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Dell Unveils New XPS Gaming Desktop

Dell just announced their latest gaming desktop, the XPS 710 H2C Edition Gaming Desktop.

The computer comes in a black chassis and includes some fancy new two-stage cooling system as well as an Intel quad-core overclocked processor.

Dell's H2C cooling system is a custom two-stage process. First, a liquid-to-air heat exchanger that works like a car's radiator removes most of the heat from the processor. Then, a fluid chiller removes more heat with ceramic-based thermoelectric cooling (TEC) modules like those used in space shuttles to transfer heat from the sunny side to the cold, dark side in space. Sensor controls help prevent the formation of frost or condensation by helping to keep the processor slightly above ambient room temperature.

The base $5,500 computer comes with:
— Factory-installed Dell H2C two-stage cooling solution including a fan, liquid-to-air heat exchanger, TEC fluid chiller, and circuitry that regulates the fan and TEC voltage to cool the processor efficiently during normal and over-clocked operation

— Intel(R) Core Extreme QX6700 quad-core processor factory overclocked to 3.2 GHz

— Two NVIDIA(R) GeForce(R) 8800 GTX graphics cards with quad scalable link interface technology for high-definition gaming resolution

— 4 GB(2) 667MHz DDR2 memory for fast loading of programs and screens

— Dual 160 GB(3) 10,000 RPM hard drives (with room for two additional hard drives)

— Dual optical drives

— Dell UltraSharp(TM) 2007WFP 20-inch widescreen flat-panel monitor with Dell AS501 flat-panel mount speakers

— The Razer Tarantula(TM) gaming keyboard and Razer Copperhead(TM) gaming mouse

— Microsoft(R) Windows(R) XP Media Center Edition 2005 operating system

— One-year limited warranty(4) with designated sales service and support queue

Hit the jump and the rest of the non-gaming announcements from Dell.

LAS VEGAS —(Business Wire)— Jan. 9, 2007 Dell (NASDAQ:DELL) added a high-performance desktop to its portfolio of XPS(TM) products, and introduced two new widescreen flat-panel displays and a Digital Home Media Suite, here today at the Consumer Electronics Show.

Details and availability of the new products are provided below. More information, including high-resolution images, is available at http://www.dell.com/ces2007news.

Dell XPS 710 H2C Edition Gaming Desktop

The XPS 710 H2Ceramic (H2C) Edition desktop comes in a midnight-black chassis and offers patent-pending cooling technology designed for serious gamers who want to push performance beyond tested limits. Dell developed the H2C design to better cool the processor, extend its life and help the system run more reliably than conventional cooling systems even when the system is overclocked. The Intel quad-core processor is factory overclocked(1) for extreme gaming and video editing, and backed by specialized XPS technicians.

Dell's H2C cooling system is a custom two-stage process. First, a liquid-to-air heat exchanger that works like a car's radiator removes most of the heat from the processor. Then, a fluid chiller removes more heat with ceramic-based thermoelectric cooling (TEC) modules like those used in space shuttles to transfer heat from the sunny side to the cold, dark side in space. Sensor controls help prevent the formation of frost or condensation by helping to keep the processor slightly above ambient room temperature.

The XPS 710 H2C Edition starts at $5,499 and is available worldwide. The base configuration includes:

— Factory-installed Dell H2C two-stage cooling solution including a fan, liquid-to-air heat exchanger, TEC fluid chiller, and circuitry that regulates the fan and TEC voltage to cool the processor efficiently during normal and over-clocked operation

— Intel(R) Core Extreme QX6700 quad-core processor factory overclocked to 3.2 GHz

— Two NVIDIA(R) GeForce(R) 8800 GTX graphics cards with quad scalable link interface technology for high-definition gaming resolution

— 4 GB(2) 667MHz DDR2 memory for fast loading of programs and screens

— Dual 160 GB(3) 10,000 RPM hard drives (with room for two additional hard drives)

— Dual optical drives

— Dell UltraSharp(TM) 2007WFP 20-inch widescreen flat-panel monitor with Dell AS501 flat-panel mount speakers

