

Dialing back either a handful of the graphical options or lowering the resolution to something more reasonable (such as a full 1080p) got rid of those stutters entirely. I experience the occasional stutter – and a tiny bit of lag – but overall it was damned impressive. I set the resolution to the full "4K" resolution (which I was surprised so many games supported) and set every single graphics setting to the highest level. This is a strategy game, but it's a very 3D one (and can be rather taxing on a system). So I loaded up Steam and installed a few games that I had a high level of familiarity with, and I was consistently blown away.Įxample: I installed Civilization V (the Linux version, naturally). One of the greatest tests of any video card – in my humble opinion – is to throw a few video games at it.
#Desktop destroyer 4 android
That's as much RAM as this, very nice, Nexus 9 Android tablet sitting next to me has… in total. But also the faster RAM, the solid state drive, and the (far more advanced) graphics card in the M3800. Part of the difference is, surely, the faster processor. In other words: The M3800 was (nearly) 6 times faster, and would save me almost an hour of rendering time. See also: Review: Google's Nexus 9 is an awesome tablet, with some caveats I copied over that project to the Dell M3800 and used the exact same software ( Kdenlive) and settings to render the video. One of my most recent video projects took roughly 70 minutes to render (1080p) on that Sony machine. To give you an idea of the speed here – I have a Sony-built Core i5 laptop (with 8GB of RAM, and a pretty standard 5200 rpm laptop hard drive) that I have been using for video editing work. To get this out of the way right now: It's fast. Let's put aside that crazy high-resolution screen for a moment and focus on the rest of the hardware. Enough horsepower to make Tim "The Toolman" Taylor proud (with a price tag to match – this configuration runs around $2,200). This is the resolution that "UHD" or "4K" TV sets use.

15.6-inch Ultra HD touchscreen display (3840x2160 resolution).Nvidia Quadro K1100M graphics w/2GB of RAM.Intel Core i7 (quad core at 2.3GHz w/6MB of cache).The model I got my nerdy little hands on was packed with the following specs: This beast of a machine is a desktop destroyer. "Desktop Replacement" doesn't really do this rig justice.
