I received the Inspiron 640m tonight and thought I'd post my
experiences. Mostly positive.
Packaging:
- Much neater than from past Dell computers. Everything packed
nicely. Reinstall CD for Vista Business. Reinstall CD for
MediaDirect 3 which I was glad to see.
Hardware:
- Core 2 Duo T7200 (4MB/2.00GHz/667MHz), 2G Shared RAM, Integrated
Graphics 950, 100G 7200rpm SATA hard drive. Relatively high-end. I
went for speed with the 100G 7200 hard drive giving up the additional
60G I would have had with the slower one.
Initial setup of Vista:
- It went relatively well. Not nearly as much garbage on this PC as
on previous ones. Some of the software is installed as a trial but
you don't know it until you get into setup. Office 2003 Small
Business trial was installed, so I uninstalled and installed my
licensed version. Uninstalled Norton.
- No problem connecting to the Internet through my wireless router.
Had that going within about 2 minutes. Very straightforward.
- Remote desktop took only about a minute to set up. No glitches
there from Vista to XP (I have not tried the reverse yet).
- None of the uninstalls caused problems on reboot like on prior Dell
XP systems (I think something had to be cleaned up with the Windows
Install Clean Up for prior notebooks I purchased for some
organizations).
- There wasn't enough garbage installed to warrant a fresh install
(very glad about that).
- At one point my screen got corrupted with horizontal lines.
Fortunately that didn't recur. This is my only worry after all the
installs tonight. I don't cope well with intermittent hardware
problems that cause things like this which is similar to the blue
screen of death.
Setup of software -- 80/20 rule or in this case 95/5 rule:
- As stated, uninstalls of things I didn't want went well.
- Installed my "bread and butter apps". Office Apps including
Publisher, Project, Visio all went fine. Notepad replacement (NoteTab
Pro went fine).
- Bread and butter apps: Info Select (
www.miclog.com, my favorite
program), amd Mind Manager Pro 6 (
www.mindjet.com) went fine.
PROBLEM WILL ROBINSON (dating myself)...
- Installed Palm software to sync with Palm Desktop from Treo 680 CD.
Install went fine, but Palm Desktop would always hang on the spash
screen when I tried to start it. I went to Palm's support area, and
according to Palm, everything should go OK. (Idiots.). So, I racked
my brains trying uninstalls, reinstalls, and all the permutations that
I could think of (the mindless brute force approach).
- Only through searching of web threads did I find many others had
the same problem, with various attempts to resolve it. Some poor
unfortunate souls went so far as reinstalling Vista! As is often the
case, I found a thread with an easy solution. The software on the
Treo 680 CD (at least his and mine) cause the hang. Installing a
prior version of Palm Desktop that is still Treo 680 compatible
resolved the program.
(oh... guess what... I did need the Windows Install Clean Up utility
after all, to fix this problem).
Apparently Palm Support, rather than documenting the problem on their
support site, was handling it as people phoned in for support. Maybe
they didn't document the problem because they didn't want to affect
sales through negative publicity. Well guess what -- I hope Palm
falls flat on its face and someday when more of the Palm apps I like
are transferred to the Pocket PC platform (getting very close now to
the most important ones), I am going to gladly jump ship when it's
time for a smartphone upgrade. I hate Palm now almost as much as I
hate AOL.
I'd say I had most of the computer up and running with all of the
software except the Palm stuff within an hour or so. The Palm stuff
took another 2-3 hours.
Other:
- Bluetooth surprisingly made sense! And it installed without a
hitch. In the past to get a Palm to sync with it I had to check an
arcane checkbox. No headaches this time, and finally an interface
that is good. Kudos on that.
Boot times seemed very fast. The whole computer is fast. Office 2003
apps like Word, Excel came up in an instant. Dialog boxes that used
to trudge along zipped along. I obviously can't do a compare of the
slower hard drive because I don't have it, but if I had it to do over
again I'd get the same hardware config.
One other thing:
- I would not have a Vista PC as my primary PC at this point. There
are still too many programs and especially utility programs that need
to be updated. I haven't checked into hardware drivers, but I would
imagine that's the case with those too. I use my laptop for limited
things, and my desktop XP (Media Center) is what I rely mostly on, and
I wouldn't touch Vista for a long time as my primary PC OS. No iPod /
iTunes, Paper Port / Scanner, Camera, Digital Voice Recorder, or
anything like that on this laptop for a loooong time.
However, I am very happy with this for what I will be using it for.
There wasn't any learning curve with Vista, however I want to find out
to get my hierarchical program menu back, and I want to find out how
to go up a level in Windows Explorer....