I use this machine (FHD, i7-10850H, 64GB RAM, Quadro T1000) for performance demanding development (IDEA, large project, huge VM).
I am not sure if everybody hating this laptop really tried it. Probably not.
Generally I like it. Combined advantages of P1 and Precision 5550 would mean the best working laptop ever.
- The machine is really unobtrusive and quiet. It is much more silent than Thinkpad P1 (gen 1) if comparing similar load. Even when fans are running the sound is not annoying (nice white noise) which I can't say about Thinkpad P1's one.
- Drivers and dock are working nicely without any glitches. No problem with graphic card switching. No sound stuttering. No latency. It was (and probably still is) a nightmare at P1 even two year after release.
- Display (FHD) seems ok, quite bright. At lowest brightness the screen edges are a bit darker, but it's not that horrible. I like tiny bezels. On the other hand the display has quite low position. It won't be ergonomic to work on it for longer periods (P1 is much better here). I hate the display can't be opened more than ~130 degrees. Shame on you Dell!
- Consumption is unbelievably great! It ate 10% after 1,5 hour while writing this or writing a code in a huge IntelliJ IDEA project. P1 was really much worse (drivers, broken graphic switching).
- Speakers are the best I have heard from laptop! Unfortunately (probably defect of this unit) during Windows sound or during zoom meetings it has this "buzz" sound from right speaker. During music nothing. MaxxAudio pro is ok, but I would welcome fully equipped standard app, not the win 10 something. Mic style switch breaks the enhancements, have to reinstall drivers. I expect it will be solved.
- Keyboard is not that great. P1 has better. But it's ok after a while (where is my mech keyboard with clicky switches :-) ). Keys backlight is nice. I was worried about arrows, but it's not that bad during writing. I hate that home and end keys are overlapping F11, F12! This was the stupidest idea they could have. Home/End is essential during writing whatever. F11/F12 is essential for programming. I am using AutoHotkey to mitigate the problem (when not using external keyboard (, unfortunately you cannot easily remap keys for specific keyboard without using dirty hack and commercially expensive paid library).
- It's heavier than P1. I would expect a bit less.
- Connectors... In the end I don't need them that much anymore (bluetooth keyboard, mouse, headphones), but at least one USB-A and HDMI would be nice. For conference rooms or for vacation (connecting to hotel's TVs).
- The machine seems to have high quality assembly, seems as much better than P1 (every P1 unit had different color of display, different feeling and backlight of keyboard, a bit different level of noise/heat, electronic noise, for that expensive laptop it is unacceptable).
- Relatively sharp edges are not that smart. But it's not that annoying either.
- The laptop was bad smelling (plastic) at start (still a bit after two weeks). The box is probably the cause (our IT guys told me it is common). There is some recycled plastic from ocean in the box. It smells almost like the machine was running when in the box. If they used paper there would be no problem.
@blank: In the package you got small reduction from USB-C to HDMI and USB-A. If you use it, you have at least one USB port. Then I think modern LCDs with USB-C ports should also behave as USB hub so I don't think it's a problem. Also a dock works nicely.
@pb79: I have to strongly disagree. The dock works flawlessly. The machine is relatively quiet. In the same load it is much more silent than Thinkpad P1 (gen 1) (not that bad either). As mentioned in the review fans has no annoying pitch sound.
During writing code fan is mostly turned off. There is also Intel CPU power scheme update that should solve annoying turn on (1s)/turn off (5s) fan when connected to power source while on mid/lower load.