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Dell Latitude Dell Latitude D630 Dell’s Latitude laptop brand is specific- ally targeted at the business market which means that standardized parts are used throughout the line and are available for sev- eral years for support purposes, as opposed to the Dell Inspiron which is aimed at the consumer market and whose specifications change regularly. Whereas Dell may switch vendors on components several times over the course of a single model, the Latitude line generally retains identical components throughout its production. This design is in- tended to simplify maintenance and support tasks for large corporations, allowing com- ponents to be easily swapped between models. Dell Latitude computers are also built to Dell’s RoadReady specification which in- cludes a durable magnesium-alloy casing, in- ternal metal frames and Strike Zone shock protection in case the computer is dropped or suffers a severe impact. Many models also feature free-fall sensors or solid-state drives. Latitude models are also generally regarded to be more durable and higher quality than the consumer Inspiron line, and even above the premium Studio and XPS models. Latit- ude models have 3 year US-based support, as opposed to the 1 year warranty on other models. This, however, results in a price premium in the hundreds of dollars as op- posed to the consumer models. Latitude computers are also differentiated in their feature sets, due to their business fo- cus. For example, they often include security features such as smartcard and contactless smartcard, and TPM security, which are not usable for most consumers. A lid clasp (as op- posed to a magnetic latching system), Dis- playPort video out (as opposed to HDMI), and support for legacy standards are all results of the requirements of the business market. Current models The current series is the Latitude E-series, on the Exx00 revision. All E-series models have the Intel Centrino 2 (Montevina) chipset, as well as some variation of the Intel Celeron or Intel Core 2 Duo processors. The mainstream models are separated into two categories: es- sential and standard. The essential models are the E5400 and E5500, while the standard models are the E6400 and E6500. The Latit- ude series also include a number of specialty models. The E4200 and E4300 are ultra-port- able notebooks. The Latitude E6400 ATG is a ruggedized version of the E6400, and is Dell’s only semi-rugged offering. Even Dell’s fully-rugged offering, the XFR, has now transitioned from the D to the E series. The Latitude XT2 is a touch-screen convertible- tablet computer. These models all maintain high compatibility with the rest of the each other, greatly simplifying IT. • : 14.1" Essential • : 15.4" Essential • : 14.1" Mainstream • : 15.4" Mainstream • : 12.1" Ultraportable • : 13.3" Ultraportable • : 14.1" Semi-Rugged • : 14.1" Fully-Rugged • : 12.1" Touch Tablet Previous models The previous series is the Latitude D-series, on the Dx30 revision. The models are the D4x0 (12.1" Ultra Mobile), D5x1 (15,4" AMD From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 1 Processor Value model), D6x0 (14.1" Corpor- ate 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 D820, the D-series features wide aspect LCD screens: 12.1", 14.1", and 15.4" respectively. The Latitude D620 weighs 4.7 lb, and the base model includes a 1.67 GHz Intel Core Duo T2300 processor (667 MHz front-side- bus) and 2 MB (2 MB) of L2 cache. There is an option to upgrade to a Core 2 Duo T7X00 processor (667 MHz font-side-bus) with 4 MB of L2 cache. It comes standard with 512 MB of DDR2 RAM, expandable to 4 GB (4 GB), and four USB ports. For graphics, it offers the Intel Graphics Media Accelerator x3100, and an option to upgrade to NVIDIA discrete graphics at the expense of lower battery life. Latitude D6x0 series The Latitude D6x0 series is the 14"/14.1" cor- porate model. It aims to combine heavy-duty power with reasonable portability, and