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Reviews of Dell XPS 13 9350 2015

Testseek.com have collected 188 expert reviews of the Dell XPS 13 9350 2015 and the average rating is 86%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Dell XPS 13 9350 2015.
Award: Editor’s Choice January 2016
January 2016
 
(86%)
188 Reviews
Users
(74%)
1985 Reviews
86 0 100 188

The editors liked

  • Exceptional design and build quality
  • Good keyboard and touchpad
  • Rigid construction
  • Cool and quiet
  • Unique design keeping dimensions small (9-15 mm) and weight low (1.29 kg)
  • The screen has 94% sRGB color gamut coverage and extremely high contrast ratio
  • Still a great size
  • Still a great weight
  • Still a great screen
  • Still a great design
  • Still a great starting price
  • Alpine Ridge
  • Gorgeous high resolution (3200x1800) IGZO display
  • Ultrafast NVMe storage
  • Thunderbolt 3/USB 3.1 TypeC
  • Fullsize SD Card reader
  • Incredibly thin
  • Light but rock solid
  • Premium build quality
  • Carbon fiber
  • Great (tiny) size
  • Light weight
  • Amazing screen
  • Excellent hardware support for Linux
  • The
  • Beautiful display
  • Thinner and lighter than most Ultrabooks
  • Good battery life
  • Attractive
  • Compact design
  • Now offered in gold
  • Intel "Iris" graphics outpace most competing machines' IGPs
  • Good battery life for a laptop with a pixel-dense display
  • Future-looking USB Type-C/Thunderbolt 3 port
  • Most compact design for a 13.3-inch laptop
  • Fastest integrated graphics performance
  • Very compact frame
  • Carbon fiber and aluminum construction
  • QHD+ (3
  • 200-by-1
  • 800) display is breathtaking
  • USB-C port with Thunderbolt 3 interface
  • Tiny footprint
  • Supports USB-C charging
  • Solidly built
  • Oddly placed webcam
  • Fantastic performance. Best of breed touchscreen
  • With nexttono bezel. Great touchpad. Ready to take us into our USBC future
  • The Dell XPS 13 keeps everything that was great about the previous model -- including its near edge-to-edge-display and fantastic keyboard -- and adds the latest Intel Kaby Lake processors and Thunderbolt 3
  • Great display with no bezels
  • Sleek and compact design
  • Speedy performance
  • Smaller than most 13inch laptops
  • Weighs just 1.3kg
  • Sixthgen Core i5 CPU delivers good performance
  • Allday battery life
  • 13.3 inch QHD+ (3200 x 1800p) touch screen
  • 256GB SSD (NVME) built-in
  • Excellent carbon fiber finish on the hand rest area
  • Well-built
  • Thin and light
  • Comfortable keyboard
  • Powerful performance options
  • Beautiful 4K
  • Color-accurate screen option
  • Metal casing's impeccable build
  • Slim profile
  • Ultra mobile
  • Bright QHD panel
  • Extremely thin display bezel
  • Very good system performance
  • Perceptibly faster graphics card
  • Quiet even under load
  • Decent connectivity for the size
  • Superb input devices
  • Ti
  • Very portable
  • Small footprint
  • High quality panel
  • Bright backlight
  • High sRGB coverage (>90 percent)
  • No PWM
  • Respectale response times
  • Low fan noise
  • 512 GB NVMe SSD
  • Sturdy chassis
  • Good build quality
  • Thunderbolt 3 support
  • Fast SD card reader
  • Good WiFi performance
  • Good input devices
  • Good performance
  • Even on battery
  • Impeccable metal casing and build quality
  • Great portability
  • Bright
  • Anti-glare 1080p display
  • Extremely thin bezel
  • Very fast system performance
  • Heavily improved GPU performance
  • No throttling under heavy stress
  • Relatively quiet with re
  • The same awesome design and display as last year's XPS 13. Skylake provides better performance and efficiency. Thunderbolt 3 is a handy inclusion. Decent battery life.

