Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

Author Pick:

Do you require a stripped down 2-in-1 that is moderately reasonable? Idealize, in light of the fact that that is all the Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1 brings to the table. With our setup, you do without control with a seventh Gen Intel Core i3 processor, yet you get a better than average strong state drive and a decent measure of RAM for $908, which is moderately reasonable. In any case, it's an excessively basic 2-in-1 that will battle to give much else besides fundamental needs, particularly on the grounds that it keeps going under 7 hours and offers no pen bolster for craftsmen and visual creators out there. The plan is straightforward however spotless and highlights a smooth touchpad. In case you're occupied with Netflixing in a hurry, however, forget about it; your eyes won't have the capacity to work because of the glare. The Latitude 3390 is useful at the cost, and even that is somewhat high. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

Design

The Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1 has a run of the mill dark plan, with the silver Dell logo inserted in the focal point of the plastic suspension. It's a flawless square that is met with smooth bends at the best and base. The 2-in-1's bended display is gracelessly implanted into the square outline of the suspension, and beneath the touchpad, the undercarriage bends effortlessly and prompts a to some degree dull status LED. The laptop is sufficiently firm to twist smoothly when set in tablet mode on a surface. 

Contrasted and its rivals, the Latitude 3390 is genuinely huge, at 3.5 pounds and 12.8 x 8.9 x 0.8~0.9 inches. Both the HP EliteBook x360 G2 (2.8 pounds, 12.5 x 8.6 x 0.6 inches) and the Lenovo ThinkPad X380 Yoga (3.0 pounds, 12.3 x 8.8 x 0.7 inches) are lighter and slimmer. 

Ports 

Regardless of its moderately little size, the Latitude 3390 has a better than average number of ports. The left half of the 2-in-1 includes a power input, one USB Type-C port (control conveyance and DisplayPort bolster), a HDMI 1.4 port, one USB 3.1 Gen 1 port and an earphone jack. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

The ports on the privilege incorporate a Noble Wedge Lock opening, one USB 2.0 port and a SD 3.0 memory card peruser. For comfort in tablet mode, there are two catches on the correct side for power and volume control. 

Security and Durability 

Dissimilar to the HP EliteBook x360 G2 and the Lenovo ThinkPad X360 Yoga, the Latitude 3390 2-in-1 isn't MIL-STD-810G ensured. This implies it most likely won't confront the rigors of outrageous mugginess, extraordinary temperatures, vibration and high height. 

All setups of the 3390 incorporate the IR camera to get to Windows Hello, while more costly configs are equipped with Intel's vPro for remote administration. 

Display 

The Latitude 3390's 13.3-inch display is without shading. The 2-in-1 replicated 73 percent of the sRGB shading extent, falling beneath the 114-percent classification normal. Be that as it may, the HP EliteBook x360 G2 and the Lenovo ThinkPad X380 Yoga likewise missed the mark, covering just 109 percent and 113 percent, individually. 

When beginning Lost in Space, I felt totally disconnected from the Robinsons' serious battle. Their white-and-orange ship, emphasized with white and red lights, was dull and unimportant as it drifted over the obscure planet. Notwithstanding when the flaring flotsam and jetsam started slamming surrounding them, the distinctive warmth that watchers should encounter when watching felt frosty and far off. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

At 233 nits of splendor, the Latitude 3390 was substantially dimmer than the normal (305 nits) and the Lenovo X360 Yoga (308 nits). The HP EliteBook x360 G2 was somewhat brighter (239 nits) than the Latitude. 

In any case, the most frustrating part of the display was the unpleasant glare. Regardless of having what's touted as an "Inserted Touch Anti-Glare" screen, the 2-in-1's absence of shine brought about perceptible glare. It showed me out of any similarity of inundation, denouncing any lit space as an unwatchable situation. The screen glares in any position and starts obscuring at a 25-degree point. 

Keyboard, Touchpad and Tablet Mode 

The Latitude 3390's keyboard has a few shortcomings: It's plain; the keys are, frustratingly, not where your fingers anticipate that them will be; and the backdrop illumination offers just two settings, rather than a slider. I delivered approximately 56 words for every moment on the 10fastfingers.com writing test, which is marginally lower than my 60-wpm normal. The keys have 1.2 millimeters of movement and require 65 grams of activation compel, barely under the midpoints of 1.4 millimeters and 70 grams. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

The tablet-mode keyboard is responsive generally and offers five keyboard settings. Be that as it may, not at all like the Lenovo X360 Yoga and the HP EliteBook x360 G2, it has no pen bolster. With the essential keyboard, I figured out how to type only 27 words for each moment. 

The 4.1 x 2.5-inch touchpad is a lovely astonishment, with its smooth surface, firm snaps and slick minimal blue line partitioning the left and right snap catches. It additionally dependably perceives Windows signals. 

Sound 

The speakers in the Latitude 3390 2-in-1 could be louder, however regardless they deliver enough stable to fill a good size gathering room. To take a little trek back to the 2000s, I tuned in to Linkin Park's "At last," and keeping in mind that the sound didn't feel immersive, it was generally exact. I found everything from Chester's exquisite high pitches to the ecstatic mood of the keyboard that support my nostalgic ears. The sound may have needed bass, yet the sound was fine by and large. 

