Dell Latitude C610 Drivers

  1. Dell Latitude C510/c610 Drivers
  2. Dell Latitude Drivers Windows 7
  3. Display Drivers Dell Latitude D610

Maintaining updated Dell Latitude C610 software prevents crashes and maximizes hardware and system performance. Using outdated or corrupt Dell Latitude C610 drivers can cause system errors, crashes, and cause your computer or hardware to fail. Furthermore, installing the wrong Dell drivers can make these problems even worse. If you depend heavily on a notebook while in transit, you should take a serious look at the Dell Latitude C610, our Editors' Choice. Its crisp display, excellent performance, and outstanding. Hard Drive: Dell Latitude C610/C510 Service Manual Back to Contents Page Hard Drive Dell™ Latitude™ C610/C510 Service Manual Removing the Hard Drive Replacing the Hard Drive Removing the Hard Drive 1. Save and close any open files, exit any open programs, and shut down the computer. Get drivers and downloads for your Dell Latitude C610. Download and install the latest drivers, firmware and software.

Dell's Latitude C640 series has long been one of our favorite thin-and-light corporate notebooks, thanks to its smart design, long battery life, speed, and terrific tech support, not to mention its thrifty accessories, which work across the entire Latitude line. We're not alone. According to Dell, the Latitude C600 line is the company's best-selling notebook line ever. The latest update to the line promises more of the same, including faster P4-M processors, ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 graphics chips, and--new to the thin-and-light category--blazing 5,400rpm hard drives, all in the customary great, slim case. Even though the C640's ValueWatch rating is only average, businesses looking for thin-and-light notebooks won't find a better combination of speed, battery life, features, and support.


The C600 series' lid.
The thin-and-light category is the sweet spot of the notebook world: a great mix of features, speed, portability, battery life, and price. The Latitude C640 series is a brilliant example of why that's so. It's larger than the ultralight Dell Latitude C400 but not as big and heavy as the desktop-replacement Latitude C800 series. But the Latitude C640 still has enough drive options for business users and won't strain your shoulder when you tote it.
All versions of the C640 series look the same, with a dark-gray, 12.5-by-9.9-by-1.4-inch chassis that's more functional than fancy. The moderate, 5.4-pound base weight may increase by a few ounces, depending on which drives you use, and the AC adapter adds a little more than a pound to the total travel weight. All in all, the C640 is similar in mass to other business-class thin-and-lights, such as the IBM ThinkPad T30 and the Gateway 450.
Keeping with the function-over-form theme, you won't get the flashy silver wrist-rest inserts found on other Dell notebooks, but you won't miss them, either. (We find they get in the way.) The only splash of silver is the familiar round Dell logo on the lid, which helps you spot a Dell notebook from 50 paces.


Dell Latitude C510/c610 Drivers


Dell's signature keyboard.

The spacebar, the touchpad, and the four mouse buttons.

The Latitude C640 series conveniently includes both a touchpad and a pointing stick. The touchpad is smooth, and the pointing stick is not too stiff, although it's set a little low between the G and H keys. The control layout is similar to that of other Latitude and Inspiron laptops. There are four mouse buttons: two small ones above the touchpad and two large ones below it. Dell's firm and responsive keyboard includes a curved spacebar (a standard Dell feature) that wraps around the upper-left mouse button.

The PC Card slots on the left.
Like many thin-and-lights, the Latitude C640 integrates an antenna for 802.11b wireless networking into the case.
You can configure the notebook with an external 802.11b PC Card for wireless access or a built-in, 802.11b, wireless mini-PCI card , both of which cost $99. We recommend the latter, as it leaves your PC Card slots open for other purposes.
Speaking of PC Card slots, Dell insists on filling them with easy-to-lose, plastic dummy cards--one of our few quibbles about this notebook. You never know what could fall into the slots if you lose the cards; we prefer protective doors on springs, which you'll find on most other notebooks.

The Latitude C640 series is full featured by thin-and-light standards, and if you're not satisfied with the base configuration, you can beef it up when you buy a notebook online from Dell.com.
The C640 lets you choose fast Pentium 4-M processors at 1.6GHz, 1.7GHz, 1.8GHz, 2GHz, or 2.2GHz speeds. Memory ranges from 128MB to 1GHz; you should get at least 256MB, if not more. Hard drives range from 20GB to 40GB. The Latitude C640 we tested included a 2GHz Pentium 4-M, 256MB of memory, and a DVD/CD-RW combo drive. (Dell also sells the C610, a less expensive configuration with slower Pentium III-M processors and a shorter standard support period that's targeted at medium and large businesses.) We recommend spending a little more for the beefed-up C640.

Dell Latitude Drivers Windows 7


Our biggest complaint about the C640? There's only one screen size in this series: 14.1 inches. A 15-inch option would be nice, although the included active-matrix display with 1,024x768 native resolution is so crisp and bright that you probably won't mind the size. For more detailed graphics, you can also order the same-sized screen with a 1,400x1,050 resolution ($50). And thankfully, a pair of speakers on the sides of the wrist rest produces decent sound for a notebook.

The front-loading combo drive.

The back edge.

The two-spindle C640 series design includes one front-loading swappable bay, which can house a floppy, CD-ROM, DVD-ROM ($129), CD-RW ($199), or combo DVD/CD-RW ($249) drive; a weight-saving plastic module; or a second, 3,900mAh, 14.8-volt battery ($129). All of these drives and the battery will also work in the modular bay of the desktop-replacement Latitude C840 or with the ultralight Latitude C400 by way of an external cable--extremely handy if you use a variety of Dell notebooks at work and need to save money by swapping drives.
The C640 series addresses additional business needs, as well. The serial, PS/2, and parallel ports on the back edge let companies use older peripherals. Notebook makers love to talk about legacy-free notebooks (which have fewer older ports), but that's not always a good thing. If you've ever had a favorite peripheral that connected via PS/2 but don't have that port on your new notebook, you know what a pain 'legacy free' can be. Dell also includes a single USB port (most notebooks in this class have two, but you'll get more if you purchase the optional port replicator), S-Video, and mini-PCI but not FireWire. We wish it did, especially with only one USB connector.

The ports on the right.
You can also connect to networks via the C640's standard 56Kbps modem and Ethernet jacks, which are easy to get to. An optional port replicator ($249) or a docking station ($499) expands the number of ports, slots, and bays.
You can configure your C640 with one of three operating systems: Windows 2000 Professional Edition, Windows XP Home, or XP Pro ($60). Call us old-fashioned, but we appreciate the choice of Windows 2000 Pro, rarely offered these days. Software options are limited to a choice between Microsoft Office XP Professional or Small Business Edition, plus Norton AntiVirus 2002 ($59) or McAfee VirusScan 6.01 ($55). All configurations include Dell's OpenManage remote-manageability software, which permits your IS manager to remotely check and manage system settings.

The Latitude C640 ran up the score on CNET Labs' performance tests, easily beating two of its peers. The Latitude, with its 2GHz P4-M processor, 256MB of RAM, and 5,400rpm hard drive, scored 137, topping the 1.8GHz ThinkPad T30 by 14 points and the 2GHz Gateway 450SX4 by 34 points. Compared to the sluggish Gateway, the Latitude scored closer to what you'd expect of a 2GHz thin-and-light system--that is, it scored superbly.
Mobile application performance (Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark2002 performance rating
Dell Latitude C640
137
IBM ThinkPad T30
123
Gateway 450SX4
103

System configurations:
Dell Latitude C640
Windows XP Professional; 2GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 32MB; Toshiba MK4019GAX 40GB 5,400rpm
Gateway 450SX4
Windows XP Home; 2GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility M6 32MB; Toshiba MK4018GAP 40GB 4,200rpm
IBM ThinkPad T30
Windows XP Professional; 1.8GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 16MB; Toshiba MK4019GAX 40GB 5,400rpm

The Dell C640 wowed us with its battery life, too, cranking along for 192 minutes--not surprising, considering the Latitude's 14.8-volt, 4,460mAah cell, more powerful than the two competing systems'. The Gateway's 11.1-volt, 3,800mAh and the IBM's 10.8-volt, 4,400mAh battery just can't compare to the Dell's powerhouse.
Battery life (Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark2002 battery life (minutes)
Dell Latitude C640
192
IBM ThinkPad T30
177
Gateway 450SX4
156

To measure mobile application performance and battery life, CNET Labs uses BAPCo's MobileMark2002. MobileMark measures both applications performance and battery life concurrently using a number of popular applications (Microsoft Word 2002, Microsoft Excel 2002, Microsoft PowerPoint 2002, Microsoft Outlook 2002, Netscape Communicator 6.0, WinZip Computing WinZip 8.0, McAfee VirusScan 5.13, Adobe Photoshop 6.0.1, and Macromedia Flash 5).
System configurations:
Dell Latitude C640
Windows XP Professional; 2GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 32MB; Toshiba MK4019GAX 40GB 5,400rpm
Gateway 450SX4
Windows XP Home; 2GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility M6 32MB; Toshiba MK4018GAP 40GB 4,200rpm
IBM ThinkPad T30
Windows XP Professional; 1.8GHz Intel Pentium 4-M; 256MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; ATI Mobility Radeon 7500 16MB; Toshiba MK4019GAX 40GB 5,400rpm

The Latitude C640 series comes with a minimum of three free years of support, including onsite, next-business-day service--a generous allotment. You can also place free calls 24/7 to Dell's automated or live tech-support lines for as long as you own the notebook. Extended warranty options (from $69 to $297) add support extras such as access to phone reps in one minute or less; free fixes due to coffee spills, drops, or other accidental damage; and up to four years of warranty coverage. The printed manual is thorough and easy to use. For enterprise customers, Dell's Web site lets you set up a customized support page with content from a huge customer forum, FAQs, downloads, and more.
Dell Latitude
DeveloperDell (1994–present)
TypeLaptop/Netbook
Release date1994
Latitude E5570 with its back cover open.
A Dell Latitude E4310

Latitude is Dell's business laptop brand, designed and manufactured mainly by Compal and Quanta. The Latitude competes with the ThinkPad series from Lenovo (formerly IBM), the EliteBook series from HP and Travelmate series from Acer. The 'Rugged (Extreme)', 'XFR' and 'ATG' models compete primarily with Panasonic's Toughbook line of rugged computers.

