Dell Adamo
Manufacturer: Dell, Inc. Part number: DACWAQ1
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- Dell's upscale Adamo is a 13-inch laptop for those who value design and finish as much as performance, but its luxury price will limit the potential audience.
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Where to buy
| store | customer rating | inventory | tax & shipping | price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ![]() | In stock | Enter zip code to get total price: Price +Tax +Shipping =Total price | as of 12/08/2009 |
CNET editors' review
Dell Adamo price range: $1,499.00
- Reviewed by: Dan Ackerman
- Reviewed on: 04/10/2009
- Released on: 04/09/2009
The good: Sleek, thin design breaks new ground for Dell; good performance for a low-power laptop.
The bad: Very expensive; lacks an SD card slot; feels a bit heavier than it looks.
The bottom line: Dell's upscale Adamo is a 13-inch laptop for those who value design and finish as much as performance, but its luxury price will limit the potential audience.
Dell initially teased the existence of its upscale 13-inch Adamo laptop at CES 2009, and formally announced details and ordering availability two months later. We previously had a chance to get our hands on a preproduction version of the system, and have now been able to test the finished product.
Adamo is a departure for Dell, a company built on selling mass quantities of mainstream laptops (Dell's Inspiron 15-inch is still one of the most affordable and configurable systems available, and an initial stop for many first-time computer buyers). Instead, it's a high-end, ultrathin 13-inch model that starts at $1,999 (there's also a $2,699 version) and partly shares a general design sensibility with the MacBook Air and the HP Voodoo Envy 133.
Dell is pitching the Adamo as a "luxury brand notebook design for the luxury conscious consumer," which may not seem like the most timely of ideas, considering the current economic climate and the resultant growth in low-cost Netbooks. But it's important to note that the ultralow voltage Intel Core 2 Duo processor used in the Adamo runs rings around other recent slim laptops, such as the HP Pavilion dv2 (with AMD's new Athlon Neo CPU).
And while you may be able to get faster components for less, the Adamo's real selling point is its design. There are no visible stickers or screws (even the usual Microsoft and Intel badges have been replaced--the logos are etched into a panel on the underside of the system), and it includes high-end features such as a solid-state hard drive, an etched anodized aluminum chassis, and a backlit keyboard.
The end result is an enviable package that will definitely attract plenty of stares at the coffee shop or airport lounge, not just because of its sharp looks but also because, with a $2,000 starting price, you're unlikely to see many of them in the wild.
| Price as reviewed | $1,999 |
| Processor | 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U9300 |
| Memory | 2GB, 533MHz DDR2 |
| Hard drive | 64GB SSD |
| Chipset | Mobile Intel GM45 Express Chipset |
| Graphics | Intel GMA 4500MHD (integrated) |
| Operating system | Windows Vista Premium (64-bit) |
| Dimensions (WD) | 13.0 x 9.5 inches |
| Height | 0.65 inches |
| Screen size (diagonal) | 13.4 inches |
| System weight / Weight with AC adapter | 4.0/3.4 pounds |
| Category | Thin-and-light |
Built into an aluminum case with unibody construction, similar to the current MacBooks, the 0.65-inch-thick Adamo is, according to Dell, the thinnest laptop in the world. It certainly is thin, but going toe-to-toe with the MacBook Air, the true "thinnest" title is open to interpretation. The tapered Air is thinner at its narrowest point, but slightly thicker at its widest point. In either case these are both very slim systems (see a direct comparison here). Picking up the Adamo, it feels a little heavier than the system looks like it should. At a hair less than 4 pounds, it's certainly lightweight, but based on the size and thinness, we were expecting something closer to the 3-pound MacBook Air.
The Adamo is available in both white (Dell calls it "pearl") and black "onyx" versions. The back of the lid is split between etched metal and a glossy finish--actually a 0.5mm glass inlay--which is better for wireless reception than other materials. The pearl finish has a wavy pattern etched into it, while the black model has a more traditional brushed-metal look.
Opting for a subtle look on and around the keyboard tray, the Adamo has only a handful of small LED lights, for the power button, the touch-sensitive media controls, and the Caps Lock button. The backlit keyboard itself is a big change from the typical Dell laptop keyboard, which has always had tall, tapered keys. This borrows more from the Dell Mini 9, with flat, closely spaced keys, similar in style to what you might find on a MacBook or Sony Vaio, but slightly scalloped instead of flat.
Typing felt very comfortable, but the individual keys were a bit clacky and the space bar required a solid hit to register, which didn't fit our light typing style. The metal touch pad worked well; sometimes using nontraditional surfaces on a touch pad can add uncomfortable friction and finger drag, but that was not the case here.
