Cadalyst - January 2008 - (Page 34) firstlooks Dell Precision M4300 Weighing just 6.3 lbs, this mobile workstation is fully certified for those who use design software on the road or in the field. By Ron LaFon faster than 802.11g — and both integrated mobile broadband technology and 10/100/1000 networking capability. Also included was an 8x DVD±RW optical drive and an Intel Pro/Wireless 4965 mini card. A 1394 controller was integrated, as was audio. An integrated touchpad with UPEK fingerprint reader provided navigation and security. All Cadalyst testing was done with Microsoft Windows XP with Service Pack 2. Graphics on the Dell M4300 were handled by an NVIDIA Quadro FX360M graphics card that featured 512 MB of onboard memory. NVIDIA drivers v.6.14.11.119 were preinstalled and used for the benchmark tests, with the addition of NVIDIA’s MAXtreme 9.00.01 accelerated 3ds Max driver for part of the tests. The battery in the Dell Precision M4300 is a nine-cell lithium ion battery that proved to have good lasting power. With all the polling services such as Bluetooth disabled, the fully charged battery lasted 3 hours, 35 minutes sitting idle. With a continuous loop of the Cadalyst C2008 benchmark running, the battery life was 1 hour, 16 minutes. I ran the Cadalyst C2008 benchmark on the M4300 with AutoCAD 2008, using the native AutoCAD drivers for both OpenGL and Direct3D. The C2008 total index score was 157 with the OpenGL drivers and 166 with Direct3D. Running dual side-by-side sessions, the combined C2008 total index score was 321 with Direct3D. For the next benchmark, I performed the MAXBench 4 benchmark with Autodesk 3ds Max 9 in three different configurations — with the native OpenGL, native Direct3D, and NVIDIA MAXtreme 9.00.01 accelerated driver. The averaged high/low scores for the benchmark were 53.47 with the OpenGL driver, 82.11 with the native I n late June 2007, Dell made a flurry of new product announcements, among them the introduction of the Dell Precision M4300 mobile workstation. I was finally able to get my hands on one to evaluate for Cadalyst readers. Like all systems in the Dell Precision workstation line, the M4300 is fully certified on a wide array of design and digital content creation (DCC) software and is designed for users who want to be able to use these applications on the road or in the field. Weighing in at a relatively trim starting weight of 6.3 lbs, the M4300 measures a compact 1.39” x 14.2” x 10.34” and features a 15.4” wideaspect ratio WUXGA screen with a native resolution of 1,920 x 1,200. The M4300 is based on an Intel Core2 Duo T7700 dual-core microprocessor rated at 2.40 GHz. The unit I received for testing included 4 GB of 667-MHz DDR2 RAM and a 160 MB SATA 7200 RPM hard drive with DataBurst cache. Dualchannel memory with 36-bit addressing allows the M4300 to use all 4 GB of the installed memory. Additional features of the Dell Precision M4300 mobile workstation included next-generation 802.11n support — which is as much as five times The Dell Precision M4300 is a compact mobile workstation for those who need to use workstation-class applications on the go. Dell Precision M4300 Mobile Workstation Pros: Good midrange performance; good battery life; compact and relatively lightweight. Cons: None significant. Price: $1,579–$3,335 Dell 800.456.3355 www.dell.com Direct3D driver, and 79.92 with the MAXtreme driver. The final benchmark was the full SPECviewperf 10 benchmark (www. spec.org), which produced the following scores: 25.61 for 3dsmax-04, 26.14 for catia-02, 17.24 for ensight-03, 53.05 for maya-02, 27.37 for proe-04, 34.02 for sw-01, 6.29 for tcvis-01, and 6.26 for ugnx-01. The base price of the Dell M4300 is $1,579, but equipped as it was for this review, the price is $3,335. Warranty coverage for the M4300 is three years for labor, parts, and onsite service, which is the Dell Economy Plan base warranty. Dell’s warranty coverage includes 24-hour replacement parts and lifetime 24-hour telephone support. Although the Dell M4300 is neither as beefy nor powerful as Dell’s M6300 mobile workstation, its trim weight, excellent design, and extensive certifications make it a useful product for users who need a mid-range mobile workstation. c Ron LaFon, a contributing editor for Cadalyst, is a writer, editor, and a computer graphics and electronic publishing specialist from Atlanta, Georgia. He is a principal at 3Bear Productions in Atlanta. 34 January 2008 | cadalyst | www.cadalyst.com http://www.spec.org http://www.spec.org http://www.dell.com http://www.cadalyst.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Cadalyst - January 2008 Cadalyst - January 2008 Contents Editor's Window Cad Central Chasing the Dolphins CAD that Won’t Break the Bank AliasStudio 2008 — Design and Visualization Software VectorWorks 2008 — CAD/BIM Authoring Software Dell Precision M4300 — Mobile Workstation What’s in Store for 2008? Low- or No-Cost CAD Goliath Reinvented Doin’ the DEED Cad Cartoon Issue Indexes The Return of Hot Tip Harry Cadalyst - January 2008 Cadalyst - January 2008 - Cadalyst - January 2008 (Page Cover1) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Cadalyst - January 2008 (Page Cover2) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Cadalyst - January 2008 (Page 3) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 8) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 9) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 10) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 11) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Cad Central (Page 12) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Cad Central (Page 13) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Chasing the Dolphins (Page 14) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Chasing the Dolphins (Page 15) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Chasing the Dolphins (Page 16) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Chasing the Dolphins (Page 17) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 18) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 19) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 20) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 21) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 22) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 23) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 24) Cadalyst - January 2008 - CAD that Won’t Break the Bank (Page 25) Cadalyst - January 2008 - AliasStudio 2008 — Design and Visualization Software (Page 26) Cadalyst - January 2008 - AliasStudio 2008 — Design and Visualization Software (Page 27) Cadalyst - January 2008 - AliasStudio 2008 — Design and Visualization Software (Page 28) Cadalyst - January 2008 - AliasStudio 2008 — Design and Visualization Software (Page 29) Cadalyst - January 2008 - VectorWorks 2008 — CAD/BIM Authoring Software (Page 30) Cadalyst - January 2008 - VectorWorks 2008 — CAD/BIM Authoring Software (Page 31) Cadalyst - January 2008 - VectorWorks 2008 — CAD/BIM Authoring Software (Page 32) Cadalyst - January 2008 - VectorWorks 2008 — CAD/BIM Authoring Software (Page 33) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Dell Precision M4300 — Mobile Workstation (Page 34) Cadalyst - January 2008 - What’s in Store for 2008? (Page 35) Cadalyst - January 2008 - What’s in Store for 2008? (Page 36) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Low- or No-Cost CAD (Page 37) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Low- or No-Cost CAD (Page 38) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Doin’ the DEED (Page 39) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Doin’ the DEED (Page 40) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Doin’ the DEED (Page 41) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Doin’ the DEED (Page 42) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 43) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 44) Cadalyst - January 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 45) Cadalyst - January 2008 - The Return of Hot Tip Harry (Page 46) Cadalyst - January 2008 - The Return of Hot Tip Harry (Page Cover3) Cadalyst - January 2008 - The Return of Hot Tip Harry (Page Cover4)
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