differs primarily from the 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, or a second bat- tery. All models have a smart card socket, PCMCIA socket, and 9-pin serial port, a "D- dock" port for docking station or port replic- ator, and have an internal socket for a 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 par- allel 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 connnections. Latitude D600 The D600 (and simultaneously-introduced D800) was Dell’s first business-oriented note- book based on the Pentium-M processor; it used the first-generation "Banias" 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 GPU Radeon 9000. 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. http://www.itfactory.co.uk/images/photos/ Dell-Latitude-D600-P4-512MB.jpg Many Latitude models had a near-clone In- spiron, in the case of the D610, it was the In- spiron 610M. Latitude D610 The D610 was an update of the D600 design; it used the same case design and very similar specs. The chipset was updated (to the "Sonoma" platform) and used DDR2 memory, and it used a second-generation "Dothan" Pentium M chips running on a 533 MT/s FSB (and available in higher speeds.) The location of one memory socket was moved to under- neath the keyboard. The D610 was available with either an Ati Mobility Radeon X300 dis- crete GPU or Intel integrated graphics. Many Latitude models had a near-clone In- spiron, in the case of the D610, it was the In- spiron 610M. Latitude D620 The D620 (and simultaneously-introduced D820) was Dell’s first business-oriented note- book with a dual core processor available. Initially available with the interim Core Duo ("Yonah") processors, it was sold with the first-generation mobile Core 2 ("Merom") chips once those became available from Intel in the Fall of 2006; both run on a 667MT/s bus. It was initial sold only with Intel integ- rated 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 intro- duced 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 ("533mhz") and PC2-5300 ("667mhz") memory. Although the D620 is capable of accepting 4gb of physical memory, because of Intel 945 chipset limitations, it makes at most 3.5gb of memory available to the installed operating system. There was no near-clone Inspiron model for the D620 Latitude D630 The D630 is an update of the D620 design; while it has been de-emphasized in favor of the E-series, it is the only D-series model still From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 2 available new as of April 2009. It differed most significantly in being based on the "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 pro- cessor 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 IEEE1394 port. It uses DDR2 memory and is compatible with both PC2-5300 ("667mhz") and PC2-6400 ("800m- hz") memory. There was no near-clone Inspiron model for the D630. Latitude D630c The D630c was a slight variant model of the D630; it featured a "manageable" version of the motherboard chipset, and base configura- tion was slightly more powerful. Except for the chipset management, all of those "base features" were available as options on the regular D630. Latitude D8x0 series The Latitude D8x0 series is the 15.4" corpor- ate model; unlike the D6x0 series, all feature a widescreen form factor. All are two spindle designs, with a "D-bay" modular bay which can interchange optical drives, 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 sta- tion or port replicator, and have an internal socket for a 802.11 wireless card. The D800 was Dell’s first widescreen Lat- itude model. The D8x0 series models roughly parallel the technology in the D6x0 models, other than for screen size; they do not share a bat- tery form factor with the D6x0 series. The D820 and D830 add an ExpressCard socket, not available in the D6x0 series. The near-clone Inspirons for the D800 and D810 were the Inspiron 8500 and 8600; there were no near-clones of the D820/D830 Latitude D5x0 series 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 fixed-optical-drive, 2-spindle devices, 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 D531 was an AMD-based model, and less closely related to the other Dx30-series models. Latitude D4x0 series The D400 and D410 were 12" non- widescreen ultra-portable notebooks, roughly following the technology of the comparable generations of the series. The D400 came with a ULV Pentium M (Bania). 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 1.06GHz or Intel Core Duo U2500 ULV 1.2GHz. The D430 came with either an Intel Core Solo U1400 ULV 1.2GHz or Intel Core Duo U7600 1.2Ghz. 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 ex- ample, the D420 uses the parallel ATA hard drive (1.8") rather than the SATA (2.5") inter- face in the D520/620/820. Other models The Latitude ATG is a highly-toughened ver- sion of the D630, and is Dell’s only semi- rugged offering, while their fully-rugged of- fering consists of the XFR. The Latitude XT is a touch-screen convertible-tablet computer. These models still maintain high compatibil- ity with the rest of the Latitude family. Latitude XT problems In July 2008, Dell released multi-touch touch- screen drivers for the Latitude XT Tablet, claiming the "industry’s first convertible tab- let with multi-touch capabilities."[11] Dell has partnered with N-trig, providers of DuoSenseTM technology, combining pen, ca- pacitive touch and multi-touch in a single From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 3 device. N-trig’s DuoSense dual-mode digit- izer uses both pen and zero-pressure capacit- ive touch to provide a true Hands-onTM com- puting 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..[1] The N-Trig digitizer interfaces to the XT by an internal USB port. .[2] Users re- port 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 re- ports that certain other drivers, such as iTunes Helper, may cause this or a similar problem. Other users report no problems from iTunes.[3] 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.".[4] There have also been reports that the driver may crash, cata- strophically 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 pro- gram will not un-install if it doesn’t recognize the N-Trig hardware. In this case, the altern- atives 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 refer- ences to N-Trig, then re-install the N-Trig software, or (3) do a complete re-install of Windows.[5] 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. Links to user reports of the Dell XT - N- Trig problem: • Tablet Touchscreen Died : Latitude XT : NtrigApplet Can’t connect to driver • How Many N-trig Driver Problems Are There? 2,3,?? • Dell Needs Your Help - Digitizer Not Found Issues • Can’t connect to driver" How common is the issue? • Multitouch Problem? • XT Tablet has two critical flaws (currently) • Latititude XT N-Trig software uninstall leaves Digitizer unusable • Dell and N-Trig: I’ve Had It Latitude D610 problems Some Dell Latitude D610 units with a dedic- ated 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. [6][7][8][9][10] NVidia GPU problems Some D620, D820, D630,and D830 models with NVidia mobile GPUs have experienced GPU overheating problems. System Configuration • Processor: Pentium M, Intel Core Duo, Intel Core Solo or Core 2 Duo • Screen: Depending on the model selected screen size varies from 12.1 inches WXGA on the X1 to a 15.4 inches WUXGA on the D830. Widescreen have been available since the D420, D620 and D800. • Operating System: Choice of Windows XP Home or Professional and Windows Vista Home Premium, Business or Ultimate (previously Windows 98/ME and Windows 2000) • Hard Drive: Range from 80 GB to 250GB GB hard drives (previously 4-8 GB), or 32-128 GB solid state drives. • Ports: Features a wide range of ports including: two to four (Only for D620 and D820) USB 2.0 (including one via D/bay connector); IEEE 1394; VGA; Fast (10/ 100) or Gigabit (10/100/1000) Ethernet via RJ-45 port; modem; Audio; SDI/O, CF card slots. Previously: PS/2, VGA, parallel, audio in/ out, USB 1.1, two PCMCIA slots, two front bays: one usually used for main battery, one usually used for CD drive. A floppy disk drive could be used in the modular bay or externally on a cable to the parallel port.