— The Razer Tarantula(TM) gaming keyboard and Razer Copperhead(TM) gaming mouse

— Microsoft(R) Windows(R) XP Media Center Edition 2005 operating system

— One-year limited warranty(4) with designated sales service and support queue

Dell UltraSharp(TM) 2707WFP 27-Inch Widescreen Flat Panel Monitor

Dell's first 27-inch monitor features a stylish, brushed aluminum bezel atop a black glass stand that can also tilt and swivel. The monitor's Dell TrueColor technology provides 92 percent color gamut coverage of the NTSC color space to gamers, photographers and digital media "prosumers" thereby enabling highly vibrant and vivid images such as deeper reds and crisper blues. The wider color spectrum expands capabilities for users whether they are editing video, working with CAD applications or enjoying the latest games. It's available immediately in the U.S. and starts at $1,399. Additional features include:

— 27-inch widescreen viewable image size

— Maximum resolution of 1920 x 1200 (WUXGA)

— 6 ms response time(5) with 1,000:1 contrast ratio

— Dell TrueColor Wide Cold-Cathode Fluorescent Lighting (Wide-CCFL) backlight that delivers deep and vibrant reds, greens and blues and accurate color representation

— Integrated 9-in-2 media card reader in a slim monitor bezel

— Beveled glass base with solid aluminum chassis

— Height-adjustable stand with tilt and swivel capabilities

— Four USB 2.0 ports for connecting devices such as digital cameras and printers

— Three-year limited warranty(4)

Dell E228WFP 22-Inch Widescreen Flat Panel Monitor

With a 5-millisecond response time(6), the Dell E228WFP widescreen flat panel LCD monitor presents images, documents, graphics and video with stunning detail, vivid color and smooth motion. The 22-inch widescreen display delivers price/performance and rich productivity features, and can also be used for watching videos and playing games. It's available immediately in the U.S. and starts at $329. Additional features include:

— 22-inch viewable image size

— Maximum resolution of 1680 x 1050

— Lets users view Web pages or documents side by side and run multiple applications simultaneously for improved productivity

— DVI-HDCP ready connectivity

— Tilt capability

— Wall-mountable for flexible installation and convenience (kit sold separately)

— Three-year limited warranty(4)

Dell Home Media Suite

For the first time, Dell is introducing a bundle of products that will gear up the family room — or any room — of a home. The bundle will enable customers to receive digital cable, including premium high-definition programming, and easily view or record it onto PCs.

The Home Media Suite, available in the United States after the introduction of Microsoft's Vista operation system later this month, will include the following:

— XPS 410 core 2 duo, 2GB memory, 1 terabatye RAID disk array, DVD/RW

— Loaded with Windows Vista when available

— Creative Precision Monitor speakers

— Full suite of entertainment software

— Creative Live! Voice webcam

— 27-inch flat panel monitor

— Dell Photo All in One 966 printer

— Linksys 802.11 draft N band router

— Linksys powerline AV bridge

— Digital cable tuner for premium HD TV

About Dell

Dell Inc. (NASDAQ:DELL) listens to customers and delivers innovative technology and services they trust and value. Uniquely enabled by its direct business model, Dell sells more systems globally than any other computer company, placing it No. 25 on the Fortune 500. For more information, visit http://www.dell.com. To get Dell news direct, visit http://www.dell.com/RSS.

Pricing, specifications, availability and terms of offers may change without notice. Taxes, fees and shipping and handling charges are extra, and vary. Dell cannot be responsible for pricing or other errors, and reserves the right to cancel orders arising from such errors.

(1) Overclocking may cause system instability and reduce the operating life of your system components. Dell Tech Support will verify the full functionality of the CPU at the factory default setting and support the CPU performance settings available within the system BIOS. Dell does not provide technical support for any hardware or software issues arising from any third party application, such as NVIDIA nTune 5.0, used to enable overclocking.

(2) The total amount of available memory will be less than 4GB. The amount less depends on the actual system configuration. To fully utilize 4GB or more of memory requires a 64-bit enabled processor and 64-bit operating system.

(3) For hard drives, GB means 1 billion bytes and TB equals 1 trillion bytes; actual capacity varies with preloaded material and operating environment and will be less. On Dimension, XPS, and Inspiron systems, for Norton Ghost 10, Norton 7 Restore and Dell DataSafe users, up to 25% of the stated hard drive capacity may be utilized by your system as dedicated backup space. With Dell Factory Image Restore installed, Windows Vista users will have 10GB of their hard drive capacity set aside for a recovery image.