  • 2Current models
  • 3Previous Models
    • 3.11Latitude D6x0 series
      • 3.11.2Latitude D610
      • 3.11.3Latitude D620
  • 4Technical specifications
  • 5History

Overview and product type[edit]

The Dell Latitude is a laptop family from Dell Computers, intended for business use. By contrast, the Dell Inspiron is aimed at the consumer market and its specifications change regularly. Whereas Inspiron may change vendors or components several times over the course of a single model, the Latitude line generally retains identical components throughout its production. This design is intended to simplify maintenance and support tasks for large corporations, allowing components to be easily swapped between models.

Dell Latitude D630

The lines of Dell Latitude personal computers are currently in the 'E' series, which is the successor to the popular Latitude D, C, and X series. The Latitudes from the early 1990s up until the C*00 lines weren't in a set 'series', instead going under the models CP and XP with modifiers at the end, e.g.: XPi, CP M233.

In the past, the 'mainstream' line was the 6 series, being the C6x0, D6x0, and E64x0 lines, but as of 2015 this line has been discontinued and replaced by both the 5 series and the 7 series. The 15' 'Premium' line was the 8 series, until the E-series merged this line with the 6 series (Model numbers being along the lines of C8x0 or D8x0). The 'budget' line was the 5 series, but as of 2015 the 5 series and 7 series Latitude laptops are the primary lines of Latitude laptops. The 3 series has replaced the 5 series as the budget line. Dell has also since dropped the E from the Latitude line (due to switching to a USB C/Thunderbolt dock system, rather than the e-Port analog pin-system docks), and the models are delineated by number now, e.g.: Latitude 5480, 5570. The second number in the model (As in, 5470 or 7280) indicates the size of the screen in the laptop.

The current Dell Latitude lineup is as follows:

Latitude 3xxx series. Budget models intended for education or home office environments, available in 13.3'/14'/15.6' trims.

Latitude 5xxx series. Mainstream line, available in 11.1'/12.5'/13.3'/14'/15.6' trims.

Latitude 7xxx series. Premium 'ultrabooks', available in 12.5'/13.3'/14' trims only.

Latitude computers are also differentiated in their feature sets, due to their business focus. For example, they often include security features such as smartcard and contactless smartcard, and TPM security, which are not needed by most consumers. A lid clasp (as opposed to a magnetic latching system), DisplayPort video out (as opposed to HDMI), and support for legacy standards are all results of the requirements of the business market.

Some models also have the capability of Latitude ON which can be selected during the configuration of the laptop. Latitude ON is essentially a system within a system. It requires a separate add on module which contains its own microprocessor and Operating system. This allows the laptop to function in the realm of a Netbook.

Current models[edit]

Latitude 2010-2018
Type**00

(2010)

**10

(2011)

**20

(2012)

**30

(2013)

**40

(2014)

**50

(2015)

**70

(2016)

**80

(2017)

**90

(2018)

**00

(2019)

Top-class
16'Ultraportable (ultrabook)Z600
14'6430uE7440E7450E7470748074907400
7400 2-in-1
13.3'E4300E43107370738073907300
Convertible735073897390 2-in-1
12.5'727572857200 2-in-1
Ultraportable (ultrabook)E4200E7240E7250E727072807290
Middle class
15.6'MainstreamE6500E6510E6520E6530E6540
E5540E5550E5570558055905500
55915501
14'E6400E6410E6420E6430E6440
E5440E5450E5470548054905400
5495
54915401
13.3'E6320E63305300
2-in-1XT35300 2-in-1
12.5'MainstreamE6220E6230E5250E527052805290
2-in-15285
52895290 2-in-1
10.8'5175/9
10.1'Tablet10-ST2
Entry-level
15.6'MainstreamE5500E5510E5520E5530E3540E35503570358035903500
14'E5400E5410E5420E5430E3440E34503470348034903400
13.3'33803301
Entry (educational)3300
2-in-133793390 2-in-1
11.6'3189
Netbook3150316031803190
10.1'210021102120
Tablet10-ST2e

(List do not include rugged modifications).

RFID (Optional) location on a Latitude E6410

Dell used the 'E-series' name up through the 2016 models, and new 2017 models drop the 'E.' [1][2] and Dell E-Port Replicator with it. As of February 2017, Latitude computers are available in three series: the 3000, 5000, and 7000. The 3000 series is designed to be entry-level, similar to the previous Latitude E55xx and Latitude E54xx laptops. The 5000 series is mid-range, similar to the Latitude E64xx and E65xx. It includes a high performance subseries whose model designations end in 1. These devices are available with higher-TDP processors, discrete graphics and NVMeSSDs. The 7000 series consists of high-end Ultrabook computers, introduced in 2014 with the Latitude E7440 and E7240.

Aside from the 3000, 5000, and 7000 series, Dell also provides an Education and Rugged Series of Latitude computers. The Education series laptops are designed for use in educational institutions. They're not especially powerful, and are more geared towards office applications or internet-based applications. The Rugged series laptops are similar to the previous Latitude XFR computers. They are designed with extra durability in mind.

xx00 Models (2019)[edit]

  • 7400 2-in-1: 14.0' Ultraportable 2-in-1[3]
  • 7400: 14.0' Ultraportable[4]
  • 7300: 13.3' Ultraportable
  • 7200 2-in-1: 12.3' Ultraportable 2-in-1[5]
  • 5501: 15.6' High-Performance[6]
  • 5500: 15.6' Mainstream
  • 5401: 14.0' High-Performance
  • 5400: 14.0' Mainstream
  • 5300 2-in-1: 13.3' Mainstream 2-in-1[7]
  • 5300: 13.3' Mainstream
  • 3500: 15.6' Essential[8]
  • 3400: 14.0' Essential
  • 3301: 13.3' Essential
  • 3300: 13.3' Education [9]

Previous Models[edit]

xx90 Models (2018)[edit]

  • 7490: 14.0' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 7390: 13.3' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 7390 2-in-1: 13.3' Ultraportable 2-in-1 (8th gen Core i3, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 7290: 12.5' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5591: 15.6' High-Performance (8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5590: 15.6' Mainstream (7th gen Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5491: 14.0' High-Performance (8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5490: 14.0' Mainstream (7th gen Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5495: 14.0' Mainstream (AMD Ryzen Pro Mobile: 3 2300U, 5 2500U, 7 2700U)
  • 5290: 12.5' Mainstream (8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5290 2-in-1: 12.5' Mainstream 2-in-1 (7th gen Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 3590: 15.6' Essential (7th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 3490: 14.0' Essential (7th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5, 8th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 3390 2-in-1: 13.3' Essential 2-in-1 (7th gen Pentium/Core i3, 8th gen Core i5)

xx80 Models (2017)[edit]

  • 7480: 14.0' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 7389: 13.3' 2-in-1 Ultraportable (7th gen core i3/i5/i7)
  • 7380: 13.3' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 7285: 12.5' 2-in-1 Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 7280: 12.5' Ultraportable (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 5580: 15.6' Mainstream (7th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5480: 14.0' Mainstream (7th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5289: 12.5' Convertible Ultraportable 2-in-1, non-detachable keyboard (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 5285: 12.5' Convertible Ultraportable 2-in-1, detachable keyboard (7th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 5280: 12.5' Mainstream (7th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 3580: 15.6' Essential (7th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 3480: 14.0' Essential (7th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 3380: 13.3' Essential (7th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 3189: 11.6' Education Convertible 2-in-1 (Pentium N4200 Intel 7265, Celeron N3350)
  • 3180: 11.6' Education (Celeron N3350)

Exx70 Models (2016)[edit]

  • E7470: 14.0' Ultraportable (6th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E7270: 12.5' Ultraportable (6th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 7370: 13.3' Ultraportable (6th gen Core m3/m5/m7)
  • 7275: 12.5' Ultraportable 2-in-1 (6th gen Core m3/m5/m7)
  • E5570: 15.6' Mainstream (6th gen Core i5/i7)
  • E5470: 14.0' Mainstream (6th gen Core i5/i7)
  • E5270: 12.5' Mainstream (6th gen Core i5/i7)
  • 5175/9: 10.8' Ultraportable 2-in-1 (6th gen Core m5/m7)
  • 3570: 15.6' Essential (6th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 3470: 14.0' Essential (6th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • 3380: 13.3' Essential (6th gen Core i3)
  • 3379: 13.3' Essential 2-in-1 (7th gen Core i3/i5)

Exx50 Models (2015)[edit]

  • E7450: 14.0' Ultraportable (5th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • Latitude 13 7350: 13.3' Convertible Ultraportable 2-in-1 Tablet (5th gen Core M)
  • E7250: 12.5' Ultraportable (5th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5550: 15.6' Mainstream (5th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5450: 14.0' Mainstream (5th gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5250: 12.5' Mainstream (5th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E3550: 15.6' Essential (5th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E3450: 14.0' Essential (5th gen Celeron/Core i3/i5/i7)

