Dell Dell 15 15.6" DC15250 Platinum Silver 2023

CPU Intel Core i7 1355U
RAM 64 GB
Storage 2 TB
Screen 15.6"
GPU Intel UHD Graphics
OS Windows 11 Pro
Weight 1.9 kg
Battery 54 Wh
Dell Dell 15 15.6" DC15250 Platinum Silver 2023 laptop
58 Score global
Aussi disponible dans:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Dell 15 DC15250 packs an absurd 64GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD into a mid-range business laptop, making it a killer value for developers and data pros who need memory above all else. The i7-1355U CPU is fine for productivity but the integrated graphics are weak, and the 250-nit display is dim. Battery life will be a struggle with that 54Wh pack. Buy it for the RAM and storage, not for gaming or outdoor use.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 64GB RAM is workstation-class and rare at this price 95th
  • Generous 2TB SSD gives you room for years of files and VMs 95th
  • 120Hz IPS display makes everyday use feel smoother than 60Hz panels 71th
  • Full port selection including USB-C, USB-A, and HDMI 1.4
  • Windows 11 Pro out of the box with backlit keyboard and fingerprint reader

Cons

  • Integrated Intel UHD Graphics are near the bottom of our database for GPU performance
  • 250-nit display is dim and struggles in bright rooms or outdoors
  • 54Wh battery is undersized for a 15.6-inch laptop with this much RAM
  • Reliability scores sit in the bottom third of products we track
  • At 1.94kg it's not particularly portable for a U-series ultrabook

What owners think

The proof

Performance

The i7-1355U sits in a weird middle ground. It's a 10-core chip with a 5.0GHz boost clock, which sounds impressive on paper, but it's still a 15W U-series processor designed for thin and light laptops. In our database, it lands around the 46th percentile for CPU performance, which is solidly average. You'll breeze through Office apps, web browsing, and even some light photo editing, but this chip will thermal throttle under sustained heavy loads. It's built for bursty productivity, not rendering marathons.

Where this config absolutely shines is in memory and storage. 64GB of DDR4 RAM puts it in the 95th percentile, which is workstation territory. You can run multiple virtual machines, keep hundreds of browser tabs open, and work with massive spreadsheets without breaking a sweat. The 2TB NVMe SSD is equally generous, also landing in the 95th percentile. Boot times are snappy, file transfers are quick, and you won't be juggling external drives anytime soon. The integrated Intel UHD Graphics are the obvious bottleneck here, sitting in the 19th percentile. You can stream video and drive external displays just fine, but don't even think about gaming or GPU-accelerated creative work.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 45.5
GPU 19
RAM 94.8
Ports 70.8
Screen 51.6
Portability 40.7
Storage 94.8
Reliability 32.4
Social Proof 23.3

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core i7 1355U
Cores 10
Frequency 1.8 GHz
L3 Cache 12 MB

Graphics

GPU Intel UHD Graphics
Type integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 64 GB
RAM Generation DDR4
Storage 2 TB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 15.6"
Panel IPS
Refresh Rate 120 Hz
Brightness 250 nits

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 2
USB Ports 2
HDMI HDMI 1.4
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.2

Physical

Weight 1.9 kg / 4.3 lbs
Battery 54 Wh
OS Windows 11 Pro

vs Competition

Stack this Dell up against the ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 and you'll see two completely different philosophies. The Zephyrus has a dedicated GPU that absolutely demolishes the Intel UHD Graphics here, plus a brighter, color-accurate display. But you'll pay significantly more and get a fraction of the RAM and storage. The Dell is for spreadsheet warriors and code compilers, the ASUS is for gamers and creators. Different tools for different jobs.

The Lenovo Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 is another beast entirely, with desktop-class performance and a price tag to match. It's overkill for what this Dell is trying to do. More interesting is the MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088, which targets a similar productivity audience but typically comes with a better display and longer battery life, though with less RAM. And the HP OmniBook X Flip 14 is a convertible with a touchscreen and pen support, making it more versatile for note-takers and presenters, but again, you'll sacrifice the ridiculous 64GB of RAM this Dell offers.

Spec Dell Dell 15 15.6" DC15250 Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 GA403WW-G14.R95080 Lenovo Legion Pro Series 7i Gen 10 HP OMEN Transcend 14-fb1023dx MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088
CPU Intel Core i7 1355U Apple M4 Max AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 9 285H Intel Core Ultra 7 258V
RAM (GB) 64 64 32 32 32 32
Storage (GB) 2048 8192 2000 1024 1024 1000
Screen 15.6" 14.2" 3024x1964 14" 2880x1800 16" 2560x1600 14" 2880x1800 13.3" 2880x1800
GPU Intel UHD Graphics Apple (40-Core) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Intel Arc
OS Windows 11 Pro macOS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 1.9 1.6 1.6 2.7 1.6 1
Battery (Wh) 54 72 - 99 71 -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
Dell Dell 15 15.6" DC15250 45.51994.870.851.640.794.832.423.3
Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max Compare 92.31996.479.299.267.499.796.788.8
ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 GA403WW-G14.R95080 Compare 8791.392.4929672.790.35997.9
Lenovo Legion Pro Series 7i Gen 10 Compare 96.889.990.797.895.28.481.879.399.9
HP OMEN Transcend 14-fb1023dx Compare 8987.591.3929671.481.832.496.9
MSI Prestige PRE13EVOA2088 Compare 64.864.98282.591.195.274.35986.9

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing on this model is all over the map. We're seeing a spread of over $208,000 across vendors, which is obviously some kind of data error or placeholder pricing from a few sellers. The realistic range seems to hover between $855 and maybe $1,200 for the 64GB/2TB configuration, which is actually pretty compelling when you break it down. You're getting a massive RAM and storage upgrade for not much more than a base model Dell Inspiron.