(4) For a copy of our guarantees or limited warranties, please write Dell USA L.P., Attn: Warranties, One Dell Way, Round Rock, TX 78682. For more information, visit http://www.dell.com/warranty

(5) Typical response time is 6 ms from grey to grey and 16 ms from black to white.

(6) Typical response time is 5 ms from grey to grey.

1:00 PM on Tue Jan 9 2007
By Brian Crecente
1,527 views
33 comments

Comments

  • why on earth would anyone pay $5,500 for a gaming computer that will be out of date 6 months down the road?

    preposterous!

  • Someone needs to tell Dell, VooDooPC, Sony, PNY, and Apple that the economy isn't doing "that" good. I mean this is uber expensive price announcement day!.

  • Hah, good to see we're cashing in on the obsessed PC whore crowd. I'm glad I work on Powervault products and not that thing. I can only imagine the scorn the geeks buying that could give if something went wrong.

  • All that power and it only comes with Windows Media Center Edition?

    I'm perplexed.

  • All prices from Pricewatch

    Intel QX6700: ~$1000
    2x GeForce 8800 GTX: ~$1200
    4x 667MHz DDR2 1gb: ~$400
    2x 160gb SATA drives: ~$150
    2x "optical" drives (WTF?): ~$50
    Dell Widescreen 20": ~$300
    Motherboard (not listed): ~$400 (upper end estimate)
    Other "extras" including case: ~$300

    Total: $3800

    So unless the hi-tech cooling rig is $2000, this is an awful deal.

  • lmao @ spending $5500 on a DELL! if you are going to drop that kind of cash on a cutting edge pc at least have the brains to buy it from a high end boutique like voodoo.

    spending that much for a dell is like going to ruby tuesdays for one of their "prime" steaks instead of eating at a place like prime 112.

  • I was thinking the same thing as Anonononomous, why not go ahead and bundle vista with all that?

  • I love PC gaming, so much so that I kept my old 1 ghz machine simply to play DOS games that Windows XP is scared of. This brings me to my point: there's lots of old games out there that can be played on really simple machines...how many new games are worth close to six grand? The PC gaming industry isn't exactly booming right now...

    Ah well, it'll make a nice contest prize, I'm sure (also if someone were to just give me one I don't think I'd complain ;)


  • movie stars, pro atheletes, and various other multi-millionaires wont flinch at buying this badboy.

    when will DELL get smart and do a Louis Vuitton Edition?

    p.s. This rig will not be obsolete in 6 months. It will be completely badass for 3-4 years. 5 years if you don't mind Medium-to-Low settings when DX13/SM5.0 is released.

  • Holy hell, that's one ugly box.

  • "All that power and it only comes with Windows Media Center Edition?"

    Vista hasn't been released yet. All computers bought right now with XP include a free upgrade to Vista when it is released.

  • Yeah, they'll get a free upgrade to the crappiest version of Vista.

  • That's way too much for a system. Just learn to build one from scratch and save yourself a lot of money in the long run. These systems I always feel put the wrong impression on new pc gamers.

  • Yeah, they'll get a free upgrade to the crappiest version of Vista.

    isn't that in all versions of Vista!

    :-p

  • baberg, you're missing the cost of a TEC and water cooling system, plus the cost of bundled software... You're still paying an 800$ premium for DELL support which may or not be worth it..

    Stil, 1400$ for a 27" flat panel with 6ms response time and 1920x1200 aint too bad, especially considering it'll get discounted in the future.

  • Man is this stuff ever ridiculous. Not only is everything marked up in price, all the components are far too powerful for what anyone actually needs. 1.2k on freaking graphics cards!? For a few hundred dollars you could have a very, very good graphics card that will play any game smoothly with reasonable settings. Also notice they add the little disclaimer that you won't even be able to access all of your 4 GB of memory with the preinstalled OS!

    Everyone in the target market (PC gamers) is either already building their own PC's or is on their way towards learning how. It's only a rapidly dwindling population of people that are ignorant enough to buy these things. So the strategy of these companies is to milk them for all their worth while they still can.

  • I agree with rainfowalrus, I bought a Dell Gen 3 XPS two and a half years ago and I can still play Company of Heroes and BF2142 with no problems.

