Dell's first 13-inch gaming laptop, now powered by the Alienware Graphics Amplifier
"I see a lot of potential in the Alienware 13. It's a lightweight
laptop that should have enough power to play the latest triple-A titles.
Want those games in ultra HD or 60 frames per second and don't mind
bankrolling the extra cost? Add an Alienware Graphics Amplifier with a
GTX 970 or 980 GPU at checkout."
Game play
need for speed rivals
For
Flexible pricing
Super slim
Alienware Graphics Amplifier hookup
Cool LEDs
Against
Intel Haswell U processor
Nvidia 860M GPU
Amplifier is extra
The Alienware 13, when it ships in December, will bring a
lot of firsts for Alienware. First and foremost, it's the first 13-inch
gaming laptop from Dell - an interesting statistic as Alienware, the
gaming arm of Dell, isn't exactly new to the scene. The
Alienware 13 is also the thinnest laptop they've ever made at just over
one-inch thick. That's still a fair amount larger than the Razer Blade, which measures in at an incredible .66 inches, but the fact that Alienware is closing that gap is amiable. If
it's only one-inch thick and 4.5 pounds, how can it withstand the
everyday dings and bumps that occur in our bags? Don't worry, the
Alienware 13 will also be one of the first to be made with carbon fiber
chips infused into the case.
OK, but if it's one-inch thick and 4.5 pounds it must
have some pretty lackluster components, right? Yes, but not exactly. The
Alienware 13 will, more or less, be as powerful as you want it to be
... if you're willing to shell out for it. An Alienware
representative told me to expect pricing to start at $999 (about £600,
AU$1,100) for the basic model equipped with a fourth-generation Haswell
i5 U processor, Nvidia GTX 860M GPU, 8GB of DDR3L memory and a
mechanical hard drive, but upgrade options include two SSDs in place of
the one mechanical drive and a boost in memory to 16GB of DDR3L instead
of 8. What will hurt the longevity of the system are the
switch from standard Intel Core mobile processors to the ultra-low
power Haswell U line and foregoing the opportunity to include the latest
Nvidia 970 and 980M Maxwell GPUs. Thankfully, Alienware has a solution. More
important than the polycarbonate case or 860M GPU is the recently
unveiled Alienware Graphics Amplifier that the company is selling in
tandem with the Alienware 13.
A disCERNing addition
So
it's not exactly the Large Hadron Collider of the gaming world, but the
Alienware Graphics Amplifier is still pretty darn cool. It
supports any double-wide desktop GPU from either AMD or Nvidia and
connects via a proprietary cable to the back of the Alienware 13. It's
essentially an external GPU that can handle the workload of high-end
games and applications and stream the results to the laptop.
Digsby
IM, Email, and Social Networks in one easy to use application!
http://digsby.com
Inside
the case you'll find a 350-watt PSU and PCI-E x 16 slot that will
accommodate almost any GPU - I say "almost any" because you won't be
able to fit dual-linked cards (like the Nvidia GTX Titan Z or AMD Radeon
R9 295x2) in the allotted space.It's not hot-swappable,
but plug in the Amplifier before you start up your machine and you'll
be running off the external GPU. If it does happen to get unplugged
during operation - an event that the Alienware reassured me won't be an
issue thanks to the locking mechanism on the cord - the machine just
forces a reboot. The implication here is that the
compromise between choosing either a laptop or a desktop is gone.
Alienware's Amplifier allows you to have the easily portable 13-inch
notebook to take with you throughout your day then, when you go home at
night, plug into the external GPU and ratchet up the settings on to
ultra for a better gaming experience. That solution,
however, comes at a cost. The Alienware Graphics Amplifier will launch
alongside the Alienware 13, but costs an additional $299 (about £200,
AU$340) for a unit without a card. Drop an extra $800 (about £500,
AU$900) on a full-size Nvidia GeForce GTX 980, and your $1,000 laptop
setup is now a $2,000 (about £1,250, AU$2,300) laptop system that only
plays games at the highest settings when it's plugged in.
Display, battery, networking and LEDs
But
what's a high resolution if you don't have a screaming screen to
display it on? The Alienware 13 has you covered, no matter what your
budget is, by offering three options: an HD anti-glare 1360 x 768
option; FHD anti-glare 1920 x 1080 option; QHD touch-capacitive 1920 x
1080 IPS screen. If those don't tickle your aesthetical fancy, the
Alienware 13 has mini-display and HDMI-out ports that let you connect up
to two external displays.
Concerned
about battery life? Don't be. During my hands on time with the unit I
was told to expect at least seven hours while perusing the internet and
an hour or two less while watching netflix or playing games. Yes, the
four zones of customizable LEDs located in the keyboard and lid will
suck up some juice, but ultimately they won't break the camel's back so
to speak.Networking won't be a problem either as the Alienware 13 comes built-in with Killer technology that supports 802.11ac.
Early verdict
I see a lot of potential in the Alienware 13. As
a standalone laptop without the Amplifier, you've got a solid rig that
should play games like Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor at a respectable
60 frames per second while live streaming on Twitch. Add an external GTX
980 or 970 GPU and you should have more than enough power to blow
through Metro Last Light (or any other game for that matter) with the
graphics set to high. Alienware's solution, though, is an
expensive one. In order to get the best of both worlds, you'll have to
shell out for it. But, honestly, if you've got that much to spend you
might want to think about a better-equipped laptop instead of a
two-piece setup. Let's file this one in the "cautiously optimistic"
category until it launches later in November.