Skip to main content

Dell is doing something it’s never done before to the XPS 13

A Dell XPS 13 Plus viewed from the side.
Digital Trends

Dell is flipping the XPS 13 on its head. In fact, it’s changing up its entire lineup of laptops with the addition of the new Snapdragon X Elite chip, which coincides with Microsoft’s push into the era of AI PCs.

Although we have five new laptops here, the XPS 13 definitely takes center stage. The XPS 13 is still one of the best laptops you can buy, depite the Plus redesign stirring up some controversy in the community (read our XPS 13 Plus review for more on that). This new model sports the Plus design with an edge-to-edge keyboard and capacitive touch buttons, along with an invisible haptic touchpad.

The Dell XPS 13 with a Snapdragon X Elite CPU.
Dell

The real goods are under the hood, however. This is the first XPS design powered by the Snapdragon X Elite processor, and one of the first laptops ever with the chip, for that matter. In the U.S., it comes with the X1 Elite, which is a 12-core chip that is capable of up to 4GHz on two cores, or 3.4GHz across all cores. It also packs Qualcomm’s Adreno GPU, but the more exciting addition is the Hexagon neural processing unit (NPU).

This NPU is the heart of a new era of AI PCs. This Hexagon NPU is capable of 45 trillion operations per second (TOPS), which is more than four times higher than what we see with Intel’s Meteor Lake processors. As more apps start to leverage the NPU for AI-powered tasks, that much processing power will surely come in handy.

Although the NPU is the star of the show, you shouldn’t discount the GPU. We’ve already seen the gaming prowess of the Snapdragon X Elite in action. It can play games like Baldur’s Gate 3 and Control at around 30 frames per second (fps), which is certainly acceptable performance for integrated graphics.

The Copilot key on the XPS 13.
Dell

Outside of the chip, the new XPS 13 is mostly unchanged. You can still pack in up to 4TB of storage (2TB at release), along with up to a 3K OLED display. You’ll also be able to pick it up in Dell’s Platinum or Graphite color options. Perhaps the most significant change is the new Copilot key on the keyboard, which is something all five laptops carry.

The laptop is available for preorder now with a starting price of $1,300, and Dell says other configurations will launch later this year.

The Dell Inspiron 14 Plus with the Snapdragon X Plus chip.
Dell

Although the XPS 13 is the most interesting of the lot, Dell has four other laptops launching with Snapdragon X chips. The Inspiron 14 and 14 Plus are unchanged compared to the models already available, but they’re now using a Snapdragon X Plus chip. This chip comes with the same NPU and GPU, but it slims down to only 10 cores that can reach 3.4GHz.

The Inspiron 14 Plus is available for preorder now with a starting price of $1,100, and more configurations will arrive later this year. We don’t have details on the base Inspiron 14, however. Dell says it will share pricing and release date details later in the year.

The Dell Latitude 7455 laptop with the Snapdragon X Elite chip.
Dell

Rounding out the slate are two new Latitude models: the 5455 and 7455. Both are business-focused laptops packing a Snapdragon X Plus chip, though the 7455 can scale up to a Snapdragon X Elite. Similar to the Inspiron 14, we don’t have pricing or availability details on the Latitude 5455 and 7455 quite yet.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Dell just hit reset on the XPS
The XPS 14 and 16 in front of a window.

Goodbye, XPS 15 and XPS 17. It was nice knowing ya.

Just in time for 2024 and CES about to hit, Dell has unveiled a massive change to its XPS line of laptops, which involves swapping out the XPS 15 and 17 with a new XPS 14 and 16 while also completely redesigning the laptops around the divisive features straight from the (now defunct) XPS 13 Plus.

Read more
Why the Dell XPS 13 Plus still beats the latest competition in little laptops
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 3 front view showing display and keyboard.

Lenovo recently updated its smallest ThinkPad, the ThinkPad X1 Nano, to its third generation. It kept everything the same except for an upgrade to Intel 13th-gen CPUs. Dell did the same with the recent refresh of the XPS 13 Plus. These are both competent 13-inch laptops.

That was a safer direction for Dell, given that the XPS 13 Plus sports an ultramodern appearance. The ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 3, on the other hand, remains a nice little laptop but its design is getting a bit dated. Can it compete with the more contemporary XPS 13 Plus?
Specs and configurations

Read more
Dell’s first Windows 11 ARM laptop is priced like a Chromebook
A woman using a Dell Inspiron 14 laptop.

Dell just launched a new Inspiron 14 laptop with a Snapdragon 8cx Gen 2, and it's priced like a Chromebook, costing only $500. The advantage of using a Qualcomm chip is the long battery life, and Dell claims the Inspiron 14 can last for 16 hours on a single charge.

The budget laptop includes a respectable 8GB of memory and 256GB of SSD storage, which should be sufficient for productivity and browsing. A 14-inch antiglare screen has an LED backlight and offers 1080p resolution.

Read more