The editors didn't like

  • The interior is prone to smudges and fingerprints
  • Too low maximum brightness
  • PWM across all brightness levels (0-100%)
  • Too pricey
  • Battery life feels like it should be better
  • No Windows Hello support
  • The systems at the extreme ends of the price scale
  • Low and high
  • Feel underpowered or cripplingly expensive
  • Webcam in a very awkward position
  • Battery life could be better
  • Max 16GB of RAM feels limited for a "Developer" machine
  • Overall performance is good but not great
  • Unusual webcam placement
  • Premium configurations offer questionable value per dollar
  • Gold chassis only offered in high-end configuration
  • Ethernet and video connectivity require dongles or new cables
  • Oddly placed Webcam
  • Mediocre battery life
  • Expensive
  • Core i7 processor increases cost without a significant jump in performance over i5
  • Middling battery life
  • Requires adapters for external displays
  • Keyboard is a tad small
  • Prone to crashes
  • At press time
  • The unit is frozen in the middle of restoring to factory settings and is unable to complete the operation. Fairly awful keyboard. Expensive
  • The design means the webcam is awkwardly placed at the bottom of the display. Though the QHD-resolution touchscreen is beautiful
  • It adds a lot to the price and hurts battery life. Gold version will cost you $50 more
  • Awkward webcam
  • No DisplayPort
  • Battery life falls short of Dell's 18hour claim
  • Moderate 1
  • 920x1
  • 080 resolution on entrylevel model
  • Thunderbolt 3 port requires adapters for HDMI/Ethernet
  • Slightly lower battery life than expected
  • Short battery life with the 4K display
  • Touchpad can be flaky
  • Webcam's poor quality
  • Color space coverage could be better
  • Color accuracy is decent
  • Restricted maintenance/upgrade options
  • Lack of control over ambient light sensor
  • High core temperatures
  • Warm surface temperatures
  • Potential for CPU throttling
  • Poor bass reproduction
  • Unimpressive battery life
  • Keys with short travel and very light feedback
  • Touchpad very prone to fingerprints
  • CABC can not be controlled by users
  • Device gets very hot under load
  • Color gamut is still somewhat lacking
  • Though accuracy is decent
  • Limited maintenance/upgrade options
  • Standard warranty is mail-in only
  • Disabling automatic brightness requires tool from Dell and is only possible on QHD+ model
  • Samsung PM951 write speed
  • Highend models are expensive
  • Entrylevel model only comes with 4GB RAM.

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Reviews

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Score
 
  Published: 2016-06-01, review by: thunderbaylive.com

  • Abstract:  Lisa Gade compares the HP Spectre and the Dell XPS 13 Ultrabooks. Check out our video review of the HP Spectre...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2016-04-06, review by: thunderbaylive.com

  • Abstract:  Lisa Gade compares the Samsung Notebook 9 and Dell XPS 13 Ultrabook laptops. Check out our video review of the Samsung Notebook 9...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2016-02-17, review by: thunderbaylive.com

  • Abstract:  Lisa Gade compares the Microsoft Surface Pro 4 and the Dell XPS 13. Check out our video review of the Microsoft Surface Pro 4...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2016-02-12, review by: thunderbaylive.com

  • Abstract:  Lisa Gade compares the Asus Zenbook UX303UB and the Dell XPS 13 Ultrabooks. Check out our video review of the Asus Zenbook UX303UB...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2017-01-02, Author: Rob , review by: gizmodo.com.au

  • Abstract:  For years, the MacBook Pro was the weapon of choice for people willing to plunk down good money for a powerful laptop with slick design. That it's a staple of both hip coffee shops and design studios reflects just how elegantly it balances the needs of th...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2016-09-19, Author: Nick , review by: techradar.com/au/

  • New Intel Kaby Lake processors, Svelte, sexy 11inch form factor, Ultrasharp QuadHDscreen
  • Rose gold price hike, nonupgradable GPU
  • Dell's refreshed XPS 13 is immaculately crafted, sports a sharp QHD+ touchscreen, Intel 7th Generation processors and a rose gold color...but opting for the premium color scheme is going to cost you...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2016-03-29, review by: pcauthority.com.au

  • There's only one thing that really bugs me about the XPS 13, and that's Dell's stubborn insistence on enabling dynamic contrast at all times. That aside, I absolutely love this thing. I could wish for a better GPU – yes, I really do want a slim, go...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(100%)
 
  Published: 2016-03-12, review by: cnet.com.au

  • This updated XPS 13 has a stunning nearly edge-to-edge high-res display, and an upgraded processor and graphics
  • This gold edition is very expensive, and battery life isn't as good as some other 13-inch laptops. The touchpad is tricky to use for some multitouch gestures
  • The excellent Dell XPS 13 series gets a high-end upgrade in this gold edition with improved performance, but also a high-end price to match...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
(80%)
 
  Published: 2016-02-28, Author: Various , review by: apcmag.com

  • Abstract:  Despite how far smartphones have come in the last eight-odd years, as productivity devices, they're still a little too restricted to get serious work done. They're undoubtedly fine for quick tasks like replying to emails and scheduling appointments, but...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
(90%)
 
  Published: 2016-02-05, Author: Dan , review by: apcmag.com

  • Abstract:  It's a handsome design, with metal top lid and base and carbon-fibre everywhere else, and we saw the appeal, giving it a Hot Product award back when we reviewed it in June. The XPS 13 often gleans comparisons to the MacBook Air, but it's actually even mo...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
(90%)
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