best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

There are many LCD screen manufacturers for the Laptop Industry. LCD screens have different resolutions, size and type and these screens are compatible as long as the resolution and connections are the same.

For this listing, we will ship you a brand new OEM Compatible LCD screen manufactured either by Samsung, LG, Chi Mei, Chunghwa, Sharp, or AUOptronics. For more information about each LCD manufacture please click here.

If you wish to know the make of the actual LCD that will be shipped to you, please contact us by phone with your order information between 10AM - 8PM EST (Monday – Friday).

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

There are many LCD screen manufacturers for the Laptop Industry. LCD screens have different resolutions, size and type and these screens are compatible as long as the resolution and connections are the same.

For this listing, we will ship you a brand new OEM Compatible LCD screen manufactured either by Samsung, LG, Chi Mei, Chunghwa, Sharp, or AUOptronics. For more information about each LCD manufacture please click here.

If you wish to know the make of the actual LCD that will be shipped to you, please contact us by phone with your order information between 10AM - 8PM EST (Monday – Friday).

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

Hi all, I hope you can lead me down the right path here! In Aug I purchased a 17.3 in Alienware Area-51m R2. Unfortunately, I accidentally cracked the LCD screen. It"s not too bad, but it will need to be replaced. While searching for a replacement, I used my service tag to identify a part number for the screen. I came up with a couple of part numbers and I would like to double check which one is the correct one.

In doing my research on google, I think it is the 5TMH8 is the correct part number for the screen. This brings me to my second problem. My screen is this one:

3) If I can"t find the exact screen, will something else work? Maybe a touchscreen, or something fancy? I already have a call in to Alienware service, I am hoping they can fix me up in a jiff, but I am still curious about these questions!

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

*Rewards: 3% back excludes taxes and shipping. Rewards are issued to your online Dell Rewards Account (available via your Dell.com My Account) typically within 30 business days after your order’s ship date. Rewards expire in 90 days (except where prohibited by law). “Current rewards balance” amount may not reflect the most recent transactions. Check Dell.com My Account for your most up-to-date reward balance. Total rewards earned may not exceed $2,000 within a 3-month period. Outlet purchases do not qualify for rewards. Expedited Delivery not available on certain TVs, monitors, batteries and adapters, and is available in Continental (except Alaska) U.S. only. Other exceptions apply. Not valid for resellers and/or online auctions. Offers and rewards subject to change without notice, not combinable with all other offers. See Dell.com/rewardsfaq. $50 in bonus rewards for Dell Rewards Members who open a new Dell Preferred Account (DPA), or Dell Business Credit (DBC) account on or after 8/10/2022. $50 bonus rewards typically issued within 30 business days after DPA or DBC open date.

*Based on testing using the Mobile Mark 2012 battery life benchmark test. For more information about this benchmark test, visit www.bapco.com. Test results should be used only to compare one product with another and are not a guarantee you will experience the same battery life. Battery life may be significantly less than the test results and varies depending on your product’s configuration, software, usage, operating conditions, power management settings and other factors. Maximum battery life will decrease with time and use.

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best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

Learn more about the E-buy 15.4lcdModelModel15.4lcdDetailsSpecifications15.4" WXGA 1280x800 (Glossy) 1 CCFLAdditional InformationDate First AvailableMarch 06, 2019

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

At E3 this year, Dell announced updates and changes to the Alienware line. The massive Alienware Area 51 gaming desktop is getting a refresh to include AMD"s new Threadripper CPUs, and Alienware is getting its own gaming mice, mechanical keyboards, and monitors.

Until now, the Alienware family mainly consisted of laptops, desktops, and consoles, so gamers had to look elsewhere for peripherals to pair with their Alienware devices. According to Dell, customers told the company they wanted more mice, keyboards, and other gaming accessories so they had more options to build an entire gaming ecosystem out of Alienware products. Dell listened, and the result of that customer research are the new Alienware gaming mice, mechanical keyboards, and monitors.

The two new Alienware corded gaming mice both have on-the-fly DPI switching between precision and speed so they can match the tempo of the gaming they"re playing; the $49 Advanced Gaming Mouse has three configurable levels of DPI switching, while the $89 Elite Gaming Mouse has five. Both have a swappable side grip so the user can adjust the ergonomics best for their hand, and the Elite Gaming Mouse has a three-position palm rest as well. Inside the Elite Gaming Mouse are four weights the user can adjust depending on how heavy they like their mouse to be. Both mice have 13 customizable buttons and RGB lighting, too, so users can change the lighting to match the rest of their system.