[11] From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 4 C series 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 4M). A Latitude C500, ready for use 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 acceler- ator 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. The most popular of the C-series included the C800, C810, C840, and later the C640. The later C-series models mostly had near clones sold as the Inspiron 4000 and 8000 series: • C840 cloned as the Inspiron 8200 • C810 cloned as the Inspiron 8100 • C800 cloned as the Inspiron 8000 • C640 cloned as the Inspiron 4150 • C610 cloned as the Inspiron 4100 • C600 cloned as the Inspiron 4000 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 modu- lar bay battery. It used a Pentium 4M pro- cessor and DDR SDRAM. Battery recall of 2006 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, D800, and D810 models were prone to bursting into flames, or even exploding:[2][3] 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 replace- ments arrived.[4] Problematic Sony batteries led to battery recall programs at other laptop companies, including Hitachi[5], Toshiba [6], Lenovo (IBM)[7] and Apple[8]. Tech Specs E-Family D-Family C-Family * Optional X-Family L-Family CS-Family History E-Family • 12 August 2008: E Family announced D-Family • 28 June 2007: D430 announced • 9 May 2007: D630, D830, D531 announced • 16 January 2007: ATG D620 announced • 20 June 2006: D420 announced • 2 May 2006: D520 announced • 29 March 2006: D620, D820 announced From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 5 Memory Video Model Chipset Processor type Architecture Memory module socket Maximum memory Memory clock speed Video type Core Frequency Video contr E6400 Intel GM45/ PM45 Intel Core 2 Duo, up to T9800 at 2.93GHz DDR2 SDRAM SODIMM 8 GB 800 MHz Integrated Intel or NVIDIA Quadro 580 MHz NVIDI Quadr NVS 1 or Inte GMA 4500M E6500 Intel GM45/ PM45 Intel Core 2 Duo, up to T9800 at 2.93GHz DDR2 SDRAM SODIM 8 GB 800 MHz Integrated Intel or NVIDIA Quadro NVIDI Quadr NVS 1 or Inte GMA 4500M • 26 April 2005: D510 announced • 1 February 2005: D410, D610 and D810 announced • 12 January 2004: D505 announced • 19 May 2003: D400 announced • 10 April 2003: D500 announced • 12 March 2003: D-family (D600, D800) announced Ultra-Portables • 28 June 2007: D430 announced • 30 March 2005: X1 announced • 29 July 2003: X300 announced • 6 May 2002: X200 announced • 4 October 2000: LS H500ST announced Value • 6 November 2006: 131L announced • 8 March 2005: 110L announced • 13 April 2004: 100L announced • 120L C-Family • 11 July 2002: C640 announced • 12 November 2001: C400 announced • 25 September 2000: C600, C800 announced • 25 October 1999: CPx H500GT and CPt V466GT announced 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 • 14 June 1999: CPi R400GT, CPi A400XT, and CPi A366ST announced • 4 May 1999: CPt-line announced • 5 January 1999: CPi A366XT and A300ST announced • CPi D266XT (BIOS Ph 7/30/98-2001): PII-266, 512KB cache, Intel i440BX; 13.3 XGA 1024x768 TFT; 256MB 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. • CP-line • 1997: C-family announced From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 6 Memory Video Model Inspiron cousin Chipset Processor type Architecture Memory module socket Maximum memory Memory clock speed Video type D400 Intel 855PM Intel Cent- rino M /Pentium M ULV(Bania) 2.5 V 266 MHz DDR SDRAM two user-ac- cessible DDR SDRAM sockets 2048 MB Intel UM integrat D410 Intel 915GM Intel Cent- rino M /Pentium M ULV (Dothan) D420 Intel 945GMS Intel Core Solo ULV, Intel Core Duo U2500 1.2 GHz 1.8V MHz DDR2 SDRAM One user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM