Dell Latitude D420

Rory Reid, CNET.co.uk

03 October 2006 12:08 PM

Tags: latitude, laptop, dell, adaptor, port

The Dell Latitude D420's portability, power and ability to go online at any time from any location makes it perfect for road warriors.

Dell Latitude D420

According to Dell, the Latitude D420 is designed for highly mobile users who value size, weight, battery life and durability over all other aspects of computer use.

Design
The Latitude D420 is seductively small, light and attractive for a business laptop. It's not in the same realm as the Sony VAIO VGN-TX27GP, and its ugly gunmetal exterior doesn't do much for it, but its matte-black interior is very easy on the eye. The unit is extremely portable thanks to its 12.1-inch screen and 1.5kg chassis, which is barely noticeable when carried in a briefcase.

Dell has managed to incorporate an almost full-sized keyboard. The Return key is of the standard size and shape; the Tab, Caps Lock and Shift keys are of the right size and the Ctrl key is positioned to the left of the Fn key -- where it should be. As well as the ordinary mouse trackpad, Dell has managed to incorporate a trackpoint mouse 'nipple' between the G and H keys -- complete with corresponding selector buttons below the space bar. For secure logins, a fingerprint reader is available as an optional extra, and separates the mouse trackpad selector buttons.

There's no integrated webcam on the Latitude D420, so you can't make a visual record of meetings. Nor does it have an integrated optical drive, so you'll have to connect the accompanying Media Base for this luxury. To the left of the laptop is a PC Card slot, memory card reader and a couple of audio jacks. You'll find the power button on the right side near the hinge, a single USB port, and a hardware switch for enabling the Wi-Fi adaptor. This doubles as a Wi-Fi sniffer -- seeking out wireless networks whether the laptop is switched on or off.

Dell has chosen to position the majority of the ports to the rear of the laptop. There are three USB ports, one four-pin FireWire port, an infrared port, a D-Sub video port and LAN and modem ports. Having most of the ports at the rear helps to keep everything neat, but you may run into difficulties when using the D420 on small desks when large USB devices stick out at the rear.

Features
The Latitude D420 is one of the first sub-2kg laptops to use an Intel dual-core processor -- most use a Core Solo or single core Pentium M processor. In this case it's the ultra-low voltage (ULV) 1.2GHz Intel U2500 -- the slowest in the mobile dual-core range. This is paired with 1GB of RAM -- an ample amount that shouldn't require users to reboot every few hours or close application windows to free up memory.

You won't be playing many games with the Latitude D420. There's no ATI or Nvidia card here -- just the integrated graphics adaptor that comes as part of the Intel 945GM chipset. It's fine for displaying presentations, images and videos, but struggles badly with 3D applications.

Our Latitude D420 sample isn't a Centrino laptop (although it's an optional configuration). The 802.11a/b/g Wi-Fi adaptor will let you connect to local Wi-Fi hotspots, but because the adaptor is Dell and not Intel-branded means it doesn't qualify for a Centrino badge.

The laptop comes with an 60GB hard drive. There's no integrated DVD or CD drive -- but there is one included in the accompanying Media Base docking station. This clips onto the bottom of the laptop and provides a few extra ports, including serial, parallel, DVI and an additional USB. It's possible to leave the D420 permanently attached to the Media Base, but it adds around 500g to the overall weight, pushing the total package up to 2kg.

The 12.1-inch display is of a very good standard, and it's good to see a laptop screen that doesn't use a glossy, reflective coating for a change. The display is connected to an ambient light sensor that adjusts the brightness of the screen depending on the lighting conditions in the room -- if it's dark inside, the screen lowers its brightness and vice versa.

The idea behind it is that battery life is prolonged as the screen is never brighter than it needs to be. The laptop comes with a three-year, next-business-day warranty. Software isn't supplied in abundance -- you get Windows XP Professional Edition and Cyberlink PowerDVD as standard.

Performance
We weren't expecting much in the way of performance from the Latitude D420. Sure enough, its bottom-rung dual-core processor clocked up a relatively low 1,911 in PCMark 2005. It's important to remember, however, that this score wouldn't have looked out of place on high-end desktop PCs a couple of years ago.

Gaming performance is nothing to write home about. The Latitude D420's integrated graphics adaptor score a paltry 145 in 3DMark 2006, and we didn't even bother running F.E.A.R on it -- it's unplayable. The laptop impressed us with its battery life, though. It lasted an impressive 208 minutes in a MobileMark 2005 test, so it should have enough stamina to last most users throughout the working day.

Dell Latitude D420
Company: Dell
RRP: AU$2,505

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Advertisement

Talkback 1 comments

  1. Say it like it is! d4xx series is no more! Anonymous -- 12/11/06

    Yeah, I want to "upgrade" from my d410 to this x2... right.

    The sad thing is that the d420 effectively ends the d4xx series. Instead of creating a successor to d400/d410 and a successor (a real latitude, ie dock compatible) to x1, they've ended the d400 line and replaced it with an x2 they call d420.

    I really hope they will create a real successor to d410 soon.


Reviews by category

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay MyPerfect.com.au has potential
    Victorian Web start-up My Perfect has a strong story and rationale for why it will succeed. But it has to overcome some challenges and design flaws first.
  • Array Storage infrastructure on the tender track
    For a large-scale storage project, it's not uncommon to go out to tender for the best deal — but when was the last time you had to put together a tender for a document management room?
  • Array Apple has killed the video store; will ISPs be next?
    The Olympics are nearly over, and the Australian team deserves kudos for an excellent performance all around. Yet even as the Olympic sun sets on the Bird's Nest for the last time this weekend, millions of spectators around the world will be scanning their dials in the hope of finding something else to fill their viewing hours.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured