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Dell Dimension 8300

PC World Editor's Review

by Mick Lockey

Dell's latest Dimension offers a comprehensive set of components for a reasonable price.

The Dimension 8300 is the second Dell PC we've seen that combines Intel's high-end, 3.2-GHz Pentium 4 CPU with a gigabyte of DDR400 SDRAM. This time around, our test configuration earned a PC WorldBench 4 score of 128--a virtual tie with the 127 score that its 8300 sibling (which we tested for our October Top 15 Desktop PCs chart) earned.

To render graphics, the 8300 uses an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics board with 128MB of memory. Our gaming tests revealed solid performance, signaling that the 8300 is suitable for a variety of graphics tasks.

The ultraslim 17-inch Dell 1703FP Ultra Sharp monitor, which can work either as an analog or a digital display (though Dell includes only a DVI cable), comes with four USB 2.0 ports--two on the left side of the bezel and two on the back of the monitor. The panel rotates 90 degrees into portrait mode, so you can view Web pages lengthwise with less scrolling. Tested in analog mode, the monitor displayed vibrant hues on a test photo and crisp, easy-to-read text on both a newsletter and a screen with several font sizes.

The Altec Lansing ADA-995 5.1 THX-certified speaker system--Dell's beefiest speaker offering--and the Creative Audigy2 sound card yielded fantastic sound in our audio tests. Explosions and a roaring engine in a DVD movie almost matched cinematic audio quality.

FireWire and DVD rewritable drives are common fare in most high-end systems these days, and the 8300 has both. The sound card has a FireWire port, and the system provides a 4X DVD+R/RW drive for burning videos and backing up data. The standard hard drive provides a relatively modest (by today's standards) 120GB of storage space, but you can opt for a 250GB drive for $230 extra if you plan to archive an extensive video collection, say.

The 8300's case opens like a book after you depress latches at the top and bottom. Drive bays are installed in the swing-out section of the case, so you have easy access to the cages. We thought the interior could have been tidier, but upgrading the memory or installing a card in one of the PCI slots should not cause any aggravation.

The system's comprehensive manual has sections on performing upgrades and troubleshooting, with helpful illustrations.

Upshot: This Dimension 8300's full set of components will appeal to power users seeking a do-it-all machine.

Mick Lockey

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