Accompanying the two gaming mice are two new mechanical keyboards. The $89 Advanced Gaming Keyboard uses KaiHua switches and spring-loaded keys to give that improved tactile feedback gamers expect, and it features anti-ghosting technology and support for macro commands. The $119 Pro Gaming Keyboard has all the same features as the Advanced model, but also includes a volume roller, onboard memory (useful for macro commands), and a 13-zone RGB backlighting system. Dell"s new Alienware 25 gaming monitor has a 24.5-inch TN, 1920x1080 LCD display with super-thin three-side bezels, a refresh rate of 240Hz, and a response time of 1ms. It models with Nvidia G-Sync ($699) or AMD FreeSync ($499). Advertisement

Dell joins HP and other PC manufacturers that are going after gamers more intently with matching accessories for their existing gaming lines. In contrast to Razer, which started out with gaming accessories and has since developed its own gaming systems, Dell and HP are targeting existing fans on their gaming families with accessories that fit into the same line. However, it"s unclear if gamers will want to pay upwards of $90 on an Alienware-branded mouse if they already have a device that works for them or can find a similar option at a better price.

Dell is also updating its Area 51 gaming desktop to support AMD"s Threadripper CPUs and Intel Skylake processors, plus up to three graphics cards. The new Area 51 will be the only device to ship with Threadripper in 2017—you can buy Threadripper CPUs on their own, but Alienware is the first and only device maker to integrate them into a product in 2017. That"s exciting for anyone thinking of taking the plunge and buying an Area 51, but, at the same time, that means you"ll be spending over $1,700 at least to get it. Exact pricing for the Threadripper-powered Area 51 hasn"t be announced, but it will be available starting July 27. All of Alienware"s new peripherals will be available starting June 13.

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

If you’ve been looking at the field of gaming laptops for the past couple of years, you’ve probably noticed that they are getting thinner, lighter, and less conspicuous. Today’s gaming laptops are not only capable of playing the latest games at high frame rates, but they can also pull double duty for productivity work just as easily.

Alienware’s new Area-51m, which starts at around $1,950 and can be configured well north of $5,000, is not one of those gaming laptops. It is a behemoth that calls back to the time when all gaming laptops were thick, heavy computers that never left the comfort of a sturdy desk.

To avoid having to use MXM, Alienware’s parent company Dell developed its own system for workstations called DGFF (Dell Graphics Form Factor) that allows it to put the latest GPUs on modular boards that can then be swapped out. The Area-51m is the first consumer laptop to make use of this new platform.

Future upgradeability is a nice thing to have, but when you’re spending $2,000 or more on a laptop, you don’t want to have to upgrade any of it anytime soon. The Area-51m’s design may immediately separate from the rest of the gaming laptop pack, but if it’s really going to justify its cost, it needs to be a top performer out of the box.

It’s perhaps best to think of the Area-51m as a “portable desktop,” as opposed to a laptop or truly mobile computer. It’s a massive machine, weighing over 8.5 pounds and measuring 1.7 inches at its thickest point. It has two power adapters, which vary in size depending on the internal configuration, but they add at least another few pounds to the total package. This isn’t the kind of computer you can just unplug and carry away from your desk; moving it from place to place is a production each time.

It’s also not the kind of computer you’ll be able to use while traveling. Sure, you can bring it from one place to another, but you won’t be gaming along the way because that demands two power outlets, and the giant machine is practically unsafe to use on your lap. Even though the Area-51m is far heavier and larger than most modern laptops (gaming or not), it’s a pound lighter than the Alienware 17 it replaces, thanks to its new magnesium alloy chassis.

The Area-51m’s overall design signals a new direction for Alienware, and it will inform other products the company releases in the future. I like it: the matte white (“lunar light” in Alienware’s marketing-speak) model I’ve been using for this review is modern, attractive, and smooth to the touch.

