The Alienware M17x R4 ($2,599 direct) gaming laptop exudes performance. Its design epitomizes what a gaming laptop should look like, and thanks to a new Ivy Bridge processor and Nvidia Kepler graphics, it topped our leaderboard on multimedia benchmark tests, and returned playable frame rates at its 1,920 by 1,080 native resolution. It's ostentatious, audacious, over the top, and strangely enough, more affordable than rivals. For this and more, it earns our nod as the latest Editors' Choice winner for midrange gaming laptops.
Design and Features
The M17x R4 carries on in a chassis that resembles the one used in the Alienware M17X ($2,254 direct, 4.5 stars) and the larger Alienware M18x ($4,529 direct, 4 stars). Like the previous models, the M17x R4 has modern retro styling that grabs your attention. The system's grilles and lighting evoke a modern reinterpretation of a 1950's hot rod. There are multiple lighting zones, which can be controlled with Alienware's Command Center software. Alienware calls it AlienFX, and you can use it to change the colors on the backlit keyboard, touchpad, Alienware logo below the screen, Alien head/power button, and the grilles on the front of the system. Advanced themes will cycle the colors, so you're assured that you'll know which system is yours in a darkened room. It's not subtle, but do you really want subtle when you're planning to crush your enemies on the game grid?
Since the M17x R4's chassis is so big, it's reassuring that the system feels as solid as a chunk of granite. There's no flexing of the screen or chassis when you pick it up with one hand, though that hand will have to have some strength to carry the 9.6-pound laptop. Add the two-pound AC adapter, and you'll need strong shoulders to carry the 11.7-pound combination in a backpack or large messenger bag. The system is solidly built, but heavy.
The backlit keyboard is full size, with concave standard keys and a full numeric keypad to the right. Keyboard feel was excellent, with full travel on the keys: not too springy, not too clicky. The trackpad has physical mouse buttons, though tap-to-click is enabled by default. You can turn on vertical and horizontal scrolling in the Alienware Command Center, and the trackpad also supports multi-touch gestures.
The system comes with 8GB of memory, a 3rd-generation Intel Core i7-3720QM quad-core processor, 32GB mSATA cache drive, and a 500GB 7,200rpm primary drive. Also built in is a Blu-ray player/DVD burner combo drive for playing DVDs and Blu-ray movies. The system has both wired gigabit Ethernet and dual-band (2.4GHz and 5GHz) 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi. Adding to the connectivity are four USB 3.0 ports, an eSATA/USB 2.0 combo port (aka, powered eSATA) with USB PowerShare charging (you can use the port to charge a smartphone or table with the system off), audio ports (including a SPDIF minijack), and a 9-in-1 media card reader. The system is particularly well suited for connecting to video sources and external displays. There's an HDMI-out port for monitors and HDTVs, a mini-DisplayPort for monitors, a VGA port, plus an HDMI-in port so you can use the system's built-in display with external sources like settop cable boxes or media players. About the only thing missing is a Thunderbolt port, though that may be built into a future version of the M17x.
As befits a gaming system, the M17x R4 is unencumbered by bloatware. The only icon you see on the desktop when you boot the system for the first time is the Alienware Command Center. No eBay, no Microsoft Office, no bloatware period. The system even comes without a bundled antivirus or Internet security suite, which is one of the first things that hardcore gamers uninstall on new systems. Gamers generally abhor any run and stay resident programs or bloatware, because they think that they steal resources like processor cycles from their gaming experience.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.