• expired

[Used] Dell 5410 - Intel i7-10610u, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, FHD Graphics, Win11 $480 Delivered @ Corporatepc

180
QWR170

Got around 20 of them in stock with varying battery life(70% or less). The discount code is valid till today only. Please feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

UPDATE: 6 units left in stock.

Specs:
Windows 11 64 bit
Intel Core i7-10610U 1.80GHz
16GB DDR4 RAM
256GB SSD
14.0 inch FHD WVA (1920 x 1080) Anti-Glare (16:9) WLED
Intel UHD Graphics 620
Webcam Yes
Video OutPut: HDMI + USB Type-C
Connectivity: WiFi Wireless, Bluetooth, Ethernaet
I/O Ports: 1x USB Type C™ 3.2 Gen 2 with Power Delivery & DisplayPort / Optional ThunderboltTM 3 with Power Delivery & DisplayPort 3x USB 3.2 Gen 1 (one with PowerShare) 1x HDMI 1.4 1x Flip-Down RJ-45 1x external uSIM card tray (optional) 1x uSD 4.0 Memory card reader 1x Optional Contacted SmartCard Reader 1x Optional Touch Fingerprint Reader in Power Button Wedge Lock slot
Battery, AC adaptor and Power cable include

Related Stores

corporatepc
corporatepc

closed Comments

  • What are fhd graphics?

    • -3

      Full HD

      • Do you mean FHD resolution?

        • +1

          Nah, he obviously means ultra full hd 630

  • +4

    So between 0 and 70% battery?

  • +9

    Just fyi the igpu of 10th gen is the same as 8th gen. They are dreaming selling this close to 500bucks

    • +1

      Agreed - it's only 4 core, and the igpu maxes out 4k at 60hz on USB-C/DP, and 24hz on HDMI

      • 375 maybe okay ish. If ppl desperate.
        8th gen $250
        9th 300
        10th 350
        11th 400.
        They betteing on noobs who think, oh wow… 10th gen!!! Not too old!!
        Well… it's same as harvey Norman staffs trying to sell $40 hdmi cable to some old pensioners.. I hate this tactics

        • +1

          Can you please share any listing from a seller(with similar stock) with this price range? Will be happy to be corrected.

          Or this is the amount you would pay for specific gen i7 processors?

          • +3

            @Skymstr: Asking nearly $500 for a four year old, battery-thrashed laptop is too much when I could've bought a brand new MSI mid-range gaming laptop for $700 a couple days ago. That's a fair point, no?

            If you can sell them for this, go nuts, but I'd say to anyone looking that these are poor value at this price, you're better off buying 8th gen for $250 by far.

            • @jcon: Any recommendation for 8th Gen i7s for $250. Hope I can correct myself.

              • @Skymstr: i7's? Nope, Because it doesn't matter.
                Most people don't need or care about the difference between i5 and i7. They want YouTube, Netflix, socials and some basic office work.

                There's no shortage of i5 8250 with 8 GB RAM which will serve most people just fine that they can buy for $250 or less.

            • +1

              @jcon: Why bother advising the seller what you think the fair price is? Both you and the seller are entitled to your own opinion - there's no right or wrong, as price is subjective. The seller will adjust the price down if the volume doesn't move.

              For over a decade while Intel stagnated there are a lot of value in buying these used corporate recycled computers - but that cycle stopped with lots renewed competition in the last 2 years or so. So I agree with you there's often better value to be had with some of the recent options. Therefore there should be strong downward price pressure on these recycled. Just don't see the point of arguing prices with the seller - it's their prerogative to advertise whatever price they want. They've sunk capital tied in these inventories and are incentivised to move them out of the door as soon as they can.

              For basic tasks like you said these old machines will fit the bill. I've got an i5 8th gen at home for such use cases and the reality is I can't justify any changes up to 11th gen - unlikely for there to be any meaningful improvement. 12gen onwards maybe a little bit with DDR5, more common to have dual M.2 etc. But then if I am getting anything that recent I would have just gone with AMD chips for better power efficiency and iGPU.

              • -2

                @CoronavirusVaccine: The seller took a disingenuous and passive-aggressive tone and that annoyed me so I decided that instead of just letting a bad deal slide I'd call it out so anyone on the fence would buy something else.

                • @jcon: Ah I see. Definitely helpful for people new to this recycled market segment. I appreciate the points you are making.

                  Seems like the seller is trying to establish a premium for i7 over i5. Historically the extra threads had a value when the CPUs had 8 vs 4 threads. But that's before the core count rapidly lifted to like 20 threads today. For the use cases that can make use of high core count, they'd just get new machines. For the pleb use cases often 4 threads of 8th gen onwards would more than suffice.

  • -4

    Found from standard google search:

    Why is Intel Core i7-10510U better than Intel Core i7-8550U?
    266 MHz higher RAM speed (max)?
    2666 MHzvs2400 MHz
    0.9GHz higher turbo clock speed?
    4.9GHzvs4GHz
    3.22x higher PassMark result?
    6619vs2056
    7.56 GB/s more memory bandwidth?
    41.66 GB/svs34.1 GB/s
    32GB larger maximum memory amount?
    64GBvs32GB
    25.76% higher Cinebench R20 (multi) result?
    1523vs1211
    33.05% higher Cinebench R20 (single) result?
    471vs354

  • +1

    1st time I have seen something like this .. "varying battery life(70% or less). :) .. it should be 17% or HIGHER ..

  • +3

    $650 list price is just a bad joke. Soled even one at that price?

    • Yeah $650 list for grade B laptop, with a 70% or less battery is nothing but a bad joke.

      • -2

        No one is being forced to buy it.

        Market forces will prevail.

  • We have these at work, the USB-C port wears out from extended use. Check the port after buying.

    • Hi, we already checked this from our side and none of them got this issue. Thanks for the heads up.

Login or Join to leave a comment