But it’s not subtle: there’s no mistaking this for anything but a gaming laptop, with its multiple alien head logos and various lighting effects. The most prominent design feature is the gigantic rear exhaust, with its hexagonally patterned grates for ventilation, surrounded by a single ring of LED light that makes the whole assembly look a bit like the engine of a sci-fi spaceship. I don’t mind the look, but if you want a sleeper gaming rig, this isn’t it.

In terms of basic specs and layout, the Area-51m has a full-size, non-chiclet keyboard with a number pad, a traditional trackpad with physical buttons (it lights up when you touch it), and a 17-inch display with slim bezels on the sides and top. I’m not the biggest fan of the keyboard or the trackpad — both feel like something that would have been appropriate on a computer a decade ago — but if you’re coming from an older Alienware laptop, you’ll feel right at home.

The keyboard has customizable macro keys and full RGB lighting options, and since most people will instantly plug a gaming mouse into the side of the Area-51m, the trackpad’s small size and so-so tracking performance aren’t that much of an issue. My biggest complaint is the annoyingly squeaky N key on my review unit, but I have a feeling that is limited to my sample. Still, it’s not something I’d want to put up with on a multi-thousand-dollar computer.

Alienware offers four different display options with the Area-51m, but they all share the same size and resolution: 17 inches and 1080p. The display on my higher-end review unit is a 144Hz panel with Nvidia’s G-Sync tech plus built-in Tobii eye tracking, and it’s great for gaming. It’s fast, there’s little to no ghosting, and its anti-glare finish helps cut down reflections. It’s not the brightest screen, especially compared to something like a MacBook Pro, but it’s about average for gaming laptops, and it’s not like you’ll be using this thing outside anyway.

I do wish there were higher-resolution options since the Area-51m’s hardware is definitely capable of pushing more pixels, but Alienware tells me that there just aren’t 17-inch, high-resolution, high-refresh panels with slim bezels available yet. When those components are available, it will make them an option at the time of purchase on the Area-51m, it says. (The display is not something you’ll be able to upgrade after the fact.)

The Area-51m has the standard set of ports you’d expect on a gaming laptop in 2019: three USB-A 3.1 ports, a Thunderbolt 3 Type-C port, HDMI, Mini DisplayPort, 2.5-gigabit Ethernet, a headset jack, a microphone jack, and Alienware’s proprietary graphics amplifier port for an external GPU. That’s probably enough ports for the average gamer, but I’d have liked to have seen even more, including an SD card slot. There’s a lot of empty space on the Area-51m’s chassis that could be used for more I/O, and multiple Thunderbolt 3 ports or an SD card slot would have made the computer much more attractive to the content creators that would use its horsepower for video editing and other tasks.

Inside the hulking chassis is a Z390 chipset, with a desktop processor, up to 64GB (four sticks) of RAM, two M.2 SSD slots, a 2.5-inch drive bay, and Dell’s DGFF modular graphics card. You can get the Area-51m with a Core-i7 8700 processor and Nvidia RTX 2060 GPU to start, but I think most people interested in this machine will opt for the higher-end (and more expensive) configurations. The model I’ve been testing has the Core i9-9900K processor, RTX 2080 GPU, 32GB of DD4 2400MHz RAM, two 512GB M.2 SSDs (in a RAID 0 setup for a total of 1TB of fast storage), and an additional 1TB hybrid drive for more storage. Alongside the Tobii eye-tracking and 144Hz G-Sync display, this configuration costs about $4,500.

It is possible to buy the lower-end configurations and then upgrade down the road — after all, this is a desktop processor and modular graphics card — but that really only makes sense for upgrading to new generations of CPUs and GPUs, not ones from the same generation. Stepping up from the 8700 processor to the 9900K is a $450 option when you buy the Area-51m; doing it after the fact will cost about $525 at today’s processor prices.

The battery inside the Area-51m is a large, 90 watt-hour unit, but that doesn’t translate into great battery life. In my tests, I was able to get about 90 minutes to two hours of use between charges for productivity work and closer to 30 minutes while gaming. That means you’ll want to carry around both of the Area-51m’s power adapters when you bring the computer places, as you’ll need both of them for full-power gaming. It is possible to rely on just the smaller, 180W charger for productivity work, but if you’re already lugging the Area-51m around, you might as well fully commit.

