December 3,2006

Dell Inspiron 1501 Reviewed by Laptop Magazine

1501.jpgDell Inspiron 1501 is the first Dell machine to house an AMD processor. Laptop Magazine reviewing Dell Inspiron 1501, gives it 3-out-of-5 stars rating and writes:” When we last reviewed the Dell Inspiron E1505, the notebook’s rich multimedia features, wireless performance, and strong battery life garnered it an Editors’ Choice award. Now, Dell follows up the E1505 with the 1501, a low-priced alternative and the first Dell machine to house an AMD processor. It’s also Vista capable and Premium ready-something you’re not going to find with run-of-the-mill value notebooks. The 1501 gives you solid performance at a decent price, but what you gain in savings you lose in functionality.

In terms of design, the Dell Inspiron 1501 is identical to the Dell Inspiron E1505. Both measure 14 x 10.4 x 1.4 inches and have speakers integrated into the front bezel, air vents flanking the left and right sides of the chassis, large touchpads with built-in scroll areas (that make for easy Web page navigation), 80GB hard drives, and non-offensive, silver-and-white color schemes. Although the Dell Inspiron 1501 weighs less (6.4 pounds vs. 6.2 pounds), the lack of dedicated CD/DVD controls is a glaring omission in a multimedia machine. When we wanted to raise or lower the volume of a DVD or skip chapters, we had to use the software’s far less intuitive controls.

The 15.4-inch widescreen produced strong colors when playing a DVD, but the viewing angles were tight on our TrueLife anti-glare display. Staying centered in front of the screen is the only way to truly enjoy the visuals, so watching a movie with a friend may be out of the question.

With the 1.79-GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 Dual-Core TL-56 processor powering the machine, the 1501 churned out a MobileMark 2005 score of 196-only four points lower than the E1505’s ho-hum results. We tested the machine’s multitasking mettle by simultaneously running a virus scan and playing a DVD, and the E501 experienced occasional stuttering, which we attribute to the low-end AMD processor. The ATI Radeon Xpress 1150 chipset with 256MB of shared memory produced a meager 3DMark03 score of 1465, which makes the Dell Inspiron 1501 less than ideal if you wish to engage in graphics-intensive activities.

The Dell Inspiron 1501 came configured with a six-cell battery, which enabled us to go unplugged for a solid 3 hours and 16 minutes of life with Wi-Fi on, and an additional two minutes with the wireless connection off. Wireless throughput measured a robust 12.6 Mbps at 15 feet from our access point, and 13.2 Mbps from 50. This is a slight improvement over the E1505’s measurements of 12 Mbps and 9.9 Mbps from the same distances.

Despite the missing multimedia controls, the Dell Inspiron 1501 offers plenty of other ports and jacks: four USB, VGA, headphone and microphone jacks, and a 3-in-1 memory card reader. This is a step down from the E1505, which featured all of those connections plus S-Video, FireWire, a 5-in-1 card reader, and optional Bluetooth. You’ll also find an ExpressCard slot, but nothing for a PC Card.

Although the Dell Inspiron 1501 demonstrated stronger wireless performance than the Dell Inspiron E1505 and has a lower price point, we can’t recommend the notebook over its far more functional predecessor. If you’re looking for a decent machine that won’t break the bank, it’s worth a look. Just remember, you get exactly what you pay for.” - LaptopMag

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