Quote from: Anonymous on March 23, 2013, 15:21:16
Your comments are somewhat misinformed. The CPU throttles because there's not enough air below as the stands are low to maintain the slim profile. If you need to run it for prolonged periods at full power, you just need to raise its back or use some notebook stand for that purpose (as the article mentions, there's no throttling in that case). The price mentioned is high as the laptops are configured with 256 GB msata SSD and 512 GB regular SSDs for which Dell charges a premium - I'm sure this alone costs several thousand dollars which can be saved if those are added afterwards. Furthermore, the laptop as configured (without the SSDs, but 32 GB of RAM, RGB screen, K5000M and an XM CPU) can be obtained from the Dell Outlet for about 3000 USD.
I don't really agree with what you said there "Anonymous". Any laptop, especially one that costs $10,000 should be designed to work as is, without the need for the user to purchase a notebook cooler or artificially prop up the back of the notebook. Plenty of notebooks manage to be designed in such a way that this kind of homemade improvisation is not necessary! The cooling system just needs to be more efficient.
As to your comment that the price is so high because of the SSD's, then I agree, but the point is the notebook as a whole is being reviewed, including the inclusion of those SSD's and the consequent price they command - it's still a $10,000 notebook whichever way you look at it! And to spend $10,000 (or $3000 for that matter) on a notebook and then have to prop up the back of it to stop it throttling is insulting to the purchaser & just plain ridiculous!