Execution 

With its double center 2.7-GHz Intel i3-7130U processor, 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD, the Latitude 3390 2-in-1 offers respectable execution at the cost, in spite of the fact that it's a turtle contrasted and normal premium laptops.However, I scarcely saw any log jam amid my chance with it, even while playing Candy Crush Soda Saga with 20 tabs open out of sight, half of which were on 1080p YouTube recordings. 

The Latitude 3390 scored an extraordinarily low 6,148 on the Geekbench 4 general execution test, which is simply finished a large portion of the 10,289 normal. The HP EliteBook x360 G2 (2.8-GHz Intel Core i7-7600U) scored somewhat higher with 8,873, and the Lenovo ThinkPad X360 Yoga (Intel Core i5-8250U) simply beat the normal with 10,828.
The Latitude's 256GB SSD copied 4.97GB of information in 30 seconds, performing at 169 megabytes for each second, which is much slower than the 284-MBps normal. Both of its rivals smashed the normal, with EliteBook x360 running at 299 MBps and the ThinkPad X360 Yoga ruling with 636 MBps. Be that as it may, both of those machines include a beefier 512GB SSD. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

The Latitude took a drowsy 2 minutes and 34 seconds to coordinate 65,000 names to addresses on our Excel test. That is about a moment longer than the 1:40 normal. In the interim, the ThinkPad X360 Yoga completed in a quick 1:27. 

With its Intel HD Graphics 620, the Latitude figured out how to run Dirt 3 at a playable 41 outlines for each second. Be that as it may, that edge rate lessens contrasted and the 68-fps normal, so don't hope to run recreations like Overwatch easily; I got 20 to 45 fps, with slack, on low settings. (We view anything more than 30 fps as playable.) 

Battery Life 

The Latitude won't last through an average workday. On our battery test, which comprises of persistent web surfing at 150 nits of shine, the 2-in-1 continued for 6 hours and 34 minutes. For correlation, the Lenovo ThinkPad X360 Yoga endured 8:09, which is near the 8:28 premium-laptop normal. 

Webcam 

The 720p HD camera on the Latitude 3390 creates to some degree grainy pictures, yet it's not awful for regular utilize. It figured out how to catch a photograph of me and the city structures outside the workplace window without showing any blurring. 

It has issue with lighting, notwithstanding, as my composition was still considerably darker than, all things considered, and the blue sky was extinguished. The camera appears to support blue light, but the pictures still figure out how to be fairly dull, notwithstanding when it's centered around me. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

Heat

In spite of the fact that the Latitude 3390's fans aren't observably noisy, the warmth can get excessively hot. After we spilled a full-HD 15-minute video, the base of the laptop came to 98 degrees Fahrenheit, which is more sweltering than our 95-degree comfort limit. The focal point of the laptop (91 degrees) and the touchpad (83 degrees) were additionally more sultry than their midpoints of 87 and 81 degrees, individually. 

Programming and Warranty 

The Latitude 3390 accompanies some supportive Dell programming, and your run of the mill bloatware. Dell Command is an advantageous application for refreshing your laptop, and SupportAssist enables you to advance your system or play out an equipment checkup. Dell additionally has its own Wi-Fi Connectivity Configuration instrument, which is a less difficult interface for the Network and Sharing Center. All Dell Digital Delivery does is guarantee that your Dell related applications are up and coming. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

Also, Dell has an advantageous provoke once you connect to a headset that gives you a chance to pick which yield or information you'd get a kick out of the chance to utilize. The commonplace Windows 10 bloatware comprises of applications like Candy Crush Soda Saga, Disney Magic Kingdoms and March of Empires: War of Lords. 

The Latitude accompanies a one-year constrained guarantee, which is upgradable to five years. Perceive how Dell performed on our Tech Support Showdown and Best and Worst Brands positioning. 

Configurations

The Latitude 3390 I tried is $908 and is designed with a 2.7-GHz i3-7130U CPU, 8GB of RAM and a M.2 256GB SATA SSD. The least expensive alternative ($599) is fitted with an Intel Pentium 4415U, 4GB of RAM and a 500GB 7200 RPM HDD, and the topped out adaptation ($1,349) highlights an Intel i5-8350U, 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. 

Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1

Main Concern 

The Latitude 3390 offers nothing exceptional to warrant its $908 sticker price, beside the 2-in-1 capacities. It trailed the opposition amid our tests, and it isn't MIL-SPEC tried for toughness while voyaging. What's more, its poor display and frail keyboard make it significantly more awkward to utilize. 

The Dell Latitude 3390 2-in-1 basically doesn't cut it as a superior 2-in-1. In the event that you require a 2-in-1 only for its size and touch-screen display, the Latitude should get the job done thinking about its cost. Be that as it may, I suggest you fork over a couple of hundred dollars and get the Lenovo ThinkPad X380 Yoga for $1,223.10. The X380 Yoga knocks you up to an Intel Core i5-8250U and gives a strong display and a rechargeable stylus.

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