Having had the chance to check out Toshiba's and HP's impending enterprise-class notebooks, more and more I'm convinced spending up is the way to go when it comes to buying a notebook that both looks and feels like quality. While Dell's Precision notebooks are still a little boxy and aren't quite the ladykillers the new HP EliteBooks are, there's still something very austere and functional about them that puts consumer-grade laptops from any manufacturer to shame. If you're one of the people that didn't much care for Dell's new XPS line, these may be for you.

Dell has announced two new mobile workstations, the Precision M4600 and M6600, 15.6" and 17.3" respectively. Both are based on Intel's Sandy Bridge platform, supporting up to 32GB of DDR3-1333 (16GB of DDR3-1600) in four DIMM slots along with ramping all the way up to the 55-watt Core i7-2920XM, and each offers a range of choices from AMD's FirePro Mobility GPUs and NVIDIA's Quadro GPUs. Best of all, Dell is offering bare-minimum 72% gamut displays on each of these notebooks along with an optional upgrade to an IPS RGB-LED display on the M4600. Let's break them down.

The 15.6" Precision M4600's screen options start from a basic 1366x768 screen, move up to a multi-touch enabled 1366x768 screen, then on to a 1080p screen, and then finally Dell's PremierColor IPS RGB-LED backlit 1080p screen. GPU options include the AMD FirePro M5950 Mobility Pro with 1GB of GDDR5 (GPU equivalent to the 480-shader Radeon HD 6670), the NVIDIA Quadro 1000M with 2GB of GDDR3 (GPU equivalent to the 96-core GeForce GT 540M, depending on the clocks), and the NVIDIA Quadro 200M with 2GB of GDDR3 (GPU equivalent to the 192-core GeForce GTX 460M, but without GDDR5 and only a 128-bit memory interface). Additionally, the M4600 can be configured with a 128GB SSD mini-card to supplement the hard drive; two 128GB SSDs can be configured to run in RAID 0 or RAID 1. It offers virtually every type of connectivity under the sun: gigabit ethernet, 802.11n, Bluetooth 3.0, WWAN, 2x USB 2.0, 2x USB 3.0, FireWire, eSATA, HDMI, DisplayPort, VGA, ExpressCard/54, and a SmartCard reader. The M4600 starts at $1,678 and will be available on May 10th.

Moving up to the Papa Bear, the 17.3" Precision M6600 brings to bear all of the same processor options and connectivity as the M4600, but graphics, display, and storage options are improved. This time, the display starts at a basic 1600x900 panel, but can be upgraded to a 1080p display with or without multi-touch capability. It won't be launching with an IPS display option, but Dell expects availability soon after. Graphics get a boost as well, allowing the following: the AMD FirePro M8900 Mobility Pro with 2GB of GDDR5 (GPU equivalent to the 960-shader Radeon HD 6970M), the NVIDIA Quadro 3000M with 2GB of GDDR5 (240 cores, likely using a GF106/GF116 die, which means roughly GTX 470M with more bandwidth but fewer cores), the NVIDIA Quadro 4000M with 2GB of GDDR5 (336 cores, again with a GF106/GF116 core, but now surpassing GTX 470M), and topping out at the NVIDIA Quadro 5010M with a whopping 4GB of GDDR5 (a full 384 cores, a full-fledged GF104/GF114, matching up with the GTX 485M). Besides the graphics and processor choices, the M6600 adds a second 2.5" drive bay to go alongside the first bay and the offered 128GB mini-card SSD, and these three can be configured together into RAID 0, RAID 1, or even RAID 5. The M6600 starts at $2,158 and will be available on May 10th.

Besides these two notebooks, Dell is offering the Precision R5500 rackmount workstation. This monster is capable of supporting up to five full-length, full-height PCIe x16 cards, dual graphics cards, up to 192GB of memory, up to five SATA drives and six SAS drives, and runs one or two Xeon 5600 series processors. These chips are still based on Westmere technology as opposed to Sandy Bridge, but combined can allow for a total of twelve physical cores and twenty-four logical cores. The R5500 starts at $2,551 and will be available in the states and Europe on May 3rd, showing up in the Asia-Pacific region a week later on the 10th.

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  • ilkhan - Tuesday, April 26, 2011 - link

    I'm running a E6410 right now, but drop the price a bit and add an IPS 1600x900 display option, and I could be convinced to purchase an M4600. But my plan has been to wait for an Ivy Bridge for my next laptop, so maybe the next gen version.
  • haolaiwu - Wednesday, April 27, 2011 - link

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  • ChuckDriver - Wednesday, April 27, 2011 - link

    Does ATI have a technology allowing on-the-fly switching between the Intel integrated graphics and its own discrete GPU that is comparable to Optimus?

    If not, I would hesitate to select a Precision laptop with the FirePro, although I'm assuming that the Quadros feature Optimus.
  • Penti - Wednesday, April 27, 2011 - link

    I would rather have an HP mobile workstation then this. To bad to not see a better offer from Dell here. It's decent and is a good laptop though, but I would like to have a few more options. It also looks rather bulky because of the excessively squared design. Personally I would rather go with a latitude rather then this, if it's not needed for at specific reason. I'm guessing the Dell will be prices ridiculous with the 1080p anti-glare IPS screen, quadcore and so on.
  • dshirsh - Tuesday, May 3, 2011 - link

    Are these workstations equipped with SATA III? With the new generation of SSDs hitting the market this is virtually mandatory. Chances are that if you spend the bucks on the computer you'll spend the bucks to get the fastest storage device for it.
  • tyea - Wednesday, May 4, 2011 - link

    I bought the laptop as soon as it came out. The class action law suite covered the NVidia quadro 1600M included in my configuration, but not during the time I bought it. Apparently, I bought it one month to early to be covered. I had the ball grid array re-soldered at a computer shop for $275, but the graphics solder card failed again from overheating about 6 months later. So now I have a non functioning dell laptop that I spent allot of money on new. It failed one month after my 3 year service contract expired. I'll never buy a Dell product again because they did not back their top of the line product for a repeat customer, with a known manufacturing defect.
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