Exx40 Models (2013/2014)[edit]

  • E7440: 14.0' Ultraportable (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7ULV)
  • E7240: 12.5' Ultraportable (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 ULV)
  • E6540: 15.6' Mainstream (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 Mobile)
  • E6440: 14.0' Mainstream (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 Mobile)
  • E5540: 15.6' Mainstream (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 ULV)
  • E5440: 14.0' Mainstream (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 ULV)
  • E3540: 15.6' Essential (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 ULV)
  • E3440: 14.0' Essential (4th gen Core i3/i5/i7 ULV)

Exx30 Models (2012/2013)[edit]

  • E6530: 15.6' Mainstream (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6430: 14.0' Mainstream (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7) (Ivy bridge processor)
  • E6330: 13.3' Mainstream (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6230: 12.5' Mainstream (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5530: 15.6' Essential (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5430: 14.0' Essential (2nd gen core i3) or (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7 year 2014)
  • 6430u: 14.0' Ultraportable (3rd gen Core i3/i5/i7) [no standard docking, only over WiGi docking station D5000 and integrated dell wifi card ]

Exx20 Models (2011/2012)[edit]

  • E6520: 15.6' Mainstream (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6420: 14.0' Mainstream (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6320: 13.3' Ultraportable (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6220: 12.5' Ultraportable (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5520: 15.6' Essential (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5420: 14.0' Essential (2nd gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5520m: 15.6' Value (Celeron/Core2Duo)
  • E5420m: 14.0' Value (Celeron/Core2Duo)
  • E6420 XFR: 14.0' Fully Rugged (2nd gen Core i5/i7)
  • E6420 ATG: 14.0' Semi-Rugged (2nd gen Core i5/i7)

Exx10 Models (2010/2011)[edit]

  • E6510: 15.6' Mainstream (1st gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6410: 14.1' Mainstream (1st gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E6410 ATG: 14.1' Semi-Rugged (1st gen Core i5/i7)
  • E5510: 15.6' Essential (1st gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E5410: 14.1' Essential (1st gen Core i3/i5/i7)
  • E4310: 13.3' Ultraportable (1st gen Core i3/i5/i7)

Exx00 Models (2008/2009)[edit]

  • E6500: 15.4' Mainstream (Core2Duo)
  • E6400: 14.1' Mainstream (Core2Duo)
  • E6400 ATG: 14.1' Semi-Rugged (Core2Duo)
  • E6400 XFR: 14.1' Fully Rugged (Core2Duo)
  • E5500: 15.4' Essential (Celeron/Core2Duo)
  • E5400: 14.1' Essential (Core2Duo)
  • E4300: 13.3' Ultraportable (Core2Duo)
  • E4200: 12.1' Ultraportable (Core2Duo)

Other Models[edit]

  • XT3: 13.1' Convertible Touch Tablet & Pen (Core i3/i5/i7) –Release Date: August 2011
  • XT2: 12.1' Convertible Touch Tablet & Pen (Core2Duo ULV)
  • XT2 XFR: 12.1' Convertible Touch Tablet & Pen –Fully Rugged (Core2Duo ULV)
  • 2100 10.1' Netbook
  • 2110 10.1' Netbook
  • 2120 10.1' Netbook
  • Z 16.0' Thin and Light

The previous series is the Latitude D-series, on the Dx30 revision. The models are the D4x0 (12.1' Ultra Mobile), D5x0 (14.1 or 15.0' standard aspect screen except for D531, plastic case, value model), D6x0 (14.1' Corporate model) and D8x0 (15.4' high-resolution model) most models are based on the Intel Core 2 Duo and the Intel Santa Rosa chipset, with the exception being the D531. Ever since the D420, D620, and D800, the D-series features wide aspect LCD screens: 12.1', 14.1', and 15.4' respectively.

Latitude D6x0 series[edit]

The Latitude D6x0 series is the 14'/14.1' corporate model. It aims to combine heavy-duty power with reasonable portability, and differs primarily from D8x0 series in screen size. All are two spindle designs, with a 'D-bay' modular bay which can interchange optical drives, a second hard drive, floppy disk or a second battery. All models have a smart card socket, PCMCIA socket, and 9-pin serial port, a 'D-dock' port for docking station or port replicator, and have an internal socket for an 802.11 wireless card.

The D600 and D610 share a common form factor, battery socket, and have a parallel printer port.

The D620 and D630 share a common form factor, battery socket, and do not have a parallel printer port. Both have support for an optional internal Bluetooth module, a socket for an optional mobile broadband card, and have an external switch for disabling any wireless connections.

Latitude D600[edit]

The D600 (and simultaneously introduced D800) was released on 3/12/2003. These were Dell's first business-oriented notebooks based on the Pentium-M processor. The Latitude D600 series used the first-generation 'Banias' or Dothan Pentium M chips running on a 400 MT/s FSB on DDR memory. It had a PATA hard drive and a D-series modular bay, and used an ATI Radeon 9000 GPU. It had a 14' screen, in regular (non-widescreen) form factor. Unlike later D6x0 series machines, both memory sockets were accessible from a single cover on the bottom of the system.

Most, if not all Latitude models prior to the Latitude Dx20 series had a near-clone Inspiron, in the case of the D600, it was the Inspiron 600M. Differences include that the 600M does not work with the Dell D-Dock, and the case styling is slightly different. The motherboards, screens and hard drive caddies are all physically interchangeable.

The Latitude D600 used a PA-10/PA-12 charger and came with a DVD drive, 2 x USB, 1 x TV, 1 x network, 1 x parallel, 1 x serial and 1 monitor output. The hard drive is accessible through a cover on the left hand front side of the lower case and is secured by 1 screw. After removing the screw, the hard drive can then slide out.

Latitude D610[edit]

The D610 (released in 2005) was an update of the D600 design; it used a slightly modified D600 chassis and a newer Pentium M chipset ('Sonoma' with 533 MT/s FSB). This chipset was the first Intel mobile chipset to use DDR2 Memory, versus the DDR in the Latitude Dx00 series. For space saving purposes, instead of having both RAM chips on the bottom of the laptop, one RAM slot was moved to the top of the motherboard which could be accessed by removing the keyboard, whereas the other RAM slot remained in the area it had been located at previously. Unlike the D600 and prior midrange Latitudes (The 6xx series, dating back to the C-series) you had a choice of standard integrated Intel Graphics (GMA 900), or a discrete ATI solution (Radeon X300).

Latitude D610 Audio-Out 'whining'[edit]

Some Dell Latitude D610 units with a dedicated ATI X300 graphics card seem to have problems with the audio-out jack. Symptoms of this problem include a noise or whine when an audio device is connected to the audio-out jack. Up to this date Dell does not have a clear solution to this problem.[10][11][12][13]

Latitude D620[edit]

In March 2006, Dell introduced the D620 (and the D820), its first business-oriented notebook with a dual core processor available. Initially available with the interim 'Yonah' Core Duo processors, it was sold with the first-generation mobile 'Merom' Core 2 chips once those became available from Intel in the Fall of 2006; both run on a 667MT/s bus. It was initially sold with Intel integrated graphics, but an option to upgrade to a discrete Nvidia GPU became available after a few months. It replaced the raised pointing stick with a 'low profile' model, and introduced the option of 4-cell and 9-cell batteries in addition to the standard 6-cell model. It uses DDR2 memory and is compatible with both PC2-4200 (533 MHz) and PC2-5300 (667 MHz) memory.

Although the D620 accepts a maximum of 4 GB of physical memory, it cannot be used fully, because of the 32-bit physical addressing limitation of the 945 Core 2 mobile chipsets [Intel-945GM/PM-chipset], (not related to the BIOS or the use of a 32-bit or 64-bit OS), restricts the usable memory by the operating system to 3.5 GB, or 3.3 GB with on board video (memory is shared).

The D620 has one mono speaker located in the base below the touchpad. It has no option to expand to stereo without using external speakers or headphones.

There was no near-clone Inspiron model for the D620.

Latitude D620 problems[edit]

All early D620 models were known for faulty LCD screens. The early models suffered from light bleeding, where a black screen would show light bleeding in from the bottom of the screen. This wasn't fixed until almost a year into production. In addition, some D630 screens are known for having bad LCD pixels.The D620/D630 and D820/D830 were available with an Intel integrated GMA or Nvidia graphics chip. Most Nvidia models will suffer from early failure of the graphics chip due to the switch to lead-free solder and 'underfill' of the BGA. The computer industry at the time had just switched to lead free solders without redesigning cooling systems. This in turn led to undesirable heating cycles of the more brittle solder causing micro fractures to quickly form. NVIDIA was found liable for these failures, causing a multimillion-unit recall, not only of some Dell notebooks, but also some HP, Compaq, and Apple products.[14] The failure manifests itself by stripes or 'artifacts' on the LCD AND also an external screen or by the total absence of an image.

Dell tried to prolong the lifetime of the Nvidia chips with a BIOS update which causes the fan to run more continuously and thus reduce the strain from repeated heating/cooling cycles on the graphics chip.

They also have bad overheating problems.