Compared to something like an Apple MacBook Pro M5 Pro, which starts at a much higher price with far less RAM and storage, this Dell is a value monster for memory-hungry workflows. The trade-off is build quality, display brightness, and GPU performance. If you're comparing against other Windows laptops in the sub-$1,000 range, most will give you 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. This config quadruples the RAM and storage for a modest premium. Just make sure you're buying from a seller with a solid return policy, since reliability scores aren't great.

Read more

Overview

The Dell 15 DC15250 is one of those laptops that makes you do a double take when you look at the spec sheet. 64GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD in a machine that's being pitched to students and business users? That's the kind of storage and memory you'd expect in a mobile workstation costing twice as much. It's clearly a third-party seller configuration where someone cracked open a standard Dell, maxed out the internals, and is now selling it as a productivity beast. And for the right person, it absolutely is.

But let's be real about what this thing actually is. Under the hood you've got a 13th Gen Intel Core i7-1355U, which is a perfectly capable 10-core chip for office work, spreadsheets, and having fifty browser tabs open. The integrated Intel UHD Graphics, though, are about as exciting as plain toast. This is not a gaming laptop, not a video editing rig, and definitely not something you'd want to throw 3D rendering workloads at. Our database puts the GPU performance in the 19th percentile, which is a polite way of saying it's near the bottom of the barrel for anything graphically demanding.

The real story here is value for a very specific buyer. If you're a developer running multiple VMs, a data analyst working with large local datasets, or just someone who never wants to see a "memory full" warning again, this configuration is hard to beat. The 120Hz display is a nice touch too, making scrolling and general navigation feel smoother than your typical 60Hz office panel. Just don't expect it to get very bright at 250 nits, and the 54Wh battery paired with all that RAM is going to have a tough time lasting through a full workday away from an outlet.

Common Questions

Q: Can this laptop handle gaming or video editing?

Not really. The integrated Intel UHD Graphics sit in the 19th percentile of all laptops we track, which means they're fine for streaming video and basic display output but will choke on modern games or GPU-accelerated editing. You might get away with very light 1080p video edits or older games at low settings, but this machine is built for CPU and RAM-heavy productivity work, not creative or gaming workloads.

Q: Is the 64GB of RAM actually useful or just overkill?

It depends entirely on what you do. For most people browsing the web and using Office, 16GB is plenty and 64GB is wasted. But if you're running multiple virtual machines, working with large datasets in memory, or doing heavy development work with containers and emulators, 64GB is a legitimate productivity multiplier. It's one of the highest RAM configurations we've seen in this price bracket.

Q: How bright is the display and can I use it outside?

The 15.6-inch IPS panel is rated at 250 nits, which is on the dimmer side for modern laptops. It's perfectly usable indoors in normal lighting, but you'll struggle in direct sunlight or bright coffee shop windows. The 120Hz refresh rate is a nice bonus for smooth scrolling, but the brightness limitation means this is best used as a desk-bound or indoor machine.

Q: Why is the price range so wide across different sellers?

This configuration is sold by third-party sellers who buy standard Dell laptops and upgrade the RAM and SSD themselves. Some listings show placeholder or error pricing in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, which is clearly not real. The actual price for the 64GB/2TB config should fall somewhere between $850 and $1,200. Always check the seller's rating and return policy before buying.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers and creative professionals should look elsewhere immediately. The integrated Intel UHD Graphics are simply not up to the task for anything beyond basic display output, and you'd be far better served by something like the ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 with a dedicated GPU. The dim 250-nit screen also makes this a poor choice for photo or video editors who need color accuracy and brightness.

Frequent travelers and coffee shop workers should also think twice. At 1.94kg it's not back-breaking, but the 54Wh battery paired with 64GB of RAM is going to drain faster than you'd like. You'll be hunting for outlets by mid-afternoon. If portability and battery life matter more than raw memory capacity, look at the HP OmniBook X Flip or an M-series MacBook Air instead.

Verdict

If you're a developer running Docker containers, a data scientist working with large local datasets, or an IT professional who needs to spin up multiple virtual machines on the go, this Dell configuration is a no-brainer. The 64GB of RAM alone makes it worth the price of admission, and the 2TB SSD means you won't be juggling external drives. The CPU is adequate for these workloads, and the 120Hz screen is a nice quality-of-life upgrade.

For everyone else, think carefully. Students who just need something for papers and Netflix will be better served by a laptop with a brighter screen and longer battery life, even if it means settling for 16GB of RAM. Anyone doing creative work or gaming should look elsewhere entirely, the integrated graphics are a dealbreaker. And if you're frequently working outdoors or in bright offices, that 250-nit display is going to frustrate you daily. This is a specialist's machine disguised as a general-purpose laptop.

Usage Scores

Overall (58.4)Ai Llm (28)Gaming (14.5)Compact (53.8)Creator (28.3)Student (61.8)Business (59.2)Developer (60.2)Entertainment (54.5)

Autres configurations2

Produits similaires