From: www.itworld.com

Product Review: Dell Inspiron 8000

by Carla Thornton

May 1, 2001 —

 

WHAT'S HOT: This Inspiron 8000 features a 15-inch screen with a native resolution of 1400 by 1050 (a 1600 by 1200 screen also is available), dual pointing devices, and a set of dual-purpose buttons that can either control audio CDs or launch applications. The sensible bay design includes a fixed 8X DVD-ROM drive and a removable floppy drive; this arrangement lets you carry two optical drives at once, for instance, or two batteries and a DVD-ROM drive so you can watch back-to-back DVD movies on your next cross-country flight.

WHAT'S NOT: Some users may not like the springy, somewhat noisy keyboard. Dell could have given the 8000's four dual-purpose buttons a more elegant design, too: Instead of simply flipping a hardware switch as on other notebooks, you must use a software utility to toggle between CD-playing and file-launching modes. The 900-MHz 8000 is heavy--even with a travel module in the floppy-drive bay, the notebook weighs 7.5 pounds--and its PC WorldBench 2000 score of 141 in our speed tests lagged somewhat behind the average score of Pentium III-850/700 notebooks running Windows Me.

WHAT ELSE: This thick, dark-gray notebook comes with two USB ports and a number of heavy-duty multimedia ports, including a fast IEEE-1394 connection for digital video editors and an S-Video port for using a television or other large screen as a monitor. An included cable adapts the S-Video port for use as a composite video port or S/PDIF-out connection. Despite this notebook's many multimedia frills, the sound is a little disappointing, with middling volume and weak bass. However, like its lighter-weight sibling the Inspiron 4000, the Inspiron 8000 boasts an easy-to-remove hard drive--handy if you like to keep important data under lock and key. Bored with the same old look? You can pop out the included dark-gray palm rests and swap in one of four other colors, including bright yellow; the set costs only 20 bucks extra. Documentation is plentiful but mostly electronic, and it's a little disorganized, with multiple shortcuts to the same manuals.

BEST USE: Small to medium-size businesses seeking a well-equipped desktop replacement for multimedia pros will find that the well-rounded 8000 almost does it all. Performance is a little disappointing for a Pentium III-900, but the US$2471 price is well below what we've seen for other similar models.

Buying Information: Dell Inspiron 8000