Dell is officially announcing the XPS 14z today, with ordering availability scheduled for November One in the US; worldwide availability will occur November 15. You will see four primary configurations offered at that point, though we’re unsure how much customization is going to be available. Our test unit has 4GB RAM when compared to 6GB that will be shipping; this shouldn’t really make a difference for normal usage, but it’s worth noting. So far as we can tell, all purchases share the same WiFi, DVDRW, and LCD; the CPU, storage, GPU and quantity of memory are where they differ.
The bottom model comes without discrete graphics, while all the upgraded versions include NVIDIA’s GT 520M. We haven’t were built with a chance to look at that GPU yet, and we’re actually thinking about testing it as it doesn’t appear to be it will be much faster compared to HD 3000. 48 CUDA cores having a 64-bit DDR3-1600 memory interface (12.8GB/s) is certainly not to write home about, and DX11 support is nearly meaningless on cheap hardware. However, NVIDIA (and AMD) have better graphics driver support than Intel, so it’s something to think about. We hope to get a second 14z using the upgrade GPU and CPU set for testing to see the way it fares, and it appears like Dell will charge about $100 extra for that GPU upgrade.
Dell packs in just about everything most users will require, including a single USB 3.0 Super Speed port around the back. (I’m not sure why they include just one SS port, because of the second USB port is appropriate next to it.) The inclusion of the optical drive in this thin laptop also warrants mention. Our test unit may be the base model, therefore we don’t have the GeForce GT 520M put into the mix, but that upgrade can be obtained should you want it. Display connectivity can also be reasonable, with a mini DisplayPort along with a full size HDMI port around the back of the laptop.


