The Latitude D505 In Pictures, Continued
By
Harald Thon,
published on March 9, 2004
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: does, everything, have, to, be, a, centrino
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: does, everything, have, to, be, a, centrino
Contents
- 1. Intentional Restraint
- 2. Special Features Of The Celeron M Compared To The Pentium M
- 3. Special Features Of The Celeron M Compared To The Pentium M, Continued
- 4. The Test System: Dell Latitude D505
- 5. The Latitude D505 In Pictures
- 6. The Latitude D505 In Pictures, Continued
- 7. Quickset: Power Management By Dell
6. The Latitude D505 In Pictures, Continued
A negative point that caught our attention in the test unit was the bad fit of the battery in the casing. A few tenths of a few millimeters of play between the battery and the casing not only cause the battery to rattle when transporting the unit, it is also not reflective of the PC's high-end pretenses.

Extensive connection possibilities on the backside of the notebook .
The sound of the stereo speakers is good but not earth-shattering. The music sounds better using headphones connected to a lineout jack. However, watch out: we learned the hard way that the maximum achievable sound level easily reaches the pain threshold.

The layout of the keyboard conforms to the usual standard, and important device functions such as WLAN or volume can be controlled with key combinations.

Good: Typical Dell - the power supply doubles as a cable winder for the power cord.
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