Xps Fly
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Posted by admin | Posted in fly fishing | Posted on 07-06-2010
Tags: documents, file, reference, shakespeare xps fly rod, word, xml, xps fly line, xps fly line sale
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Xps Fly

Dell XPS 1530
We've fallen in love with the little Dell review notebook from this roundup. It arrived stock with Vista Business installed but even that did little to dampen our enthusiasm about the little red wonder.
Part of Dell's XPS range and more of a mid-range notebook than anything else, the test scores were sufficiently impressive to be almost shocking. Sweeping the board with SuperPi, the first place seems fitting for the Ferrari-red unit.
While it only placed second in the 3Dmark run, it still posted a decent score for a laptop that is apparently designed more for business than gaming. What was of note was a random test of the 1530's on-the-fly network device switching which was unplanned and would have slipped by if not for a power failure. The Dell picked up a stray signal from a nearby Wi-Fi hotspot and started installing updates while everyone else was cursing the delay to this month's articles.
From the blinding boot speed through to the durable, if plain, laptop bag, there is very little that this XPS has left out. There are three integrated USB's, HDMI inputs, Firewire and a memory card reader arrayed around the chassis. The 2.0 megapixel webcam and mics are perfect for those on-the-go meetings and for a little added security; a biometric scanner has been thrown in to keep those logins a bit tighter. The fact that there is less lag booting into Vista Business on this machine than on our desktop PCs with XP is also a huge selling point.
Bluetooth has not been left out in the cold and there are a couple of optional extras if you're willing to spend the money on them. A TV tuner card, Blu Ray drive or solid state drives are just a few such titbits. Shelling out for some of these can push your notebook in one direction or the other, from business extension to multimedia powerhouse to gaming rig. The choices are there.
The only gripe we've got with the 1530 is the battery life and the DVD drive. The battery life is always a problem on a notebook and turning down the resource usage does extend uptime considerably but it won't function as well. Looking at the slot-loading drive; it fits the aesthetic for the XPS extremely well but somehow we just prefer the stability of a tray-loading drive when using a portable machine.
Make no mistake; the Dell XPS 1530 is seemingly all about business. But it functions equally well as a multimedia or portable gaming rig. It may not run Crysis but you've got no business running that on a notebook at work anyway.
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Stick with my Duo or Upgrade to Quad?
I've had my Dell XPS 630i for a while and I am thinking of Upgrading my Computer's CPU from Duo to Quad core.
Only Problem is I looked up a bit of information and I don't know if its good or not.
Oh and I do not like to overclock as I know its bad for my computer's life span.
(My Current CPU)
Intel Core 2 Duo CPU E8500 3.16GHz 6mb Cache
(The CPU I Want to upgrade to)
Intel Core 2 Quad CPU Q9400 2.66GHz 6mb Cache
As you See, The one I want to upgrade to Has a slower speed, but more Cores.
I want to upgrade for smoother game play but I am not sure as to how much better it would actually be.
Currently Battlefield Bad Company 2 Runs at around 30 frames or less in an intense battle and around 15 Frames or less when Particles start flying around on my Current CPU.
So the Question is,
Should I Upgrade to the Quad? Or Stick with my Duo?
Will It Perform any better? I would like to know Why or why not upgrade to Quad.
I have a gefore 8800gt
I have a Geforce 8800GT*
Before you upgrade you CPU, what is your graphics card? An E8500 is a good Dual core CPU, a little long in the tooth, but still a good one. Post your graphics card and I will check back and tell you what will really benefit you.
Yes a quad core would benifit you in BFBC2, as that game takes advantage of four cores, but info on your GPU would help.
* * * * Addiditional Details* * * *
Well the 8800GT is not bad, if it is the 256Mb version, it will do you well to upgrade. Someone mentioned an HD 5770, I would recomend the same, but your motherboard has Nvidia's nForce 650i chipset, and 2 PCI-E X16 slots, which means you can SLI two cards on that motherboard, (Nvidia cards only, Nforce chipsets do not support ATI's crossfire). I think it has a 750 Watt powersupply, so you can upgrade to a GTX465, or a GTX470. Even a GTX260 or a GTX460 willl be an upgrade, and since you can SLI two cards, if your budget permits you can do that.
Me flying XPS Trex 450se at Heli Heatwave 2007