socket, 512 MB DDR2 SDRAM soldered on motherboard 1536 MB 533 MHz Intel UM integrat D430 Intel 945 GMS Intel Core Solo ULV, Intel Core 2 Duo ULV (533MHz FSB) 1.8V MHz DDR2 SDRAM One user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM socket, 1 GB DDR2 SDRAM soldered on motherboard 2048 MB 533 MHz Intel UM integrat D500 Intel 855GM D505 Intel 855GME D510 Intel 915GM Intel Penti- um M 730, 2Mb L2 Chace, 533MHz FSB / Intel Celeron M 1.8V MHz DDR2 SDRAM Two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 512Mb (2x256Mb) / 256Mb 400MHz Intel UM integrat From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 7 D520 Intel 945GM (Core Duo), 940GML (Celeron M) Intel Core Duo, Intel Core 2 Duo, Intel Celeron M Two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 2048 MB (940GML); 4096 MB (945GM) 533/667 MHz Intel UM integrat D530 Intel 965GM D531 AMD M690T AMD Turi- on 64 X2 1.8 V DDR2 SDRAM Two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 4096 MB 667 MHz ATi (AM Integrat D600[12][13] Intel 855PM 80536 Pen- tium M Banias (1MB L2) or Dothan (2MB L2) 1.3, 1.4, 1.6, 1.8 GHz (400 MHz FSB) DDR SDRAM (DDR166/ PC2100) Two user-ac- cessible DDR1 SDRAM sockets 2048 MB 266 MHz Discrete (ATI) D610 Intel 915PM (ATI X300), 915GM (Intel GMA) Intel Penti- um M Dothan (2MB L2) up to 2.0 GHz DDR2 SDRAM two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 2048 MB 533 MHz Intel UM integrat (915GM ATI dis- crete (X300) D620 Intel 945GM (Intel), 945PM (NVIDIA) Intel Core Duo (533MHz FSB), Core 2 Duo (667 MHz FSB) 1.8 V DDR2 SDRAM two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 4096 MB 667 MHz Intel UM integrat (945GM NVIDIA discrete (945PM D630 Intel 965GM Intel Core 2 Duo (800 MHz FSB) 1.8V DDR2 SDRAM Two user-ac- cessible DDR2 4096 MB 667 MHz Intel UM integrat NVIDIA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 8 SDRAM sockets Quadro NVS 135 D631 AMD RS690T chipset AMD Turi- on 64 X2 Dual Core D800 Intel 855PM 80536 Pen- tium M Banias (1MB L2) or Dothan (2MB L2) 1.3, 1.4, 1.6, 1.8 GHz (400 MHz FSB) DDR SDRAM Two user-ac- cessible DDR1 SDRAM sockets 2048 MB 400 MHz nVidia GeForce 440 Go D810 Intel 915PM Intel Penti- um M Dothan (2MB L2) up to 2.0 GHz DDR2 SDRAM two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 2048 MB 533 MHz ATI dis- crete (X300) D820 Intel 945GM (Intel), 945PM (NVIDIA) Intel Core Duo (533MHz FSB), Core 2 Duo (667 MHz FSB) 1.8 V DDR2 SDRAM two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 4096 MB 667 MHz D830 Intel 965GM Intel Core 2 Duo (800 MHz FSB) 1.8V DDR2 SDRAM Two user-ac- cessible DDR2 SDRAM sockets 4096 MB 667 MHz Intel UM integrat NVIDIA Quadro NVS 135M, NVIDIA Quadro NVS 140 References [1] Multi-touch display giving Dell Latitude XT users fits? [2] n-trig: Failure to open Device [1] [3] Dell Needs Your Help - Digitizer Not Found Issues [4] Dell Latitude XT Multi-Touch Screen Has Digitizer Issues From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 9 Memory Video Model Inspiron cousin Chip set CPU type Architecture Memory module socket Max RAM RAM clock rate Video type Clock rate Video adapter V m C400 Intel 830M Intel PIII Mobile PC133 SDRAM two SODIMM sockets; one user- accessible 1 GB 133 MHz integrated with Intel 830M chip set 166 MHz Intel UMA integrated graphics 3 o M C500 I4000 Intel 440BX Intel Celeron Mobile mini- ZIF PC100 (spe- cially selec- ted RAM) two SODIMM Sockets 512 MB 100 MHz ATi Rage 128-chip 133 MHz ATi Mobil- ity Radeon M3 8 C510 I4000 Intel 830M Intel Celeron (PIII- based) Mobile PC133 SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 1GB 133 MHz ATI Mobility Radeon M6P 1 C540 I4150 Intel 845M Mobile Intel Celeron PC2100 DDR SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 1 GB 266 MHz ATI Mobility Radeon 7500C 3 C600 I4000 Intel 440BX Intel PIII Mobile PC100 SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 512 MB 100 MHz ATI Mobility M3 8 C610 I4100 Intel 830M Intel PIII Mobile PC133 SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 