By Kane Fulton
Introduction and design
Is the XPS 13 still king of the ultraportables? I would say so, as few machines have given Dell’s compact laptop much to think about since it set the standard for design last year.
Featuring a near-bezel-less 13.3-inch InfinityEdge display, the XPS 13 has the dimensions of an 11-inch laptop. A win for both productivity and portability, the innovative display tech has since been ported over to Dell’s revamped XPS 12 and XPS 15 devices. Even the company’s OLED monitors are getting in on the game.
As its competitors play catch-up (see HP’s Spectre 13 and the equally alluring MacBook), Dell is now looking to replicate the XPS 13’s success in the business space with the Latitude 13 7370.
The first enterprise-focused laptop to sport an InfinityEdge display, it arrives with a number of work-friendly features in tow. It’s tempting to think of the Latitude as a productivity-focused XPS 13, but such a comparison is a little too simplistic.
The Latitude’s keyboard is superior, but it features a weaker Core M processor on the inside. It’s also around £410 ($580/AUS$756) more expensive. While you could pick one up and use it for non-business …read more
Source:: techradar.com – PC and Mac