The 13.4-inch 16:9 LED display offers a 1,366x768 native resolution and is behind a sheet of edge-to-edge glass. It's a sleek look, but very susceptible to glare and reflections. The screen hinge is set back about an inch from the rear of the system, leaving what looks a little like a small handle when the display is open.
| Dell Adamo | Average for category [thin-and-light] | |
| Video | DisplayPort | VGA, mini-HDMI or Mini-DVI |
| Audio | Stereo speakers, headphone jack | Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks |
| Data | 3 USB 2.0 (1 USB/eSATA), SD card reader | 3 USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, SD card reader |
| Expansion | SIM card slot | ExpressCard/54 |
| Networking | Ethernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth | Ethernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, optional WWAN |
| Optical drive | None | DVD burner |
The slim selection of ports and connections is one area where the Adamo falls short. Other than a headphone jack and a user-accessible SIM card slot on the right side, all the other ports and connections are on the rear edge. There are two USB ports, a USB/eSATA port, and an Ethernet jack, plus a DisplayPort video output (a DisplayPort-to-DVI dongle is included in the box).
The lack of an SD card slot is particularly annoying (it's one of the things we regularly knock MacBooks for not having), and there's no internal optical drive. Dell offers specially matched external models: a DVD burner is $120, and a Blu-ray read-only drive is $350.
While our review unit included a 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U9300, 2GB of RAM, and a 128GB SSD hard drive, a more expensive configuration with a 1.4GHz SU9400 and 4GB of RAM is also available (and we generally suggest 4GB of RAM for use with Windows Vista).
The dual-core Intel ultralow voltage processor makes a huge difference compared with the Atom/Neo/Nano CPUs we've spend most of our time with lately, and the Adamo handles multitasking chores much more like a mainstream system. The tiny, low-power ULV chips that allow the Adamo to hit that 0.65-inch thickness are expensive, however, which is why you don't find them in Netbooks, and why a basic sub-$1,000 Core 2 Duo 13-inch laptop such as the HP Pavilion dv3510nr, can outperform the Adamo.
While it's not intended to be a speed demon, in anecdotal usage the Adamo worked well, with no slowdown or stuttering during regular usage: Web surfing, working on office documents, and media playback.
One area we'd expect a high-end system like the Adamo to excel at is battery life. It ran for 2 hours and 36 minutes on our video playback battery drain test, using the included battery. Our battery drain test is especially grueling, so you can expect longer life from casual Web surfing and office use, but we had hoped for a more robust battery, especially with the efficient CPU, LED display and SSD hard drive.
Dell wisely includes an enhanced one-year warranty with the system. Called Adamo Premium Service, it includes a special 800 number to call, an average wait time of about 2 minutes, and you can request the same technician every time you call. Upgrading to a three-year plan will cost an extra $349. Dell also has a robust set of online support features, including an online knowledge base and driver downloads.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
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System configurations:
Dell Adamo
Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (64-bit); 1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U9300; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 800MHz; 779MB (Shared) Mobile Intel GMA 4500MHD; 128GB Samsung SSD
HP Pavilion dv2
Windows Vista Home Edition SP1 (64-bit); 1.6GHz AMD Athlon Neo Processor MV-40; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 800MHz; 512MB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3140; 320GB Western Digital 5400rpm
Dell Studio XPS 13-163B
Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (64-bit); 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P8600; 4,096MB DDR2 SDRAM 800MHz; 256MB Nvidia GeForce 9400M G; 320GB Seagate 7,200rpm
HP Pavilion dv3510nr
Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (64-bit); 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P7350; 4,096MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 512MB Nvidia GeForce 9600M GS; 320GB Toshiba 5,400rpm
Apple MacBook (Core 2 Duo 2.4GHz, Nvidia GeForce 9400M)
OS X 10.5.5 Leopard; Intel Core 2 Duo 2.2GHz; 2048MB DDR3 SDRAM 1066MHz; 256MB Nvidia GeForce 9400M; 250GB Toshiba 5,400rpm
User reviews
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Very stylish tool from Dell. My wife loves it.
by PizzleDizzle on July 29, 2009
Pros: E-SATA ports! Super light. Great battery performance. Coolest looking laptop, and they keyboard is fantastic. The touch pad is the best in its class.
Cons: CPU/GPU a bit lacking for graphics intensive processing.
Summary: I've seen these now for less than 1500. Very competitive price for a such a sexy tool.
Summary: I've seen these now for less than 1500. Very competitive price for a such a sexy tool.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Save yourself and buy something else
by barflairer on November 30, 2009
Pros: None. You're initially impressed by the thickness and sleek design but you soon realise that frankly it's a piece of crap.
Cons: Fragile, ridiculously overpriced, poor specifications, bad system that crashes often and the absolutely worse service and support for this laptop
Summary: Dell, an IT company famous for the ease of purchasing computers has completely dropped the ball with this laptop from the design to the service. It is truly unbelievable.
1. ...Summary: Dell, an IT company famous for the ease of purchasing computers has completely dropped the ball with this laptop from the design to the service. It is truly unbelievable.
