Gaming

  • Dell's XPS 730 Gaming Desktop Details Over at Your Blog

    Update: This time on the Direct2Dell homepage.

     If you're interested in the latest information on the XPS 730, see Anne's post on at Your Blog. If you are a gamer, there's probably some stuff you'll want to see.

    It's got three videos: one that gives an overview of the system, a second all about overclocking and a third that highlights the new H2C cooling system.

    Enough babbling from me... if gaming's your thing, hop on over.

  • Is the Video Game Industry Composting?

    If you've followed many of my past posts on Direct2Dell, you know that I have a passion for virtual worlds and the opportunities I think they present for online interactions. So, it only make sense that I attended Corey Bridges panel yesterday on The Future of Virtual World & Game Development. Corey has quite a background from Netscape to Netflix and now Multiverse. He's also co-founder of the Metaverse Roadmap project.

    Too often when people speak at conferences you feel like you are listening to a commercial for their company or service, but luckily that was not the case with this panel. Instead, he took a high-level view at how the gaming industry is facing the same impact from independent producers that mainstream media is seeing. New technologies are putting production and distribution in the people's hands. In his words, game developers are dead, they just don't know it yet.

    From the compost of that dead video game industry, however, he predicts the rise of a beautiful garden (his metaphor). There will be new genres of games for different consumers - not just hardcore gamers. There will be smarter games for smaller market segments - those who aren't hardcore, but want more than "mainstream dreck".

    He also see more blurring between games, virtual worlds and social networking. As the new medium of virtual worlds is discovered by more people, and gameplay becomes "de-stigmatized" through the use of game systems for business purposes (training, collaboration), Corey predicts flourishing growth of indie development studios and a consolidation of the bigger publishers. Some say play is already how we principally learn and principally create, so fully emergent games is where we want to go.

    The benefit of it all for the rest of us? Corey says it's better design, fewer publishers, more millionaires. Hmm...I guess by the rest of us he meant those who are building games and virtual worlds...

  • The Changing Face of Gaming

    On Wednesday last week in London, UK, we held a gaming event to discuss and celebrate the enormous changes we are seeing in the gaming industry. At the event we launched the new XPS 630 and announced our sponsorship of team Dignitas. We also held a heavyweight gaming industry panel discussion, which included Dell, Intel, Alienware, NVidia, Ascaron, Gamerbase, Ubisoft, Dignitas.

     

    My favourite bit of news from the day was the announcement that Dell is sponsoring team Dignitas, who I managed to catch in the afternoon along with Dell’s Adam Griffin. Team Dignitas is a leading professional gaming team based in the UK with gamers from more than 20 countries across the globe. This announcement as well as meeting Su-Joy Roy and Dominic Mulroy from Gamerbase, brought it home to me that Dell's interest in gaming goes well beyond delivering some of the best hardware (both XPS and Alienware) in the industry.

     

    <a href="http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/March2008/Gaming_Interview.flv"><img src="http://direct2dell.com/photos/videos/images/48489/300x225.aspx" border = "0" width="300" height="225"></a><br /><a href = "http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/March2008/Gaming_Interview.flv">View Video</a><br />Format: flv<br />Duration: 5:13

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    In the morning we asked Dell gaming experts Abizar Vakaria, Chris Shelton and Brian Joyce about the future of gaming. My apologies that you’ll hear a few clashes in the background as the crew are moving furniture setting-up for the event.

     

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    A phrase from Susan Bookbinder, our moderator, resonated with me. It was along the lines of, “Like a fine wine the gaming and gamers are maturing into an evermore discerning breed.”  Gaming is now a fashionable social activity that you can enjoy with your friends and make new friends doing so.

    For me the discussion panel highlighted how Dell is working with a broad range of industry leaders to partner on and develop the best gaming experience available worldwide.    

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    Note: panel members from left to right: Dominic Mulroy, Gamerbase; Ulrich Norf, Intel; Heiko tom Felde, Ascaron; Michel O’Dell, Dignitas; Susan Bookbinder; Abizar Vakaria, Dell; Su-Joy Roy, Gamerbase; Brian Joyce, Dell Alienware and Phil Wright, NVidia.

     

    We have also added a few photos from the event on our Flickr siteAnd last, but not least, if you are interested in gaming and want join a growing community of gaming enthusiasts check out our Dell gaming forum

  • XPS 630: Gaming Power for the Masses

    I warned you. Today, customers in the United States, Canada, Latin America, Europe and Japan can order the XPS 630. It's a gaming desktop meant to pack a lot of power into a smaller chassis. Granted, smaller is a relative term—it's smaller compared to the XPS 720: the XPS 630 has a starting weight of about 39 pounds compared to almost 48 pounds for its larger cousin.

    Note: Clicking on either of these photos below will show a larger version. You can see more photos at the main Dell Flickr site here.

     The goal behind the XPS 630 was to provide great performance and expandability at a reasonable price point. We call it a mainstream gaming system. It supports many of the same high-end options that the XPS 720 does, with a starting price of $1,249. That's where the mainstream part comes from. 

