Dell XPS 13 review (2018): Still looking up your nose
The Dell XPS 13's new design and barely there screen bezel are great, but the up-the-nose webcam still baffles.
The Dell XPS 13's new design and barely there screen bezel are great, but the up-the-nose webcam still baffles.
Whether you design games or just play them now and again, this 15-inch laptop has you covered.
With 10 speakers and a great 27-inch display, your home-entertainment system may get jealous of this AIO.
The XPS 27 all-in-one features 10 speakers for high-end sound.
The slick XPS look, with a barely there bezel, now comes in a 360-degree hinge version.
The no-bezel screen on the XPS 13 still wows two years later, and the updated components keep it in the hunt against newer, thinner 13-inch laptops.
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Dell CEO Michael Dell talks about how his company is delivering a more efficient enterprise with its services. He discusses Dell's plan to automate tasks and provide more visibility, allowing users to consume what they need when they need it.
ZDNet Senior Editor Sam Diaz talks about the company’s effort to sell its products to the SMB market. He says Dell executives are hoping to gain ground on the competition by retooling offerings to be more customizable.
There is much to both love and hate about Dell's M109S projector. It has a very low resolution, gets seriously hot, and is only 50 lumens in brightness. At the same time it's tiny, has the longest lamp life we have ever seen, and is mercury free.
ZDNet Senior Editor Sam Diaz says Dell's recent product announcements show the company is positioning itself for a comeback, and he believes Dell's entry into new product categories like lightweight laptops and wireless music players is a step in the right direction.