1. While the laptop might look good, the slightest touch will get smudge and fingerprint marks all over the shell of the laptop
2. It?s fragile. The slightest mistake even if you put the Adamo down too hard will pop the bottom cover off
3. The specifications is poor so the performance matches.
4. It is ridiculously expensive especially for the specs that come with the Adamo. The most annoying thing is that it doesn?t come with anything else but the laptop. You don?t the external optical drive or the protection case. You don?t even get support CDs with it to recover the laptop when it crashes. (and boy does it crash!)
5. It crashes constantly! After 2 weeks, the wireless card, mouse pad and display drivers died. Dell tried to tell me if was a software problem and I had to reinstall windows vista. One slight problem, the laptop didn?t come with an software or support CDs so how was I going to do this. Eventually they sent a technician out to take a look but he had absolutely no idea what to do and it was actually his first time he had ever seen an Adamo. Needless to say after 6 weeks and 4 visits, it turned out the wireless card, mouse pad and display drivers were faulty and needed replacing.
6. Ridiculously bad support. No one knows about the Dell Adamo. People at the Dell stores don?t know anything about the Adamo besides the specifications and refer you to the website or support phone line. Support staff at the call centre don?t know anything about the laptop. When I tried to order the optical drive, protection case and an extra power adapter, they didn?t have a clue what I was talking about or the part number. They said they would call me back but needless to say I?ve called them on 8 separate occasions over several weeks and 8 people have said the system is down and they will call me back and not a single one has. I?ve now given up.
The fact is this Adamo laptop by Dell is a piece of crap. It?s so bad that I actually bothered to get online and write a review about it. I feel so strongly about this that I wanted the world to know about it so they don?t have to endure as much frustration as I have had. So do yourself a favour and get a Macbook Pro. I guarantee you it will be less frustrating learning to use Mac OS than dealing with Dell. -
It could have been soo much better.
by edgecrush3r1977 on October 17, 2009
Pros: Sleek design
Cons: Highly priced
Low GPU
Low MemorySummary: When Dell announced the Adamo, i was realy looking forward to seeing something special. But like most people i got very disappointed when it finally hit the shelves.
If they ...Summary: When Dell announced the Adamo, i was realy looking forward to seeing something special. But like most people i got very disappointed when it finally hit the shelves.
If they would have just fitted a NVidia 9400 M this laptop would have lived up for its hefty price tag. Even with the Air, you would get so much more value for money. -
sleek, powerful, portable, beautiful
by adg1017 on August 29, 2009
Pros: powerful design statement - powerful computing
Cons: None I've found thus far. well... maybe the glare issue, but I am used to that from the I-phone and my previous laptop. A net plus or me as I enjoy the richness of color the gloss finish brings.
Summary: As opposed to the Air, which I've used also, the Adamo feels more dependable and less likely to be damaged [this is a personal evaluation - only opinion]. I ...
Summary: As opposed to the Air, which I've used also, the Adamo feels more dependable and less likely to be damaged [this is a personal evaluation - only opinion]. I run multiple programs for high-end graphic design and it performs flawlessly. Battery life is wonderful, portability as well. All in all, a 5 star effort from Dell REGARDLESS of price. If you actually used both, you would see that this in now way competes with the Macbook Air, and is indeed a step above.
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All the cost and half the performance
by mweingar on July 6, 2009
Pros: Rugged aluminum case
Cons: Price, GPU performance
Summary: I suggest we aspire to form and substance. A good looking, overpriced, poor performance is a poor entry.
Summary: I suggest we aspire to form and substance. A good looking, overpriced, poor performance is a poor entry.
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Nice Job Dell
by Rbreines on June 29, 2009
Pros: Good latop nice speed
Cons: too heavy which it could be smaller also
Summary: good value I would recomend
Summary: good value I would recomend
0 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Dell, Inc.
- Part number: DACWAQ1
- Bottom Line: Dell's upscale Adamo is a 13-inch laptop for those who value design and finish as much as performance, but its luxury price will limit the potential audience.
General
- Weight 4 lbs
- Notebook type Ultraportable (Under 4 lbs.)
Processor
- Processor Intel Core 2 Duo SU9400 / 1.4 GHz
RAM
- Installed Size 2 GB
- Technology DDR3 SDRAM
Storage
- Hard Drive 128 GB
- Hard drive type Solid state
Video
- Graphics Processor / Vendor Intel GS45 Integrated Graphics with 256MB Memory
- Video Memory 256 MB
Audio
- Audio Output Features High Definition Audio 2.0
Networking
- Networking Network adapter
- Wireless NIC Intel WiFi Link 5300
- Data link protocol Gigabit Ethernet
Battery
- Technology Lithium Polymer
- Battery capacity 40 Wh
Operating System / Software
- OS Provided Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium, 64bit, English
Sustainability
- Greenpeace policy rating (Sept 2009) 4.7
Product series
Manufacturer info
- Dell, Inc.
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Dell, Inc. products on Shopper.com
-
- Website: http://www.dell.com/
- Address:
One Dell Way, Round Rock, TX 78682 - Phone: (800) 274-3355
- Email: LB_Order_Questions@dell.com









