• @MeekerThanBeaker
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    402 days ago

    As an IT guy, recent (past five years) XPS laptops we gave to execs were pretty bad. Smaller, yes, but I found the Latitudes were better in terms of build quality. It is a small sample size though as most execs preferred MacBooks.

    • @AtariDump
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      252 days ago

      Latitude is superior to the XPS line for business.

      And man did they have a bad run of XPS’s there for a while with their batteries swelling up.

      • @[email protected]
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        162 days ago

        I worked in IT and those latitudes were no exception in my experience. Earlier models were good but we had to replace so many e7000 series batteries bulging out the bottom.

      • @tibi
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        1 day ago

        They should replace the XPS name with the Longitude. And then the Altitude.

      • @Jtee
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        42 days ago

        Latitude 7490 had a string of bad batteries too. Our XPS units kept having things disconnect internally (even after a motherboard swap with warranty). The latitude 7420 onwards have been super solid!

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      Imo this kind of shows the basic problem with the xps line. As I understand it it was basically the premium consumer line, not something meant for business use. Meaning it had the nice specs on paper, but not the durability you’d need in a setting with extensive use and where downtime means serious money. But as you demonstrate this distinction was too blurry.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 days ago

      Used to be a field repair tech for several oems. The XPS usually suffered hinge issues. They decided it was a good idea to use press fitted standoffs in plastic to anchor the screen hinges…and the plastic is not very thick.