    However, I only paid $2500 for my comp, $5500 seems a little extreme for something to play games on (as someone else mentioned above.)

  • if they own alienware, why are they releasing a dell branded gaming pc again? i know the xps line is their gaming line or whatever, but cereal guys, cereal. no pc gamer i know would buy a dell...most of em' make thier own pc's anyway. buy still, i'd like to see what sort of demographic bothers to waste money on this.

  • I'm not sure what it looks like most: stage gear, an electric heater or a dialysis system for Cylons. Who could put that monstrosity on their desk and get away with it?

  • I believe that's a shiny space heater...

  • I wouldn't say no gamer buy's dell gaming machines. I know alot of gamers with Dell gaming PC's, I even have one and it works great, no problems. Honestly, this machine compared to a alienware is pretty budget. Dell kept the price pretty damn low for a high end gaming machine. if you notice that they offer only 667mhz dimms while alienware offers 800mhz dimms, that's pretty much $300 off the price tag. After your done configuring your alienware your price tag is close to 7k easy, while your dell is under 6k. Plus your getting a lquid cooling unit out of the deal, to me that's a damn good deal.

    I hope that cooling unit isn't a koolance. That would suck major ass.

  • I believe its a shiny space heater...

    thats was my observation as well in that Dell/1Up thread

  • ... that thing looks like a waffle iron.

  • so... basically

    people are paying 5.5 grand... for something I can get for 3.5?

    why the hell do you need 4GB RAM? That's murder... it's not needed, and is too much shit to deal with.

    they HAVE to overclock the quadcore, or else people would complain the dualcores are beating them('since there isn't anything that supports quadcore, YET)

    dual g80's, mehhh, just wait, the prices will go down, r600 anyone?


    Like I said

    CUSTOM FOR THE WIN BITCHES!

  • Is that the front panel? How's the optical drive is supposed to get out?

  • I heard it also comes with the new CTW interface port. thats worth the 6K alone.
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .....CTW = Control the world. :)

  • I was thinking space heater too! It's the PS3/Foreman Grill equivalent in the PC gaming world.

  • This story reminded me of a blog post a while discussing the on the conversations VoodooPC's president had with Michael Dell in the period leading up to Dell's Alienware purchase.

    Dell has become a huge company due to WalMart-esque efficiency... not innovation. They are really clueless on gaming in general. Its kind of ironic that they are now spending money to market a PC that will compete with the Alienware brand. They need to choose which brand to go with and throw everythign they have at the high-end PC market.

    This isn't a demographic they should give up on quite yet... I beleive high-end gaming PCs will see alot more sales growth in the future. Alot of PC gamers do not have the time (and $ constraints) that forced them to build PCs in their youth. I can only speak for myself, but now that I replaced a long line of "jobs" with a "career"(cue synical snickering), I have less time to feed my gamming addiction. I appreciate the value in buying a loaded gaming PC I wont have to worry about updating, servicing, soddering, ect.

    Sure, some of my h4x0r friends rag on my shiny boutique box (no, it isnt that monstrosity dell makes), but they dont work 8am-9pm every day.

    Just my 2c... I kind of got off-topic, but the VoodooPC blog link is below if anyone is interested:

    http://voodoopc.blogspot.com/2006/08/where-theres-smoke-th...

  • @Kadawg

    That is why they are both sexy. Like having your own server.

  • I think the best part of the design is the all heat from the tec cooler is being dumped right into the case. And peltiers are inefficient at cooling and dump off ALLOT of heat.

    And a similar CoolIt cooling system (hell its likely manufactured by CoolIt) costs 200-300 dollars.

  • All I want to know is will my hookshot be able to grab onto that grating on the front or is it that kind of grating that hookshots can't grab onto when it would allow me to go somewhere I wasn't supposed to go?

  • What bugs me the most about Dell (and this computer specifically) is all of the bloatware/malware/crapware that comes preinstalled. I bet that computer runs at 70% capability when first turned on.

    It will take many hours to get it running optimally, and then when you want to reinstall windows, guess what? You have to use Dells crap windows CD that contains all of the junk you spent hours fixing.
    Cheers!

  • anyone who says this is "overkill" clearly hasn't played Flight Simulator 10 yet.

    five words: 11 FPS on lowest setting.

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