Latitude D630[edit]

Released in 2007 the D630 is an update of the D620 design. It differed most significantly in being based on the newer 'Santa Rosa' (mobile 965) chipset, which supported the 800MT/s models of the mobile Core 2 Duo (both the Merom 7xx0 series and later the Penryn-based 8x00/9x00 series.) It also had newer versions of the graphics processor options, support for Intel's 'Turbo Memory' flash cache (although this uses the same card slot as the mobile broadband card), and support for internal Wireless-N. It also added a 4-pin Firewire IEEE1394 port. It uses DDR2 memory and is compatible with PC2-5300 (667 MHz), and PC2-6400 (800 MHz) memory will work at PC2-5300 speeds.

The optional nVidia graphics on this series of laptop are to be avoided due to overheating issues where the GPU would develop cracks in the solder. This was mostly due to temperature fluctuation but the graphics chips also ran much hotter than they were meant to. The D830 series, despite having more room for cooling the chip, suffered from the same issue.

The D630 unofficially will accept a maximum of 8 GB of physical memory, however, a BIOS update is required.

Unlike the D830, the D630 only has one speaker.

Latitude D630c[edit]

The D630c was a slight variant model of the D630, featuring a 'manageable' version of the motherboard chipset unavailable on the standard D630.

Unlike the D630, the D630c model laptop could not be ordered with Intel graphics, it shipped only with the nVidia graphics chip. As a result, all of the Latitude D630c laptops will eventually fail if used, that is, unless they have already failed previously.

It also could only be ordered with the Intel 4965AGN wireless card, you couldn't order it with Dell's wireless options or lower end Intel wireless cards.

Latitude D631[edit]

The Latitude D631 (released in 2007), similar to the D531, was a variant of the Latitude Dx30 series that had AMD processors instead of Intel. However, it is very rare inside the United States due to it not being an option to order on Dell's website. You can find some that originated in the United States, but those were special ordered over the phone. They were sold alongside the D630 as standard equipment in select international countries, but while not being that rare internationally, they didn't sell as many units as the D630 series (And even D630c series) laptops did. As a result, not much information about specific chipsets, graphics chip options (If there were any), or any other features can be found online for specifying details.

Latitude D8x0 series[edit]

The Latitude D8x0 series is the 15.4' corporate model; unlike the D600 and D610, all feature a widescreen form factor. All are two spindle designs, with a 'D-bay' modular bay which can interchange optical drives, a floppy module, a second hard drive, or a second battery. All models have a smart card socket, PCMCIA socket, and 9-pin serial port, a 'D-dock' port for docking station or port replicator, and have an internal socket for an 802.11 wireless card.

A Dell Latitude D820 running Windows 7 Professional.

The D800 was Dell's first widescreen Latitude notebook.

The D8x0 series models roughly parallel the technology in the D6x0 models other than for screen size; they do not share a battery form factor with the D6x0 series. The D820 and D830 add an ExpressCard socket, not available in the D6x0 series. The D830 is capable of accepting 8 GB of physical memory with updated firmware.

The D800 equated to the Precision M60, and the D810 to the Precision M70. They were for all intents and purposes identical except for the graphics card, certification and in the case of the M70, the lid.

The near-clone Inspirons for the D800 and D810 were the Inspiron 8500 and 8600; the D820 and D830 share hardware with Precision models M65 and M4300 respectively. There are even known cases of 'mixed-mode' samples of the latter, where the Dell-recorded type according to the service tag and markings differs from the BIOS-reported type with an identical service tag.

Both Latitude D820 and D830 have stereo speakers mounted on both sides of the keyboard.

Latitude D5x0 series[edit]

The Latitude D500 series is a set of 'entry level' business models; they are built on a 15' non-widescreen form factor, although models before the D530 were sold with both 14.1' and 15' screens (the 14.1' having a wider bezel.) They are 2-spindle devices (removable optical drive interchangeable with D6xx/D8xx machines), and roughly follow the technical generations (chipset and processor-wise) of the D6x0 and D8x0 series. The D530 was Dell's last non-widescreen Latitude model.

The Latitude D531 was also available, being the cheapest Latitude available at the time due to using AMD processors and cutting back on a few features. It was essentially a D830 with no PC Card slot, no trackpoint, an option for a 14' screen (If this was chosen it would have a similar wider bezel as on the earlier D5xx series machines), an AMD-based motherboard. DVD Drives, Screen Assemblies (If the laptop was ordered with the 15' screen), RAM, and Hard Drives/Caddies were interchangeable.

Latitude D4x0 series[edit]

Dell Latitude D410 running Red Hat Enterprise Linux

The D400 and D410 were 12' non-widescreen (4:3 aspect ratio) ultra-portable notebooks, roughly following the technology of the comparable generations of the series. The D400 had a design that was similar to the D610 and came with a ULV Pentium M (Banias). The D410 came with a ULV Pentium M (Dothan).

The D420 and D430 are 12.1' widescreen ultra-portable notebooks. The D420 came with either an Intel Core Solo U1300 ULV 1.06 GHz, Intel Core Duo U2400 ULV 1.06 GHz or Intel Core Duo U2500 ULV 1.2 GHz. The D430 came with either an Intel Core Solo U1400 ULV 1.2 GHz or Intel Core 2 Duo U7600 1.2 GHz; the U7700 Processor (1.33 GHz) was later made available as an option.

A Dell Latitude D400 running Linux Mint and a D410 running Windows XP.

While the D8x0, D6x0 and D5x0 models were all introduced simultaneously with each generation, the D4x0 series were generally introduced a couple of months after their counterparts. Also, since they use ULV (ultra-low-voltage) processors and chipsets, and are generally less powerful, the technology does not correspond as closely as it does between other models in each generation — for example, the D420 uses the parallel ATA hard drive (1.8') rather than the SATA (2.5') interface in the D520/620/820.

In a 22C° ambient the D430 U7700 processor has been measured to run from 62C° at idle to 85C° under heavy system loads, that is, within 10C° of Intel's max. temperature rating for the processor.[citation needed] The D4x0 series has been replaced by the E4200 model.

Latitude C series[edit]

The Latitude C-series notebooks covered the range of processors from the Pentium 166 MHz to the Pentium 4-M. Models in this series included the CP (Pentium processors), CPi (Pentium II processors), CPx, C600 and C800 (Mobile Pentium III processors), CPt, C500 and C510 (Celeron processors), C400, C610 and C810 (Pentium 3-M processors) and C640 and C840 (Mobile Pentium 4-M).[15]

Dell latitude wireless drivers downloads
A Latitude C500

C series laptops were notable for their consistent and interchangeable accessories across this wide range of processors. The series was one of the first to offer the UXGA 1600x1200 resolution display and included a NVidia GeForce MX400 32 MB video accelerator to complement the display requirements. A robust design made it a favorite in harsher climates; however, this design lacked the visual appeal of many of its competitors.[16]

The most popular of the C-series included the C800, C810, C840, and later the C640.[citation needed]

The later C-series models mostly had near clones sold as the Inspiron 4000 and 8000 series:

  • C840 cloned as the Inspiron 8200 and Precision M50
  • C810 cloned as the Inspiron 8100 and Precision M40
  • C800 cloned as the Inspiron 8000
  • C640 cloned as the Inspiron 4150 and as the Inspiron 2650
  • C610 cloned as the Inspiron 4100
  • C600 cloned as the Inspiron 4000
  • CPxJ cloned as the Inspiron 3800
  • CPxH cloned as the Inspiron 3700

An interesting note on the C840 is that it was the last Dell notebook (along with its sister models the Inspiron 8200 and Precision M50) to have both a 'fixed' optical drive as well as a modular bay, making it a 'three-spindle' notebook. The modular bay could also be used for a second battery identical to the primary battery rather than a special modular bay battery. It used a Pentium 4-M processor and DDR SDRAM.[16]The Dell C840 can support up to one gigabyte of RAM in each of two slots, for a total of two gigabytes in all. The GPU can also be upgraded on the C840/M50/i8200, from a GeForce2 Go to the Quadro4 Go 700 from the Precision M50.

Other models[edit]

The Latitude ATG was a semi-rugged version of the D620, and was Dell's only semi-rugged offering, while their fully rugged offering originally consisted of the Augmentix XTG630, a D630 in a fully rugged case, and later the D630 XFR. The ATG as well as the XFR have a protective glass glued on top of the screen that often has glue leaking onto the display causing air bubbles to form.

Latitude XT[edit]

The Latitude XT was a touch-screen convertible-tablet computer.

Latitude XT problems[edit]

In July 2008, Dell released multi-touch touch-screen drivers for the Latitude XT Tablet, claiming the 'industry's first convertible tablet with multi-touch capabilities.'[11] Dell has partnered with N-trig, providers of DuoSense technology, combining pen, capacitive touch and multi-touch in a single device. N-trig's DuoSense dual-mode digitizer uses both pen and zero-pressure capacitive touch to provide a true hands-on computing experience for mobile computers and other digital input products over a single device.

A large number of user reports suggest that the Dell Latitude XT suffers from a major problem.[17] The N-Trig digitizer interfaces to the XT by an internal USB port.[18] Users report that any other USB device which is plugged in may, and usually does, prevent the N-Trig applet (program which controls the features) from identifying the N-Trig hardware. In addition, there have been reports that certain other drivers, such as iTunes Helper, may cause this or a similar problem. Other users report no problems from iTunes. According to the reports, this still leaves the dual sense but without Multi-Touch and other advanced features, 'which render the auto and dual mode useless. The digitizer will only start working again after consecutive reboots.'[19] There have also been reports that the driver may crash, catastrophically or non-catastrophically, leaving no screen input at all. A re-boot may solve the problem, but often users found that the driver installation is damaged, requiring a re-installation of the drivers. But the install program will not un-install if it doesn't recognize the N-Trig hardware. In this case, the alternatives are (1) restore the entire operating system from backup, (2) manually un-install by erasing all N-Trig programs and drivers then editing the registry to remove all references to N-Trig, then re-install the N-Trig software, or (3) do a complete re-install of Windows.