1 GB 133 MHz ATI Mobility Radeon M6P 1 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 10 C640 I4150 Intel 845M Intel P4-M PC2100 DDR SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 1 GB 266 MHz ATI Mobility Radeon 7500C 3 C800 I8000 Intel 815E Intel PIII Mobile PC100 SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 512 MB 100 MHz ATI Mobility M4 3 o M C810 I8100 Intel 815E Intel PIII Mobile PC133 SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 512 MB 133 MHz nVidia GeForce 2Go! 1 o M C840 I8200 Intel 845MP Intel P4-M PC2100 DDR SDRAM two user- accessible SODIMM sockets 1 GB 266 MHz 220 MHz nVidia GeForce4 440 Go 6 CPx J650GT I3800 Intel PIII Mobile ATI Rage Pro Mobility 4 [5] WARNING: Latititude XT N-Trig software uninstall leaves Digitizer unusable [6] http://support.dell.com/support/topics/ global.aspx/support/dsn/en/ document?c=us&cs=19&dl=false&l=en&s=dhs&docid=F3787DCCC033918BE030030ABB627371&d [7] http://www.neilslade.com/ DellLatitudeAudioBuzzNoiseUSB.html [8] http://www.notebookreview.com/ default.asp?newsID=2472 [9] http://support.dell.com/support/topics/ global.aspx/support/dsn/en/ document?c=us&cs=19&dl=false&l=en&s=dhs&docid=F3787DCCC033918BE030030ABB627371&d [10]http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/dell- latitude-d610/ 1996-3121_7-31268759.html?ctype=msgid&messageSiteID=7&messageID=1010532&cval=1010532 [11] "Dell Laptops/Notebooks". http://www.dell.com/content/products/ category.aspx/ latit?c=us&cs=555&l=en&s=biz. Retrieved on 2008-09-27. [12]Bruzzese, Stephanie (2003-03-14). "CNET Editors’ Review: Dell Latitude D600". CNET Networks, Inc.. http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/dell- latitude-d600/ 4505-3121_7-20906166.html. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. [13] "Dell Delivers New Family Of Innovative Latitude Notebook omputers". Dell Computer Corp. 2003-03-12. http://www1.us.dell.com/content/topics/ global.aspx/corp/pressoffice/en/2003/ 2003_03_12_rr_002. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 11 Memory Video Model Inspiron cousin Chipset Processor type Architecture Memory mod- ule socket Maximum memory Memory clock speed Video type C F X1 Intel 915GMS Intel Pen- tium M DDR2 one user-ac- cessible SODIMM socket 256 + 1024 400 MHz integrated with Intel 915GMS chip set 13 X200 Intel 830MG Intel Mobile Pentium III PC133 SDRAM one user-ac- cessible SODIMM socket 128 + 512 133 MHz integrated with Intel 830MG chip set 16 X300 300M Intel 855GM Intel Mobile Pentium PC2100 SDRAM one user-ac- cessible SODIMM socket 128 + 1024 266 MHz integrated with Intel 855GM chip set 13 XT Intel ULV U7700 Intel Core 2 Duo DDR2-667 SDRAM two (one integ- rated+one user accessible) 1 + 2 GB 1.33 GHz ATI Integ- rated Graphics Radeon Xpress 1250 Memory Video Model Inspiron cousin Chipset Processor type Architecture Memory module socket Maximum memory Memory clock speed Video type Core Frequency V c L400 2100 Intel 440BX Intel Mobile Pentium III SDRAM one 144-pin SODIMM 256 MB 100 MHz A i LS 2000 Intel 440BX Intel Mobile Pentium III SDRAM one 144-pin SODIMM 256 MB 100 MHz N N Memory Video Model Inspiron cousin Chipset Processor type Architecture Memory module socket Maximum memory Memory clock speed Video type Core Frequency V c CS R Intel 440BX SDRAM SODIM 512 MB 66 MHz N M 2 CSx Intel 443BX Intel Mobile Pentium III SDRAM SODIM 512 MB 66 MHz N M 2 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dell Latitude 12 External links • Dell Laptops Buying Guide Dell’s official laptop buying guide site • Dell USA Medium & Large Business, Latitude Notebooks • Dell Financial Services Direct Sales Dell’s off-lease desktop/notebook sales site • Geekonomics blog E-series review on CNET Asia • Dell Latitude Standard Memory Specification Guide Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dell_Latitude" Categories: Dell laptops This page was last modified on 14 May 2009, at 16:48 (UTC). 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