    The Dell folks I talked to were pretty excited about the XPS 630, and based on early awards from CNET, PC Magazine and HotHardware, I'm glad to see they're not alone.

    But enough about that, let's jump into the more technical details. By popular demand, the XPS 630 utilizes a motherboard based on the popular ATX form factor. It's based on a Dell implementation of NVIDIA's 650i chipset, is the first OEM system to support NVIDIA's new Enthusiast System Architecture (ESA) and all units will come with a 750W power supply.

    It also supports Intel processors (initially we'll support the quad-core Q6600 processor and the and Core 2 Extreme QX 6850, with more coming soon) and several graphics card options from both ATI and NVIDIA. We'll offer certain dual graphics card options in Crossfire mode or SLI mode, depending on whether you prefer ATI or NVIDIA.

    In terms of memory, we also support Corsair DDR2 Dominator 800MHz Enhanced Performance Profile (EPP) modules that can be overclocked to1066MHz.

    For folks that want to take performance a step further, you will have the opportunity to overclock the parts of the system through the system BIOS and software like NVIDIA's nTune application, much like the XPS 720 today. Unlike the XPS 720, however, we will not ship the XPS 630 overclocked from the factory. Because there's a lot more to discuss on that front, we'll blog about overclocking soon. And look for an overclocking vlog in the not-too-distant future.

     

    In this vlog, I interview Lee Kinder from the XPS Desktop Team about the system overall. He also discusses design elements, talks specs, hardware and OS options, overclocking and more.

    <a href="http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/February2008/XPS_630_vlog.flv"><img src="http://direct2dell.com/photos/videos/images/47691/300x225.aspx" border = "0" width="300" height="225"></a><br /><a href = "http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/February2008/XPS_630_vlog.flv">View Video</a><br />Format: flv<br />Duration: 6:08

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  • XPS 630 Desktop Coming Soon

    Some of you may have seen some basic details about the XPS 630 during CES 2008.  Shortly after that, we rolled out a teaser campaign for it, similar to ones we had done for the XPS One, the M1730, and the World of Warcraft notebook. This one was the most successful we've had in terms of registrations.

    And to those of you who did register, you should be receiving an e-mail that looks like this very soon. Click on it to see a larger version of the image.

      

    Here's the deal. From now until 2/27/08 at 5:59am CST, you can purchase a new XPS 630 gaming desktop with a $479 discount. Just click on the Game On button to configure the system. After the discount, the base system includes the following hardware for $1,299:

    • Intel Core 2 Q6600 quad-core processor
    • 2GB 667MHz DDR2 memory 
    • Dual NVIDIA 8800GT cards with 512MB memory
    • 320GB hard drive
    • 16x DVD+RW drive
    • 2-year limited warranty

    More XPS 630 product details coming soon.

  • Lightning Rod: XPS, The Next Generation—Hard Drive Configurations

    As you may have noticed, the masthead of IdeaStorm has changed again.  A new lightning rod is up today, thanks to Dell's gaming desktop team. 

    The team is making decisions on what HDD configuration options to offer from the factory in our next-generation gaming desktop system. As you look at the options we have posted on Dell Community Forum, please share your thoughts on the configurations that interest you from a gaming perspective and why. The gaming desktop HDD survey will be live from Monday, February 18 to Monday, February 25.  Our gaming desktop development team will be joining the conversation on the comment threads, as necessary.

    As a reminder, the purpose of the lightning rods is to get specific feedback from the entire community about current and future Dell products and services. This feature is how we propose our own ideas on issues we are facing or decisions we are making and, hear what the community has to say about them.

    Lightning rods are intended to entice new IdeaStorm members, and produce higher participation rates in the community based on topics of interest. Defined deadlines are sometimes set to best capture the community's initial interest.  The lightning rods will always involve a specific issue for which Dell customer feedback. 

    If you're new to IdeaStorm, be sure to read about how the site works, then get yourself registered and you can start voting and commenting on ideas.

  • Dell Adds the NVIDIA 8800M GTX with Dual SLI Technology to the XPS M1730 Gaming Notebook

    Update: 1/29—My apologies... I published this at 6am, but meant to publish it here on the Direct2Dell home page.

    I imagine many enthusiasts have read articles about NVIDIA's mobile graphics card in places like Anandtech, Crave, HotHardware and others. As of today, we're offering customers in the United States the option to order the mobile SLI version of the 8800M GTX in our XPS M1730 notebook. The same graphics card option will soon be available to customers in EMEA and APJ as well. What this means to a mobile gamer is DirectX 10 (DX10) performance that approaches performance of high-end desktops.

    To put it in perspective, according to benchmark's run by Dell's performance team, the same XPS 1730 notebook earned a score of almost 13,500 in 3Dmark06—which is about 49% performance gain over two 8700M GT cards in the same notebook. In other words, games like Crysis, BioShock, Far Cry 2 and Age of Conan will scream.

    Back when we launched the XPS M1730, I mentioned that we would offer an upgrade option for customers who purchased their laptops with the previous-generation graphics solution, the NVIDIA 8700M GT SLI edition. The upgrade option will also be available to customers who bought the XPS M1730 World of Warcraft Edition as well. 