These problems have been reported both with XP and Vista, 32 and 64 bit. In addition, Dell sells a MediaBase with an internal DVD drive. The drive also interfaces by way of a USB connection inside the MediaBase. Most, but not all, users of the MediaBase report that it prevents the drivers from loading.

NVidia GPU problems[edit]

Many D620/D630 and D820/D830 models (and related Precision models) with NVidia mobile GPUs may experience graphics failure. A Class Action Lawsuit settlement by NVidia was reached where certain Dell models were provided with replacement motherboards at no expense.

Recall affecting D Series batteries[edit]

Dell posted notices to many of their laptop customers on August 14, 2006, saying that the Sony batteries on the D410, D500, D505, D510, D520, D600/D610, D620, and D800/D810 models were prone to bursting into flames, or even exploding.[20][21]

The batteries on any of these computers purchased between April 2004 and July 18, 2006 were supposed to be removed and the computers run on AC power until replacements arrived.[22] Problematic Sony batteries led to battery recall programs at other laptop companies, including Hitachi,[23] Toshiba,[24] Lenovo (IBM)[25] and Apple.[26]

Technical specifications[edit]

The majority of Latitude laptops are built to order.

Operating System: Windows, FreeDOS, or Ubuntu for some models.

Processor package

Soldered

Audio codec

AC'97

E-Family (2007-current)[edit]

ModelReleaseCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
Top-class
14'
7400[27]20198th Gen Intel Core

i5-8265U (4x 1.6 6MB)
i5-8365U (4x 1.6 6MB)
i7-8265U (4x 1.9 8MB)

DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 6201366×768
1920×1080
14.0
74902018Intel CoreDDR4-2400
(or 2133)
32 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 620

(or UHD 620)

14.01.4 kg
74802017Intel CoreDDR4-213314.0
E747020166th Gen Intel Core
up to i7-6650U (2×2.2 GHz 4MB)
DDR416 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 520 or HD 540Intel Skylake-U/Y PCH - RealtekIntel Dual Band Wireless-AC 8260 + Bluetooth 4.2Anti-glare LED
(opt. + 2 finger multi-touch)
1366×768
1600×900
1920×1080
2560×1440
14.019.4334.92321.36 kg
E745020155th Gen Intel CoreDDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 5500Anti-glare LED1600×90014.0337.8231.120.31.6 kg
13'
73002019DDR4Intel UHD 62013.3
73902018DDR4-2400
(or 2133)
16 GB (1 slot)Intel HD 620

(or UHD 620)

IPS, opt. touch1920×108013.317304.82081.2 kg
73802017DDR4-213313.3
7370201613.3
E43102011Intel QS57DDR38 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA HD13.3
E43002008Intel Core 2 Duo Up to SP9400Intel GS45DDR38 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA 4500MHDDell Wireless: 1397 (802.11g), or 1510 (802.11a/g/n 2x2),
Intel WiFi Link: 5100 (802.11a/g/n 1x2),
or 5300 (802.11a/g/n 3x3)
LED backlit1280×80013.325.4-29310217.41.5 kg
(3-cell)
12'
7290[28]2018Intel 8th gen i5/i7, 7th gen i5DDR4-2400
(or 2133)
16 GB (1 slot)Intel UHD620
(or HD620)
173052081.2 kg
72802017DDR4
E7270
E7250Intel HD 5500
Middle class
15'
5501[29]2019i5-9300H
i5-9400H
i7-9850H
Intel CM246DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 630
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX150
15.6
5500Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 620
Option + AMD Radeon 540x
15.6
5591[30]2018Intel Core

i5-8300H (4x 2.3GHz, 8MB),
i5-8400H (4x 2.5GHz, 8MB),
i7-8850H (6x 2.6GHz, 9MB)

Intel CM246DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 630
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX130
15.6
5590[31]Intel Core U series,
i5 7th gen (2-core), or i5/17 8th gen (4-core)
DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 620 or UHD 620
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX130
15.6
558020177th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR432 GB (2 slots)15.6
E557020166th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR432 GB (2 slots)15.6
E555020155th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 5500
Option + NVIDIA GeForce 840M
15.6
E554020134th Gen Intel Core up to i7-4600U (2×2.1 GHz)DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4400
Option + NVIDIA GeForce 720M
15.6
E65404th Gen Intel Core up to i7-4810MQIntel QM87

[a][b]

DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4600
Option + AMD Radeon HD 8790M (2 GB GDDR5)
Intel Lynx Point HDIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6235 + Bluetooth 4.0 or Ultimate-N 6300
or Dell Wireless 1506 (802.11g/n 1x1)
Anti-glare LED1366×768
1920×1080
15.633.4379250.55.64 lbs
E65302012Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 up to i7-37x0QMIntel QM77[a]DDR316 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 3000 (i3-2xxx)
or HD 4000 (i3/i5/i7 3xxxM)
Option + NVIDIA NVS 5200M (1 GB GDDR5)
IDT 92HDxxxIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300;
or Dell Wireless: 1504 (802.11g/n 1x1) or 1540 (802.11n 2x2)
Anti-glare LED1366×768
1600×900
1920×1080
15.628.3-34.23842585.4 lbs
(4-cell, SSD)
E65202011Up to Intel Core i7-2860QM
(4× 2.5 GHz, 8MB L3)
Intel QM67DDR316 GB[d] (2 slots)Intel HD 3000
Option + NVIDIA NVS 4200M (512 MB)
IDT 92HDxxxIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300; or
Dell Wireless: 1501 (802.11b/g/n 1x1); or 1530 (802.11a/g/n 2x2)
Anti-glare LED
(opt. + 2 finger multi-touch)
1366×768
1600×900
1920×1080
15.628.3-34.23842585.52 lbs
(4-cell)
E65102010Intel Core i5-560M, i7-620M, i7-720QMIntel QM57DDR38/16 GB[e] (2 slots)Intel GMA HD
Option + NVIDIA NVS 3100M (512 MB DDR3)
IDT 92HDxxxDell Wireless: 1397 or 1510;
Intel WiFi Link 5100 or 5300
LED backlit TN1366×768
1600×900
1920×1080
15.627.4-33.33582575.53 lbs
(6-cell)
E65002009Intel Core 2 Duo, up to T9800
(2× 2.93 GHz 6MB L2)
Intel GM45DDR28 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA 4500MHDIDT 92HDxxxDell Wireless: 1397 or 1510;
Intel WiFi Link 5100 or 5300
CCFL Backlit1920x120015.427.4-33.33582575.15 lbs
(4-cell)
Intel PM45or NVIDIA Quadro NVS 160M (256 MB DDR2)
14'
54012019Intel CM246DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 630
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX150
Anti-glare LED14.0
5400DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 620
Option + AMD Radeon 540x
Anti-glare LED14.0
54952018DDR432 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED
5491[33]Intel Core

i5-8300H (4× 2.3GHz, 8MB)
i5-8400H (4× 2.5GHz, 8MB)
i7-8850H (6× 2.6GHz, 9MB)

Intel CM246DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel UHD 630
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX130
Anti-glare LED14.0
5490Intel Core

i3-7130U (2× 2.7GHz, 3MB)
i5-7300U (2× 2.6GHz, 3MB)
i5-8250U (4× 1.6GHz, 6MB)
i5-8350U (4× 1.7GHz, 6MB)
i7-8650U (4× 1.9GHz, 8MB)

DDR432 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 620 or UHD 620
Option + NVIDIA GeForce MX130
Anti-glare LED14.0
548020177th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR432 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED14.0
E547020166th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR432 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED14.0
E545020155th gen Core i3/i5/i7DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED14.0
E544020134th Gen Intel Core up to i7-4600U (2×2.1 GHz)DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4400
Option + NVIDIA GeForce 720M
Anti-glare LED14.0
E64404th Gen Intel Core up to i7-4610MIntel QM87

[a][b]

DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4600
Option + AMD Radeon HD 8690M (2 GB GDDR5)
Intel Lynx Point HDIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6235 + Bluetooth 4.0 or Ultimate-N 6300
or Dell Wireless 1506 (802.11g/n 1x1)
Anti-glare LED1366×768
1600×900
1920×1080
14.031.8338232.64.68 lbs
E64302012Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 up to i7-37x0QMIntel QM77[a]DDR316 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 3000 (Core i3-2xxx)
or HD 4000 (Core i3/i5/i7 3xxxM)
Option + NVIDIA NVS 5200M
IDT 92HD93Intel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300;
or Dell Wireless: 1504 (802.11g/n 1x1) or 1540 (802.11n 2x2)
1366×768, 1600×90014.0
E64202011Up to Intel Core i7-2860QM
(4× 2.5 GHz, 8MB L3)
Intel QM67DDR3–133316 GB[d] (2 slots)Intel HD 3000
Option + NVIDIA NVS 4200M (512 MB)
IDT 92HDxxxIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300; or
Dell Wireless: 1501 (802.11b/g/n 1x1); or 1530 (802.11a/g/n 2x2)
Anti-glare LED
(opt. + 2 finger multi-touch)
1366×768, 1600×90014.027-32.43522414.56 lbs
(4-cell)
E64102010Up to Intel Core

i7-840QM (4× 3.2 GHz, 8MB L3), max. factory-installed is
i7-640M (2× 2.8 GHz, 4MB L3)

