13" IPS laptop recommendation

pjm1

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Paul
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Ok, I'm needing* a new work** laptop and looking for a recommendation or three...

* needing is probably overstating, but I would like one and if I don't get one soon I'm going to bust either my work briefcase or my shoulder...

** work is quite loosely defined: I want a new laptop, I will be buying it through my business and I will technically be using it for work. Sometimes.

As my portable carry-around I currently have a heavy, clunky, slow and cheap 15" HP laptop with a horrible TN screen. I fancy something smaller, much lighter with a better screen, faster processer and which looks/feels like a premium product rather than bargain basement. Weight is important as I do carry it around in my briefcase and the current laptop is in danger of destroying said briefcase (which is a false economy since the briefcase cost more than a decent laptop!) It is this reason I'd rather compromise on screen estate and go for a 13".

I have never used a Mac and I don't particularly want to start... more importantly, I don't want to start the whole Mac vs PC war thing, so let's just assume I'm going to buy a PC and nip that right in the bud.

The current top of the list is an Asus Zenbook UX301LA which seems to be about £1,400. It's probably a touch more than I really wanted to spend, but it does look quite lovely and the reviews are favourable. I also looked at the Yoga 2 Pro, but that doesn't seem to get as good a write-up and I'm not really fussed by the whole twisting screen thing. There seem to be a few other 13" laptops around with IPS screens, but as a novice I don't really know which ones have better screens than the others. Budget is £1-1.5k give or take, I'd prefer to spend less but equally don't want to sacrifice really beneficial features for the sake of a hundred quid or two. Therein lies the slippery slope!

What do I want it for? Well, work (technically), which means Word, Excel, Outlook and surfing. Also for non-work, so LR and PS but not to be used as the main processing computer - all of that (and day-to-day work much of the time) is done on my desktop which is reasonably powerful with a decent sized standalone monitor. It's really just if I'm out and about and want to download images - e.g. when I'm on holiday or perhaps away for a couple of days at a time. Basically, this is just a backup computer which I'll have with me when I'm not at home/in the office. I probably use it 10-20% of the time, the other 80-90% is reverting to my desktop.

It is probably a bit OTT getting a really high spec laptop, but it seems a false economy to spend maybe £500 getting something which looks nice but is feature-impaired... as I really do need a lighter laptop. Or would I genuinely be better off getting a Chromebook or something and saving a wedge of cash?

Any ideas?
 
Cool, thank you for that suggestion, Toni.

The price saving of the XPS13 is superb and looking at the reviews the FHD version does look to be IPS. Given my Dell IPS panel is pretty reasonable, is it fair to assume their laptops should also be ok?

Not sure I'm keen on QHD with Windows because of the scaling problem and likely illegible icons etc! 13" is what I'm really after...
 
Hope it works well Paul. I bought an XPS15 earlier this year as a Macbook replacement, and it's been pretty good. Weakest point is probably the trackpad: after an apple trackpad almost anything is less good.
 
The other thing to be aware of - and I consider this a bonus - is that the refurb machines seem to have a clean install of windows + Dell drivers & tools ONLY, i.e. no Norton malware and all the other junk that sometimes comes on a new machine. I'd been wondering if it would be necessary to spend ages removing bloat, but as it turned out there was no bloat to deal with.
 
Be interested how you get on with the XPS 13.

I just sent an xps 12 back because the fan was annoying / not even remotely silent and also on mains power it had coil whine from the mainboard. If the fan is passable on the 13 I might give them another go, the screen was very good (and IPS)
 
Cheers Richard. Can't wait for it to arrive... currently working off my old laptop in a crummy hotel room and the TN screen basically has two states: white and black. Awful!

I will put up with some fan noise for a better screen :)
 
I can't stress enough how nice the screen was :) I had the i7 and working with photos was an absoute pleasure compared with my few gens ago i5 on a horrid grainy screen.
 
I use a dell XPS13. It's great. Way prefer the screen to the macbook air.

USB 3 tether with capture one and lightroom in windows 7 doesn't work, needs windows 8
 
I'm on an XPS 13" for mobile work as well. The only thing that (seriously) annoys me is the touchpad. For some unknown reason Dell opted for their own in-house version rather than a Synaptics one - their usual choice. The software controls for it are frankly a bit poor.

Other than that, it's excellent.
 
Well thanks for the recommendation and advice...

Laptop is up and running and it's a beauty! Screen is lovely (doesn't even seem that small) and keyboard works really well. Even this touchpad seems ok (not perfect, but ok...)

So, all in all absolutely delighted! Just installing Office, Google Drive etc. to get it properly up and running. Oh, and Adobe Cloud!
 
Glad you like it - the high res screen does seem a lot bigger inside than out IYSWIM.
 
Be interested how you get on with the XPS 13.

I just sent an xps 12 back because the fan was annoying / not even remotely silent and also on mains power it had coil whine from the mainboard. If the fan is passable on the 13 I might give them another go, the screen was very good (and IPS)

Just another update - having used the XPS13 now for a good week, it's a beauty.
  1. The screen is lovely. Apart from being glossy, it's absolutely wonderful. Despite thinking I'd never use the touchscreen feature, I do and it works well
  2. The touchpad does take a bit of getting used to - having the buttons as part of the pad is a bit odd, but after a week I'm now used to it... I think
  3. The fan has only really kicked into overdrive once. I left it running sat ontop of a stack of A4 paper and when I came back into the room it was trying to take off. Other than that, it's been great. The carbon fibre base means it doesn't burn your legs either
  4. It is very fast - almost as speedy as my desktop which is a full fat i7 rather than a throttled laptop version (just goes to show the processor isn't the bottleneck for most things I do)
  5. Did I mention the lovely screen?
I genuinely couldn't recommend it highly enough. And at less than £750 all in, it was a relative bargain. Thanks to @ancient_mariner (Toni) for the suggestion! (y)
 
You're very welcome - hope it does you well for a long time. :)

BTW the trackpad with 'buttons' on the corner is how the Macbook works too.
 
No, it's fixed at 8GB. I had a quick google and the SSD can be upgraded but not the RAM.
 
Is there a way of setting up an alert for it being in stock at the Dell outlet store?

I'm frequently out of the country with work at the moment.
 
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