@illusion:
My personal two cents on your gripe:
Sorry, it isn't about attitude, it's about realism. The fact is that these are complex products. Armchair critics are a dime a dozen (it's an easy job), and every product has its own assortment of idiosyncrasies, some of which are not noticeable to all users, and others which do not become apparent until quite some time later. It is unfeasible to expect any editor of any publication to cover 100% of these anomalies, or to continually research post-publication to assess the relevance of their claims thereafter. If you think you're up to it, perhaps you have a very successful position as a product reviewer in your future. ;-)
Bottom line, it's my personal opinion that the reviews here at Notebookcheck are some of the most scientific and comprehensive anywhere. If we miss something, sorry, we're human. The image retention issue you mention regarding the XPS 12 was subsequently widely reported by users, but it wasn't unique to that machine. It appears to have affected anything using those LG panels, including, but not limited to also a number of Lenovo machines (i.e. the X220). But the fact remains that almost no reviewers initially noticed it, and it also doesn't bother most users outside of that vocal minority. That's why. It is just such one of those aforementioned idiosyncrasies.
Getting back on topic, what was it you were so worried about in this particular review anyway? Isn't that the entire focus of this discussion? There is no image retention and no CPU whine. End of story.
@Puppy:
Is there such a feature that's enabled on these units? We always disable graphics power savings, adaptive brightness, and other such dynamic video adjustments before performing our measurements, so unless it's an uncontrollable feature of the machine it should not have affected our readings. I will say that it is immediately evident to the naked eye that the black level on this machine is fantastic. :-)
@Vangelis:
Great question. Although the MacBook Pro 13 is considerably heavier and larger, the XPS 13 technically encroaches upon the territory of its specs. In brief, I'd say:
Screen: Toss-up (MacBook Pro: Better color coverage, brightness distribution; XPS: Better brightness, contrast, resolution)
Case: Toss-up
Weight/size/portability: XPS
WLAN/communication: MacBook Pro
Maintenance/upgrades: XPS
Input devices: Both are excellent, edge to the MacBook however
Performance: MacBook Pro (CPU by wide margin, storage by a less significant one due to 4K R/W differences, GPU almost equivalent)
Noise levels: Depends on use, but probably equivalent
Temperature: XPS
Speakers: Toss-up
Battery life: Again, depends on use. Toss-up
Price: Difficult to compare value due to features such as touch on the XPS and the fact that some people may not need more than 1080p (which is < $1K on the XPS)... the lower-spec model easily would win out on battery life as well.
----
So yeah, it's hard to recommend one over the other, as both have their relative strengths and weaknesses. I believe it most is up to the user's preference and intended use. You seriously cannot go wrong with either machine, and in my opinion that speaks to just how excellent this XPS 13 actually is.
Steve