Intel QM57DDR38/16[e] GB (2 slots)Intel GMA HD
Option + NVIDIA NVS 3100M (512 MB DDR3)
IDT 92HDxxxDell Wireless: 1397 or 1510;
Intel WiFi Link 5100 or 5300
LED backlit1280×800
1440×900
14.127.4-33.33582574.2 lbs
(6-cell)
E64002008Intel Core 2 Duo, up to T9800
(2× 2.93 GHz 6MB L2)
Intel GM45DDR28 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA 4500MHDIDT 92HDxxxDell Wireless: 1397 or 1510;
Intel WiFi Link 5100 or 5300
LED backlit1280×800
1440×900
14.125.4-31335238.34.3 lbs
(4-cell)
Intel PM45or NVIDIA Quadro NVS 160M (512 MB DDR2)
13'
53002019DDR4
E63302013
E63202012Intel Core i3, i5 and i7, up to i7-26x0MIntel QM67DDR3–133316 GB[d] (2 slots)Intel HD 3000IDT 92HDxxxIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300; or
Dell Wireless: 1501 (802.11b/g/n 1x1), or 1530 (802.11a/g/n 2x2)
Anti-glare LED1366×76813.325.4-30.1335223.33.64 lbs
(3-cell)
12'
52902018Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4(2 slots)Intel HD 620

(or UHD 620)

Anti-glare LED12.5
52802017Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4(2 slots)Intel HD 620Anti-glare LED12.5
E52702016Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4(2 slots)Intel HD 520Anti-glare LED12.5
E52502015Intel Core i3, i5 and i7(2 slots)Intel HD 5500Anti-glare LED12.5
E6230[34]2012Intel Core i3, i5 and i7Intel QM77DDR316 GB[d] (2 slots)Intel HD 3000 or HD 4000IDT 92HDxxxAnti-glare LED1366×76812.5
E62202011Intel Core i3, i5 and i7, up to i7-26x0MIntel QM67DDR3–133316 GB[d] (2 slots)Intel HD 3000IDT 92HDxxxIntel Centrino: Advanced-N 6205[c] or Ultimate-N 6300, or
Dell Wireless: 1501 (802.11b/g/n 1x1), or 1530 (802.11a/g/n 2x2)
Anti-glare LED1366×76812.524.73092263.17 lbs
(3-cell)
Entry class
15'
35002019Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4Anti-glare LED15.6
35902018Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4Anti-glare LED15.6
35802017Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR4Anti-glare LED15.6
35702016Intel Core i3, i5 and i7Anti-glare LED15.6
E35502015Intel Core i3, i5 and i7DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4400
Option + NVIDIA GeForce 830M
Realtek ALC3234Anti-glare LED15.623380259
E354020144th Gen Intel Core up to i7-4610MIntel QM87DDR3L16 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED15.6
E55302013Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 up to i7-37x0QMIntel QM77[a]DDR316 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 3000 (Core i3-2xxx)
or HD 4000 (Core i3/i5/i7 3xxxM)
IDT 92HD931366×768, 1600×90015.6
E55202012Intel QM67DDR315.6
E55102011Intel Core i5-560M, i7-620M, i7-720QMIntel HM55DDR38 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA HDIDT 92HDxxxDell: Wireless 1501 or 1510,
Intel: WiFi Link 6200, or 6250, or 6300
LED backlit1600×90015.633.83712505.72 lbs
(6-cell)
14'
3400DDR4Anti-glare LED
3490DDR4Anti-glare LED
3480DDR4Anti-glare LED
3470Anti-glare LED
E3450[35]20156th Gen Intel i3, i5, i7 and celeronDDR3l16 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 4400
Option + NVIDIA GeForce 830M
Realtek ALC3234Anti-glare LED
E344020145th Gen Intel i3, i5, i7 and celeron16 GB (2 slots)Anti-glare LED
E54302012Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 up to i7-37x0QMIntel QM77[a]DDR316 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 3000 (Core i3-2xxx)
or HD 4000 (Core i3/i5/i7 3xxxM)
IDT 92HD931366×768, 1600×90014.0
E5420[36]Intel Core i3, i5 and i7Intel QM67DDR38 GB (2 slots)Intel HD 3000
E5410
13'
3301DDR4
3300DDR4
3390

2-in-1

3380
3379
11.6'
3190DDR411.6'
318911.6'
318011.6'
316011.6'
315011.6'
10.1'
2120
2110
2100
Gray colored cards - switchable graphics (AMD Dynamic Switchable Graphics or Nvidia Optimus)
Red colored cards - non-switchable discrete graphics
(may be changed for purchase time only)
  1. ^ abcdefOptional Intel Rapid Start Technology, Intel Smart Connect Technology (SSD required)
  2. ^ abAnd optional Intel Smart Connect Technology (SSD required)
  3. ^ abcdefOptionally WiMax
  4. ^ abcdeofficially supported 8 GB[32]
  5. ^ ab16 GB with Quad-Core i7, only models with dedicated graphics

D-Family (2003-2007)[edit]

ModelReleaseCousin modelCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock ratecontrollerTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
12.1' ultraportable
D4302007Intel Core Solo ULV,
Core 2 Duo ULV (533 MHz FSB)
Intel 945GMSDDR2 – 533 MHz2 GB (1 slot,
1 GB soldered)
Integrated (chipset)400 MHzIntel GMA 950SigmaTel STAC 92XXLAN: Broadcom BCM57xx GbE

WLAN: Broadcom 43xx (Dell) or Intel: 3945 802.11a/b/g or 4965 802.11a/b/g/draft-n

1280×80012.1'25.42952101.36 kg
D4202006Intel Core Solo ULV,
Core Duo U2500 1.2 GHz
Intel 945GMSDDR2 – 533 MHz2.5 GB (1 slot,
512 MB soldered)
400 MHzIntel GMA 950LAN: Broadcom BCM57xx GbE
WLAN: Broadcom 43xx (Dell) 802.11a/b/g or Intel 3945
1280×80012.1'25.42952101.36 kg
D4102005Intel Centrino M /Pentium M ULV (Dothan)Intel 915GMDDR2 – 533 MHz2 GB (2 slots)Intel GMA 900(Soft Audio)1024×768

32 bpp

12.1'31.92782381.7 kg
D4002004Intel Centrino M /Pentium M ULV (Banias)Intel 855GMDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB (2 slots)Intel Extreme Graphics 2(Soft Audio)LAN:Broadcom 5705M gigabit controller
WLAN: Broadcom BCM4306 802.11a/b/g (Dell 1450 miniPCI)
CCFL1024×768

32 bpp

12.1'25.42942451.7 kg
15' case
D5312007AMD Turion 64 X2 Dual CoreAMD M690TDDR2 – 667 MHz8 GB[a] (2 slots)ATi (AMD)
Integrated (chipset)
ATi (AMD) Radeon x1270SigmaTel STAC9205Dell (1390 802.11b/g, 1450 802.11a/b/g, 1505 802.11draft-n)1280×80014.1'35.3365.7262,52.3 kg
1280×800,

1440×900

15.4'
D530Intel Core 2 Duo (800 MHz FSB)Intel 965GMDDR2 – 667 MHz8 GB (2 slots)Integrated (chipset)500 MHzIntel GMA X310015.4'35.3262,5
D5202006Intel Core Duo,
Core 2 Duo,
Celeron M
Intel 945GM (Core Duo)
940GML (Celeron M)
DDR2 – 533/667 MHz4 GB[b](945GM)

2 GB (940GML) (2 slots)

400 MHzIntel GMA 950LAN: Broadcom 440x 10/100 Ethernet
WLAN:Broadcom 43xx (Dell) 802.11b/g or a/b/g or Intel 3945
1024×76814.1'35.8338.32732.38 kg
1024×768,

1400×1050

15.4'
D5102005Intel Pentium M 730 (2 MB L2) 533 MHz FSB / Celeron MIntel 915GMDDR2 – 400/533 MHz2 GB (2 slots)333 MHzIntel GMA 900SigmaTel STAC9205LAN: Broadcom 440x 10/100 Ethernet WLAN: Intel PRO 2200 (802.11b/g) Modem: V.92 capable 56K1024×76814.1'
D5052004Inspiron 510mIntel Pentium M Banias (1 MB L2)
or Dothan (2 MB L2) 1.3 - 2.0 GHz (400 MHz FSB)
Celeron M
Intel 855GMEDDR1 – 333 MHz2 GB (2 slots)Intel Extreme Graphics 2LAN: Broadcom 570x gigabit controller
WLAN: Intel: PRO 2100 (802.11b) or PRO 2200 (802.11b/g))
or TrueMobile (1350 (802.11b/g) or 1450 (802.11a/b/g))
Bluetooth: optional
1024×76814.1'31.8338.3273
1024×768,

