations and delivers a polished, powerful, cutting-edge gaming PC. We still have a few issues, but nothing deal-killing and nothing that overwhelms our positive opinion. Dell can now hold its head high in the high-end gaming space, and this is a PC you should consider.
Specifications: Processor: Intel Core Duo x6800 Extreme (2.93 GHz); RAM installed: 2 GB DDR II SDRAM; Hard drive: Serial ATA; See full specs
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 07/13/2006
- Released on: 07/13/2006
Dell's product manager likened the forward-slanted case design to that of a jet engine, and we don't disagree. Both the aluminum case and the banded red plastic across the front and back panels (it's also available in black) give the XPS 700-case a fighter-jet feel. Red LEDs on the front and the back light up the various ports and drive-panel buttons in the dark--one of the few truly functional applications for lighting we've seen on a desktop. An easy-pull tab and a clever latching mechanism make the side panel easy to remove and replace.
Inside, Dell has routed the cables neatly, giving you clear air flow and leaving the spare power and the data connect cables immediately accessible to the empty hard drive and optical drive bays. We've asked for this type of build care from Dell for years, and we're glad to see it finally delivered. We're also happy to report that the XPS 700 is one of the quietest systems we've ever heard. This near silence (but for a brief, loud fan surge at start-up) is largely due to the Core 2 Extreme X6800 chip and its forgiving power specs, which require less cooling and therefore less work from the system fans. The Core 2 Duo E6700-equipped Falcon Northwest Mach V system we also reviewed today is equally quiet.
This is not to say that Dell's new flagship PC is without a few design problems. Measuring 22 inches high, 8.75 inches wide and 24 inches deep, the aluminum-clad chassis is a true beast. It's taller than the majority of desktops currently on the market, and it weighs about 57 pounds, so you'll need to be sure you have the room for it. Also, we aren't in love with the plastic hardware on the front panel. The drive bay and the expansion-slot doors feel flimsy. They're recessed slightly from the front of the case, so it's unlikely that you'd accidentally knock them off if they were open, but they don't feel very solid on their hinges. More annoying is the power button. It's a tiny little nub that's hard to push, and even somewhat painful to press long enough to power down the system. And with no reset button, nor a power-supply kill switch, the annoying power nub is your only option for a hard shutdown, short of yanking the power cable entirely.
Dell originally announced the XPS 700 with Intel's previous-generation Pentium D 900 chips. You can still order those models--at significant savings--but we highly recommend that you don't, because Intel's new Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Extreme chips are far superior. The XPS 700 Dell sent to us came with the Core 2 Extreme X6800, which is currently the fastest chip on the market. With that CPU as its foundation, this XPS 700 becomes an elite-level gaming PC, a category Dell has not had success with in some time.Along with the chip, there's a fairly typical array of high-end hardware. Dell sent us 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 SDRAM; two 320GB, 7,200rpm hard drives; and two 512MB GeForce 7900 GTX cards. Right now, that's about as good as it gets. The only better options might be a 10,000rpm hard drive for faster read/write access (which Dell offers for either $110 or $410, depending on size and number), and an Nvidia GeForce 7950 GX2 graphics card--far and away, the best current graphics card--which Dell does not currently offer but expects to add later this summer.
As it stands, the pair of GeForce 7900 GTX cards are technically faster (even faster than the Falcon Northwest Mach V's overclocked 7950 GX2), but they take up twice the internal space and with two cards, you're adding roughly $500 to the cost; Dell doesn't specify the cost of one 7900 GTX. If you've read this far, you might be wondering about Quad SLI. Nvidia is holding things up on that end; its Quad drivers are still in development and aren't expected until the end of the summer.
For the rest of our XPS 700 review unit, there were few surprises. Dell sent us a top-line Creative X-Fi Xtreme Music card for audio. You could also add Ageia's PhysX physics accelerator card for $249, but you'd be paying for a cutting edge game enhancer that doesn't have a lot to do at the moment due to a lack of games that use it. Dell also sent us the now-standard pair of DVD burners, which is the only optical drive option.
If there's a feature aside from the chip that really sticks out, it has to be the XPS 700's motherboard. Dell's long-standing (although perhaps fading) Intel loyalism meant that it nearly always paired Intel's chips with Intel's motherboard chipsets. No longer. Intel allied its Core 2 Duo chipsets exclusively with ATI and its dual 3D card CrossFire technology. In other words, if you want to build a PC with Nvidia's competing SLI technology, you need to use Nvidia's Nforce 590 SLI for Intel chipset that the Dell XPS 700 uses.
As it turns out, the chipset issue is more important that we initially thought it would be. As we said in the features section, the Dell XPS 700 uses Nvidia's new Nforce 590 SLI for Intel chipset. Every competing Intel-based system on our comparison charts used Intel's own 975 chipset. So in addition to the Dell XPS 700 using the fastest current desktop chip on the planet, it also apparently has the fastest chipset as well.(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Multitasking test |
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Adobe Photoshop CS2 image-processing test |
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Apple iTunes encoding test |
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Microsoft Office productivity test |
There's not really much left to say after looking at these charts. The Dell XPS 700 blew away the competition on CNET Labs' new application tests, including the Falcon Northwest Mach V, whose Core 2 Duo E6700 chip was overclocked to 3.13GHz. If you're looking for a consumer desktop to use as a multimedia workstation, the Dell XPS 700 is the fastest we've seen so far. Continue reading
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