
- HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD PRO
- HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD FREE
- HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD WINDOWS
If you don’t want to use your face to login, there’s also a fingerprint reader built into the power button.
HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD WINDOWS
The module also supports infrared and works with Windows 10’s biometric Windows Hello feature. In the XPS 15 9500, it’s a 720p-resolution unit (as are the vast majority) that’s integrated into the top bezel. Webcams are no longer the throwaway feature they were last year. Which webcam looks the best to you? The Dell (top left), the MSI GS66 Stealth (top right), the XPG Xenia 15 (bottom left) or the low-bezel mount Gigabyte Aero 17 (bottom right.) Dell XPS 15 Webcam If you’re copying over 100GB of video files you just shot, that’s a significant difference. The XPS 15 9500’s SD card slot outperformed a fast USB reader by 21 percent in reads and 18 percent in write speeds.
HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD PRO
We ran CrystalDiskMark 7.0’s standard test on the and compared it to the results of a SanDisk Extreme Pro UHS-II USB reader. Actual UHS-III SD cards are still nearly impossible to find, though, so for our test we used a 128GB SanDisk Extreme Pro card rated for 300MBps reads and 260MBps writes. Dell specs it as a UHS-III-capable slot, which means in theory, it can hit 600MBps if you have a fast-enough card. Dell XPS 15 Card Reader Performanceīecause the is aimed at content creators, Dell spends valuable real estate to integrate an SD card reader into the laptop. We found the Dell XPS 15 9500’s built-in UHS-III reader (left) outperformed SanDisk’s Extreme Pro UHS-II USB reader (right) in performance on a UHS-II-rated SanDisk Extreme Pro SD card.
HOW TO BUY A MACBOOK PRO WITH CANADIAN KEYBOARD FREE
Dongles are yet another accessory to juggle, but a free dongle is better than none at all. All Apple gives you with the MacBook Pro 16 is the power supply and a smug look.įortunately, Dell mitigates this a little by including a USB-C dongle with a USB-A and HDMI adapter in the box. What’s the difference between Dell and Apple? You get an HDMI and USB-A dongle in the box with the XPS 15 9500. Suddenly you’re down to a single USB-C port for everything else. A monitor (with adapter) would take another port. With the XPS 15 9500, one USB-C port will always be occupied by the charger. That meant you could charge the older model with an HDMI monitor plugged in as well as a USB keyboard and USB mouse. The previous featured two USB-A, one Thunderbolt 3, a full-size HDMI port, headset jack, SD Card slot, lock port and dedicated charging port. The unofficial reason, we suspect, is that if Apple gets away with it, why not Dell? When we mean “get away with it” we mean, people still buy Apple and Dell laptops by the truckloads, so maybe it’s just us.īeyond the loss of the USB-A though, is an overall trend to lose concurrent port use. Dell’s official reason has been to reduce the thickness of the laptop without adding drop-down jaws or port bulges.

We’ve complained about this since Dell jettisoned the USB-A on the XPS 13, but to no avail. Yes, there’s no square USB-A port on the XPS 15 9500, which is sure to chap some hides.

The right side of the gives you (lef tto right) a USB-C port with DisplayPort and USB Power Delivery charging, as well as a UHS-III card reader and headset jack.