1400×1050

15.4'
D500[c]2003Inspiron 500mIntel Pentium M Banias (1 MB L2)
or Dothan (2 MB L2) 1.3 - 2.0 GHz (400 MHz FSB)
Celeron M
Intel 855GMDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB (2 slots)Intel Extreme Graphics 2LAN: Broadcom 570x gigabit controller
WLAN: Intel: PRO 2100 (802.11b) or PRO 2200 (802.11b/g)
or TrueMobile: 1300/1350 (802.11b/g) or 1400/1450 (802.11a/b/g)
Bluetooth: optional
CCFL1024×768
32 bpp
14.1'
14' case
D6312007AMD Turion 64 X2 Dual CoreAMD RS690TDDR2 – 667 MHz8 GB[a] (2 slots)ATi (AMD) IntegratedATi (AMD) Radeon x1270SigmaTel STAC9205Dell: 1390 802.11b/g, 1490 802.11a/b/g, 1505 802.11a/b/g/draft-n1280×800, 1440×90014.1'323382382.7 kg
D630Precision M2300Intel Core 2 Duo (800 MHz FSB)Intel 965GMDDR2 – 667 MHz8 GB (2 slots)Integrated (chipset)
or discrete
500 MHzIntel GMA X3100Intel: 3945 802.11a/b/g, 4965 802.11a/b/g/draft-n,
Dell: 1390 802.11b/g, 1490 802.11a/b/g, 1505 802.11a/b/g/draft-n
14.1'323382382 kg
667 MHzNVIDIA Quadro NVS 135M (128 MB)
D6202006Core 2 Duo (667 MHz FSB)
Intel Core Duo (533 MHz FSB)
Intel 945GMDDR2 – 667 MHz4 GB[b] (2 slots)300 MHzIntel GMA 950Intel 3945 802.11a/b/g, Dell: 1390 802.11b/g, 1490 802.11a/b/g14.1'323382382 kg
Intel 945PM300 MHzNVIDIA Quadro NVS 110 (256 MB)
D6102005Precision M20Intel Pentium M Dothan (2 MB L2) up to 2.13 GHzIntel 915GMDDR2 – 533 MHz2 GB (2 slots)350 MHzIntel GMA 900SigmaTel C-Major
STAC9751
LAN: Broadcom 57xx Gigabit controller
WLAN: Intel (PRO 2200 (802.11b/g) or PRO/Wireless 2915ABG) or Dell 1370
Bluetooth: Dell Wireless 350 (optional)
1024×768 1400×1050

32 bpp[d]

14.1'34312.52612.1 kg
Intel 915PM350 MHzATI Mobility Radeon X300 (64 MB DDR)
D600

[37][38]

2003Inspiron 600mIntel Pentium M Banias (1 MB L2)

or Dothan (2 MB L2) 1.3 - 2.0 GHz (400 MHz FSB)

Intel 855PMDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB (2 slots)Discrete200 MHzATI Mobility Radeon 9000 (32/64 MB)SigmaTel C-Major
STAC9750
LAN: Broadcom 570x Gigabit controller
WLAN: Intel: PRO 2100 (802.11b) or PRO 2200 (802.11b/g)
or TrueMobile: 1300/1350 (802.11b/g) or 1400/1450 (802.11a/b/g)
Bluetooth: optional
CCFL1400×1050
32 bpp or

1024×768
24 bpp

14.1'30.5315256,52.1 kg
15' case, performance
D8302007Precision M4300Intel Core 2 Duo (800 MHz FSB)Intel 965GMDDR2 – 667 MHz8 GB[a] (2 slots)Integrated (chipset)
or discrete
Intel GMA X3100Intel: 3945 802.11a/b/g, 4965 802.11a/b/g/draft-n,
Dell: 1390 802.11b/g, 1490 802.11a/b/g, 1505 802.11a/b/g/draft-n
1280×800
1680×1050
1920×1200
15.4'
ntel 965PMNVIDIA Quadro NVS 135M (256 MB)
or Quadro NVS 140M (256 MB)
D8202006Precision M65Core 2 Duo (667 MHz FSB)
Intel Core Duo (533 MHz FSB)
Intel 945GMDDR2 – 667 MHz4 GB[b] (2 slots)Intel GMA 950LAN: Broadcom 57xx Gigabit controller
WLAN: Intel 3945 802.11a/b/g, Dell 1490 802.11a/b/g
1280×800
1680×1050 1920×1200
15.4'38368266.5
Intel 945PMor NVIDIA Quadro NVS 120 (256 MB)
D8102005Precision M70Intel Pentium M Dothan (2 MB L2) up to 2.26 GHzIntel 915PMDDR2 – 533 MHz2 GB (2 slots)DiscreteATI Mobility Radeon x300 (64/128 MB)15.4'
or Mobility Radeon x600 (128 MB)
D8002003Inspiron 8500

Inspiron 8600 Precision M60

Intel Pentium M Banias (1 MB L2)
or Dothan (2 MB L2) 1.3 - 1.8 GHz (400 MHz FSB)
Intel 855PMDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB (2 slots)nVidia GeForce4 4200 Go (32 MB)CCFL15.4'
or GeForce FX Go5200 (32/64 MB)
or GeForce FX Go5650 (128 MB)
ModelReleaseCousin modelCPUChipsetTypeMaximumTypeClock rateVideo adapterAudio codecNetwork cardTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepthWeight
MemoryGraphicsScreenDimenshions (mm)
  1. ^ abcofficially supported 4 GB
  2. ^ abcUsable RAM limited to 3.25 GB by chipset
  3. ^This Laptop is a clone of a Dell Latitude D600
  4. ^integrated graphics chipset supports up to 1600×1200 pixels / Mobility Radeon X300 supports up to 2048×1152 pixels with external monitor

X-Family (2002-2011)[edit]

ModelReleaseInspiron cousinCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock ratecontrollerAllocated memoryTypeMaximum resolutionHeightWidthDepth
12.1' Convertible Tablet PC
XT32011Integrated (chipset)
XT22008Intel Core 2 Duo (1.2, 1.4 or 1.6 GHz)Intel GS45[a]DDR3 –800 MHz5 GB (1 GB soldered + 1 slot)475 MHzIntel GMA 4500MHDup to 384 MBIDT 92HD71B7LAN:Intel 82567LF Gigabit Network (10/100/1000 Mbit/s)
WLAN:Intel Wi-Fi Link (5100AGN or 5300AGN)
or Dell Wireless (1397 (802.11g) or 1510 (802.11a/g/n 2x2))
LED1280×768 32 bpp27.4220.62971.62 kg

(28 WHr battery)

XT2007Intel Core 2 Duo
(1.33 GHz) U7700
Radeon Xpress 1250DDR2 –667 MHz3 GB (1 GB soldered + 1 slot)350 MHzATI Radeon X300up to 384 MBSigmaTel STAC9205Broadcom NetXtreme Gigabit Ethernet (10/100/1000 Mbit/s)
WLAN: Intel Wireless Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN
400 cd/m2 CCFL
or 230 cd/m2 LED
1280×768 32 bpp252182971.69 kg

(42 WHr battery)

12.1'
X1[b]2005Intel Pentium MIntel 915GMSDDR2 –400 MHz2.25 GB (256 MB soldered + 1 slot)Integrated (chipset)350 MHzIntel GMA 900SigmaTel C-Major
STAC9751
Broadcom NetXtreme Gigabit Ethernet
MiniPCI card for Wireless LAN
CCFL1280×768 32 bpp25286196.81.14 kg

(27-WHr battery)

X3002003300MIntel Pentium MIntel 855GMDDR1 – 266 MHz1.15 GB (128 MB soldered + 1 slot)133 MHzIntel Extreme Graphics 232 - 64SigmaTel C-Major
STAC9750
Broadcom 570x Gigabit SeriesCCFL1024×768 32 bpp22.2275233.61.31 kg

(28-WHr battery)

X2002002Intel PIII MobileIntel 830MGSDRAM – 133 MHz630 MB (128 MB soldered + 1 slot)133 MHzIntel Extreme Graphics32 - 48Cirrus Logic CS42993c905C-TXCCFL1024×768 18 bpp≈242732261.31 kg

(27-WHr battery)

  1. ^GM45 in small package
  2. ^fanless computer using 1.8-inch PATA HDD

C-Family (1999-2002)[edit]

All screens have a TN active-LCD matrix and a CCFL backlit.

ModelReleaseCousin modelCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codec
NIC
modem / wireless
ScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock rateControllerAllocated memoryTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
C4002001Intel PIII MobileIntel 830MSDRAM– 133 MHz1 GB (2 slots)[a]Integrated (chipset)166 MHzIntel Extreme Graphics32 or 64 MBCirrus Logic CS42053Com 10/100 LANCCFL1024×76812.1'26.6-30.52902381.63 kg

(4-cell battery)

C5402002Inspiron 4100Mobile Intel CeleronIntel 845MDDR1 – 266 MHz1 GB (2 slots)DiscreteATI Mobility Radeon 7500C (32 MB)Cirrus Logic CS4205V.92 capable 56K MDC softmodemCCFL1400×1050

32 bpp

14.1'36,53192545.73 lb[b]
C5102001Inspiron 4000Intel Celeron (PIII-based) MobileIntel 830MSDRAM – 133 MHz1 GB (2 slots)ATI Mobility Radeon M6P (16 MB)Cirrus Logic CS4205Dell TrueMobile 1150 Mini-PCI Wireless[c]CCFL1024×768

32 bpp

14.1'36,53192545.73 lb[b]
C5002000Inspiron 4000Intel Celeron Mobile
mini-ZIF
Intel 440BX

SDRAM –
66/100 MHz[d]

512 MB (2 slots)133 MHzATi Mobility Radeon M3 (8 MB)ESS Maestro 3i3Com 10/100 LAN
56K V.90 Mini-PCI modem
CCFL

1024×768,
18 bpp

14.1'
C6402002Inspiron 4150Intel P4-MIntel 845MDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB[e] (2 slots)DiscreteATI Mobility Radeon 7500C (32 MB)Cirrus Logic CS4205V.92 capable 56K MDC softmodemCCFL1400×1050, 32 bpp14.1'36,53192545.73 lb[b]
C6102001Inspiron 4100Intel PIII MobileIntel 830MSDRAM – 133 MHz1 GB (2 slots)ATI Mobility Radeon M6P (16 MB)Cirrus Logic CS4205Dell TrueMobile 1150 Mini-PCI Wireless[c]CCFL

