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[Used] Dell Latitude 5400: 14" FHD, Intel i7-8550u, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, Win11 $309 Delivered @ corporatepc

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Windows 11 64 bit
Intel Core i7-8550U 1.80GHz
16GB RAM
256GB SSD
14 inch FHD antiglare (16:9), WLED, non-touch, 220 nits
Intel UHD Graphics 620
Webcam
HDMI
Connectivity: WiFi, Bluetooth, Ethernet
I/O Ports: x USB 3.1 Gen 1 (Type-A), USB Type-C 3.1 Gen 2 port, Ethernet (RJ45), HDMI, Headphone/Microphone combo port, SD Card Reader
Battery, AC adaptor and Power cable included

Battery life: 70% or above
Warranty: 3 months

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Comments

  • +1

    was $269 https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/826766 8 months ago!
    yes 8GB ram but double SSD

    • +2

      Not saying this is a good deal or not but it has the i7 so that's another difference.

      • +1

        I5 and i7 of the old Intel chips make jack all difference.

        • -3

          I'd argue the other way around. i5 vs i7 for new chips makes jack-all difference to the vast majority of users. For a 5yo processor the difference is actually quite relevant.

          As an example, I'm running a 9900K and it's perfectly serviceable for anything and everything I do (including gaming). An i5-9400 would really struggle.

          • @CarbonTwelve: That's desktop environment.

            In the laptop environment, you will be bottlenecked by the Igpu and cooling before the CPU would even matter.

            Plus they're basically the same chip. Both 4 core 8 threads.

            • @Wonderfool: I'm not suggesting you're gaming on this, I'm saying for the average user that an i5 vs i7 matters more in older CPUs than it does in newer CPUs.

              • @CarbonTwelve: https://technical.city/en/cpu/Core-i7-8550U-vs-Core-i5-8250U

                Here's the difference between i5 and i7 for 8th and 10th gen. Until E core was released, they were basically same chip with different binning and lcache ram.

                Laptop is different to desktop.

                • @Wonderfool: Depends which segment. In the 8th gen H range (still laptop) the i7 is a 6 core CPU vs i5 being a 4 core.

                  You're still missing my point, which is that for most users any modern CPU will be fine, but older CPUs are more likely to be near the threshold of poor performance, and therefore the class of CPU matters more.

    • Are you sure? This was with i5 processor.

      • It depends on what application you run on it. For normal use, even a 10 years old notebook is good enough.

  • +5

    No thanks

    • Yeah few days ago metrocom has new battery on the i5.

      Too bad it was not 1 year warranty, else would go for it

      • Similar spec were going for 250-300 throughout covid. Should be under $200 these days.

        Gave my trusted gen8 i7 away, laptops age was very obvious.

        • Why wouldn't you just keep using it until it died? thats not very ozbargainy of you ;)

      • Grabbed one of those, should be delivered tomorrow 😁 was a decent deal imo.

  • i7 has worse battery life than the i5. Going rate has been about 280 lately. I made the mistake of buying a refurb laptop for a colleague and now it seems to be my main job buying these things for everyone i know

  • +2

    220 nits on the display is a bit disappointing. Fine for average indoor lighting, but a bright room or outdoors and it's going to be useless.

    • Thanks for pointing that out. Listing updated.

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