
In general, I highly recommend not messing with XPS. Don't believe marketing promises. Before that, I also had to work on a Dell laptop, but simpler. There, too, was full of all sorts of jokes that darkened life. But others. Some pros: The laptop is assembled quite qualitatively, there is an opportunity to upgrade components. The screen is normal (I have a FullHD matrix). Light weight, looks nice. The system for automatically ating any drivers works well, quite conveniently. Its cons: I hope fate saves you from this miracle business laptop. I do not recommend taking either for business trips, or for work, or for anything else. The whole laptop is one continuous problem. If you think that it is productive - yes, the first 5-10 seconds. And then very aggressive throttling is turned on, because. The laptop can't keep up with the cooling. Therefore, when programming, it makes noise all the time like a vacuum cleaner and all the time in throttling. The headphones constantly some kind of background noise, crackling, squeaking. A bunch of topics on forums with similar problems, but no one has much success, as I understand it. The power management system is generally a nightmare. A laptop cannot normally be taken to sleep: with a probability of 90%, it will continue to do something there and make noise with coolers, only the screen will turn off. And if it goes to sleep, it will turn on in 30-60 minutes. Turning on while the laptop is somewhere in the bag is generally a favorite thing. In the morning, you will usually see a laptop in two states: either it is noisy (and worked all night), or it is not noisy. But in this case, you will spend about a minute turning it on, because. The first 20 seconds the laptop does not respond to the power button, then it starts to make a fit of noise-stop-make noise again and try to turn on. If you unplug the power cable at night, then in the morning there is a good chance to see that the battery is dead. I can directly imagine how you went to make a presentation to someone with this laptop, yeah. You need to connect the power cable in a strictly defined order: first power, then usb-c. Otherwise, the laptop will start charging via usb-c, it will write that there is not enough power. But it will not switch to a regular adapter, although it will also be connected. The touchpad, it seems, is not bad . But once every five clicks, your cursor will move somewhere. Either up or to the right. I don't really understand what kind of joke this is. WiFi with poor connection quality works worse than in an old laptop that is 6 years old. With normal coverage, there are no complaints. The microphone is located at the touchpad, all the time you will touch your finger and make noise.

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