1024×768,
1400×1050, 32 bpp

14.1'36,53192545.73 lb[b]
C6002000Inspiron 4000Intel PIII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 100 MHz512 MB (2 slots)133 MHzATi Mobility Radeon M3 (8 MB)ESS Maestro 3i56K V.90 Mini-PCI modem[c]CCFL1600×1200, 32 bpp14.1'38,53192545.51 lb[b]
C8402002Inspiron 8200
Precision M50
Intel P4-MIntel 845MPDDR1 – 266 MHz2 GB[e] (2 slots)Discrete220 MHznVidia GeForce4 440 Go (64 MB)Cirrus Logic CS4205[f]Mini-PCI Wireless card capableCCFL1600x1200, 32 bpp15.1'
C8102001Inspiron 8100

Precision M40

Intel PIII MobileIntel 815ESDRAM – 133 MHz512 MB (2 slots)nVidia GeForce2 Go (16 or 32 MB)ESS Maestro 3i56K V.90 Mini-PCI modem[c]CCFL1400×1050,

1600×1200, 32 bpp

14.1 / 15'
C8002000Inspiron 8000

Inspiron 2500

Intel PIII MobileIntel 815ESDRAM – 100 MHz512 MB (2 slots)105 MHzATi Mobility Radeon M4 (8 or 16 MB)ESS Maestro 3i56K V.90 Mini-PCI modem[c]CCFL1600×1200, 32 bpp15'44,53302767.67 lb[g]
CPx J650GT1999Inspiron 3800Intel PIII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 100 MHz512 MB (2 slots)ATI Mobility Rage Pro M1 (4 MB)ESS Maestro 3i56K V.90 Mini-PCI modem[c]CCFL1024×768

32 bpp

14.1'45320255,5
  1. ^1 user-accessible
  2. ^ abcde with CD-ROM module
  3. ^ abcdefOptional
  4. ^PC66, or PC100 specially selected RAM
  5. ^ abMotherboard supports 1 GB SODIMMs (unavailable at time of laptop release, regular configuration is 2x215 MB)
  6. ^on Intel 82801CAM ICH3-M South Bridge
  7. ^with FDD module

L-Family (1999-2006)[edit]

All screens have a TN active-LCD matrix and a CCFL-backlit.

ModelReleaseInspiron cousinCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumVideo typeClock rateControllerMemoryTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
15.4'
131L20061501AMD Turion 64 X2ATI Radeon Xpress 1150DDR2 – 533 MHz2 GB (2 slots)400 MHzATI Radeon Xpress 1150 (integrated)256 MB HyperMemoryDell Wireless 1490 (802.11a/g)CCFL1280×80014,1 / 15,4363562662.83 kg
120L2006CCFL
110L20051000CCFL
100L20041150CCFL
12.1' ultraportable
L40020012100Intel PIII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 100 MHz256 MB (1 slot)ATI Mobility M4 MBCrystal CS4281 + CS4297A3Com 3C920CCFL1024×768 18 bpp12,125,72722201,63 kg 6-cell / 1,56 kg 4-cell
LS19992000Intel PIII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 100 MHz256 MB (1 slot)NeoMagic NM22002,5 MBNeoMagic NMG5CCFL800×600 18 bpp12,125,72722201,66 kg 6-cell / 1,62 kg 4-cell

CS-Family (1998-1999)[edit]

ModelReleaseCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock rateControllerMemoryTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
CS R1999Intel 440BXSDRAM – 66 MHz512 MB (2 slots)NeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZX4 MBNeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZXCCFL800×600
1024×768 16 bpp
13,3293062461.89 kg 6-cell
CSx1999Intel PIII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 66 MHz512 MB (2 slots)NeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZX4 MBNeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZXCCFL1024×768 16 bpp13,3293062461.95 kg 4-cell
CS[39]1998Intel PII MobileIntel 440BXSDRAM – 66 MHz512 MB (2 slots)NeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZX4 MBNeoMagic MagicMedia 256 ZXCCFL1024×768 16 bpp13,3293062461.95 kg 4-cell

CP-Family (1997-1999)[edit]

ModelReleaseCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock rateControllerMemoryTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
CPxPentium III 750 MHz;
CPi1998Intel Pentium II 266-400 MHzIntel i440BXEDO256 MB (2 slots)TFT1024×76813.3
CP1997Intel Pentium 233 MHz

Display Drivers Dell Latitude D610

XP-Family (1994-1998)[edit]

Latitude XP noticed as a first laptop with a optional Lithium-ion battery.[40] For XPi and earlier models BIOS limited to an 8.4gb or smaller hard drive. XPi CD is a last mass-market laptop with a optical trackball.

ModelReleaseCPUChipsetMemoryGraphicsAudio codecNetwork cardScreenDimenshions (mm)Weight
TypeMaximumTypeClock rateControllerMemoryTypeResolution'HeightWidthDepth
LXPi CDIntel Pentium 150, 166 MHz
XPi CD1997Intel Pentium 133, 150, 166 MHzFPM/EDO72/80 MB (2 slots, 8/16 MB soldered);
48 MB for a 150 MHz CPU
NeoMagic MagicGraph 128ZVDSTN or TFT TN800×600
16 bpp
12.1'

10.3'

3.4 kg
XPi1996Intel Pentium 75, 90, 100 MHz40 MB (2 slots, 8 MB soldered)
XP1994Up to 486DX438 MB (2 slots)STN or TFT TN9,5

History[edit]

E-Family[edit]

  • 21 May 2012: E6230, E6330, E6430, E6430s, E6530, E5430, E5440, E5510,E5530, E6430 ATG[41]
  • 8 Feb 2011: E5420, E5520, E6220, E6320, E6420, E6520, E6420 ATG laptops and XT3 convertible tablet[42]
  • 8 April 2010: E6410, E6510, E6410 ATG[43]
  • 12 August 2008: E-Family (E4200, E4300, E5400,E6500 E5500, E6400, E6400 ATG)[44]

D-Family[edit]

  • 28 June 2007: D430 announced[45]
  • 9 May 2007: D630, D830, D531 announced[46]
  • 16 January 2007: ATG D620 announced[47]
  • 20 June 2006: D420 announced[48]
  • 2 May 2006: D520 announced[49]
  • 29 March 2006: D620, D820 announced[50]
  • 26 April 2005: D510 announced[51]
  • 1 February 2005: D410, D610 and D810 announced[52]
  • 12 January 2004: D505 announced[53]
  • 19 May 2003: D400 announced[54]
  • 10 April 2003: D500 announced[55]
  • 12 March 2003: D-family (D600, D800) announced[56]

C-Family[edit]

  • 11 July 2002: C640 announced
  • 12 November 2001: C400 announced[57]
  • 25 September 2000: C600, C800 announced[58]
  • 25 October 1999: CPx H500GT and CPt V466GT announced[59]
Some of the earlier Dell laptops lacked a built-in Ethernet network adapter well into the Internet age, CPx H500GT was one such model.
  • 23 August 1999: CS-line (R400XT) announced[60]
  • 14 June 1999: CPi R400GT, CPi A400XT, and CPi A366ST announced[61]
  • 4 May 1999: CPt-line announced
  • 5 January 1999: CPi A366XT and A300ST announced[62]
  • CPi D266XT (BIOS Ph 7/30/98-2001): PII-266, 512 KB cache, Intel i440BX; 13.3 1024×768 TFT; 256 MB max, 2 EDO SoDIMM slots; 4 - 20+ GB, two PCMCIA, two modular bays, PS/2, VGA, parallel, USB 1.1, audio in/out. Windows 98.
  • 1997: C-family announced (with CP-line)

XPi-Family[edit]

  • 1996: Dell Latitude XPi P133ST, NeoMagic NM2070 video chipset, 24MB of memory (8MB on motherboard), 1.2 GB hard disk, PCMCIA modem card, 10.2' SVGA (800x600) TFT display, Windows 95 with possibility to partition and install Linux, Desktop Survival Guide

Ultraportable[edit]

  • 28 June 2007: D430 announced[45]
  • 30 March 2005: X1 announced[63]
  • 29 July 2003: X300 announced[64]
  • 6 May 2002: X200 announced[65]
  • 4 October 2000: LS H500ST announced[66]

Value[edit]

  • 6 November 2006: 131L announced[67]
  • 23 March 2006: 120L announced[68]
  • 8 March 2005: 110L announced[69]
  • 13 April 2004: 100L announced[70]

The Latitude 100L is a near-clone of the Inspiron 1150 and is also closely related to the 1100,5100,and 5150.The Latitude 110L is a near-clone of the Inspiron 1000.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Latitude E7470'. Dell. Dell. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  2. ^'New Latitude 7480'. Dell. Dell. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  3. ^https://www.notebookcheck.net/Dell-Latitude-7400-2-in-1-can-sense-when-you-re-up-to-5-feet-away.376881.0.html
  4. ^https://www.notebookcheck.net/2019-Dell-Latitude-7300-and-7400-laptops-now-shipping-for-1300-USD.419677.0.html
  5. ^https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/30/dell-latitude-laptops/
  6. ^https://www.notebookcheck.net/Redesigned-Dell-Latitude-5400-5401-5500-and-5501-now-shipping-with-Wi-Fi-6-and-Intel-XMM-LTE.419721.0.html
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