    Pricing and additional details about the graphics card upgrade program will be coming soon.

  • World of Warcraft Notebook: Horde or Alliance—Which One Are You?

    You might have seen reactions to our teaser page on Dell.com. Today, we start taking orders for the XPS M1730: World of Warcraft Edition from United States customers who signed up for the e-mail. The product will be available to other customers in the U.S. begininng on December 11.

    If you registered at the teaser site, soon you will get an e-mail that looks like this one:

    Here's the deal. We have teamed with the folks at Blizzard Entertainment to create a product that allows fans of World of Warcraft (WoW) to immerse themselves in the game. Our partnership started earlier this year in January when we auctioned off two custom WoW notebooks for charity. For this system, we wanted to go way beyond a custom appearance. How did the XPS team go about doing that? They started with the award-winning XPS M1730 and beefed up the minimum config. I'll start with the system itself, and will explain other things that come with every system a bit later.

    Every system comes pre-loaded with the games themselves: World of Warcraft and The Burning Crusade expansion pack. We'll also install all the major client patches for both games as well. We'll continue to test and ship future patches pre-installed as they are released by Blizzard. Dell's goal is to get you into the game with as little effort as possible. Beyond that, it has lots of World of Warcraft content, including original artwork desktop wallpapers and screen savers. The image below is the default Alliance wallpaper that you'll see when you first boot: 

     

    Alliance System:

     

    Horde System:

    Alliance and Horde systems side by side, front and back:

    The Orc box, which contains the hardware accessories like the binder with User's Manual, the notebook power adapter, custom XPS WoW mousepad, WoW t-shirt, etc. coming down the manufacturing line.

     

    There's a whole lot more to this than the system hardware. Everyone who orders this system will get three things: a Quest Envelope, a WoW backpack full of stuff and the system itself. Before I explain those things in more detail, I'll introduce Randy "Randydeluxe" Jordan to you. He's one of the hosts from the popular WoW podcast called The Instance. We recently invited him to Round Rock for a first-ever unboxing of the system so you can see exactly what you're going to get. This video is almost 30 minutes long, but it's a complete overview of what to expect.

    Note: You can left-click on one of the video format links below to play that video in a browser window. Otherwise, you can right-click, then click on Save Link As, then click Save to download the video to your system. Either way, since it's a 30-minute video, it will take some time to load.

     

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    I'll start by explaining the Quest Envelope. Here's the YouTube video where Randydeluxe looks at the it. The Quest Envelope will come to you separate from the system via certified overnight mail. It contains the following:

    • Golden Ticket - This provides you an opprortunity to get a customized figurine of your WoW character through FigurePrints. FigurePrints will access you character's data through Blizzard's servers to create a custom 3D figure of your character, complete with weapons and armor you can choose. Take a look at this video if you want to see what this is all about.
    • Blizzard Beta Club Card - The code on the card registers you for Blizzard's Beta Club, which gives you access to five upcoming beta tests, starting with the Wrath of the Lich King
    • Collector's Edition Account Upgrade Certificate - This allows you to upgrade your account to a collector's edition account, enabling you to get a special in-game pet.

    The WoW backpack is what comes in the Night Elf box. Here's the video where Randydeluxe unboxes the it. The backpack has the following things in it:

    In this vlog, you'll hear from Shane McWilliams, who is the program manager for the XPS M1730  World of Warcraft Edition development team. His main character is a Blood Elf Mage, and when this video was shot, he was level 56. Today, he's level 60, and has enough battleground experience to get the complete "Gladiator's Regalia" armor set when he hits level 70. He gives you a good overview of the system and the experience, and provides more insight into the design of the hardware.

     

    <a href="http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/December2007/XPS_1730_WOW.flv"><img src="http://direct2dell.com/photos/my_photos/images/37189/300x225.aspx" border = "0" width="300" height="225"></a><br /><a href = "http://media.dellone2one.com/dell/December2007/XPS_1730_WOW.flv">View Video</a><br />Format: flv<br />Duration: 6:01

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  • Prairie View A&M Tent Event

    What do DJ Mo Phatt, Dell XPS systems, Madden 2008 and perfect weather have in common?  All were present for Dell's first tent event at Prairie View A&M!  A team of our Dell managers and recruiters were there to play Madden on the big screen (with only a little trash talk), dance to Soulja Boy with help from DJ Mo Phatt and  Dell manager Justin Hospie, award giveaways including a color Inspiron notebook...and talk with students about career opportunities with Dell.

    Our team met some great students—some of which we hope to see on board at Dell in the near future!  Be on the lookout for possible Tent Event details on your campus!

  • XPS 700 Motherboard Exchange Program Ends on October 13

    I wanted to take a minute to remind folks that the XPS 700 Motherboard Exchange Program will expire on Saturday, October 13.

    This means that all XPS 700 or 710 customers who want to participate in the program must submit orders on or before 11:59pm Central Time on Saturday, October 13.

    As a reminder, the link for the XPS 700 Motherboard Exchange Program is:

    www.XPSUpgradeProgramDell.com

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