All of those specs and power mean little if the components can’t stay cool enough to run optimally, which is the biggest challenge with gaming laptops. Fortunately, the cooling system Alienware developed for the Area-51m is excellent, and it’s able to keep both the CPU and GPU at temps well below their throttling points. It’s not silent — the fan system is very loud, especially when at full speed — but it’s effective, and it lets the Area-51m hit performance numbers that are much closer to what a desktop provides than a laptop.

Loud fans are not really unusual for a gaming laptop, and if you’re in the market for the Area-51m, you probably expect it. There are powerful speakers up front that can overpower the fan noise, but most people will just want to use a headset while gaming so they don’t have to hear the fans at all. You just might not be able to get away with using the Area-51m in a quiet office or library without getting some dirty looks.

Playing games is what the Area-51m was designed to do, and it does that job excellently. It is able to play virtually any modern AAA game I throw at it with the graphical settings maxed out and still maintain high frame rates. Even games like Battlefield V and Shadow of the Tomb Raider, which have a lot of eye candy and special ray-tracing lighting effects, could be played with virtually every setting turned on and maxed out and the Area-51m still maintains frame rates between 60 and 80 frames per second. That’s not quite the full 144Hz that this screen can push, but it’s still high enough for a great experience in those games.

Competitive shooting games, like Apex Legends, Overwatch, CS:GO, and everyone’s favorite, Fortnite, can be played with all of their graphical features enabled at 120 to 144 frames per second. Players that prefer high frame rates over eye candy can configure these games with lower settings and run them at hundreds of frames per second, which is well more than the native refresh rate of the display. If stock settings aren’t providing enough power, Alienware’s Command Center offers overclocking options for both the CPU and GPU to squeeze even more performance out of them.

All of that performance headroom highlights the Area-51m’s bottleneck: the display’s resolution. I have no doubt that the Area-51m could easily push a 1440p panel or maybe even a 4K display in lots of games, but for the time being, you’re limited to 1080p.If you’re after the fastest frame rates you can get, you probably prefer a high-refresh rate screen, but if you are more into visual presentation and eye-candy, more resolution is appreciated, especially for non-gaming applications. For now, if you want to game or work at a higher resolution on the Area-51m, you’ll just have to use an external display.

As it stands, the Area-51m is the most powerful gaming laptop you can buy, and its upgradeable features mean it could remain powerful for years to come. When we opened up the Area-51m ourselves, we found that — while it isn’t exactly easy — swapping out the CPU and GPU isn’t much different than doing so on an average desktop gaming PC. But there’s an asterisk next to all of this: we don’t know for sure that the next generation of Intel processors or Nvidia or AMD GPUs will actually fit in this computer or how much those modular graphics cards will cost. Dell has said that if it’s possible to physically and electrically fit the chips onto its swappable graphics boards, it will offer upgrade options, but Dell admits it doesn’t necessarily know what Nvidia’s next plans are.

That uncertainty makes it tough to swallow the Area-51m’s price because we really don’t know if this experiment will last. For the cost of a well-configured Area-51m, you could buy a desktop computer and monitor with similar power and still have enough money left over to buy a more mainstream thin-and-light gaming laptop for when you want to game on the go.

The Area-51m is an unrealistic option for most gamers. The kind of gamer who is going to demand this level of performance in a portable machine and put up with all of the compromises and costs necessary to get it is likely a competitive e-sports player or a virtual reality game developer who needs an easier way to transport their desktop to the next trade show.

That said, what Alienware has done with the Area-51m is really impressive. Not only does it hit performance marks unmatched by other portable machines, but it doesn’t have any glaring issues or show-stopping usability problems that bring it down, other than the obvious compromises with its size and weight. Even just being able to cool these desktop components efficiently enough for them to perform this well in a portable machine is a genuine feat. If you are the type of gamer who wants the ultimate power in a portable machine and are willing to pay any cost to get it, the Area-51m is for you.

For the rest of us, I’m hopeful that Dell’s plans for upgradability pan out because I’m very curious to see where the Area-51m’s ideas on performance and portability go in the future.

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best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

During our time with the Alienware Area-51 R5, we came to realize that some of our benchmarks just weren’t challenging enough to truly put the machine’s 18-core processor to the test.

So, we devised a new one using Adobe Premiere Pro. Using a custom workload, we measured how quickly the fully-loaded Alienware Area-51 R5 could render a video file. Our control in this experiment is a machine renowned for its on-the-go media management horsepower, the MacBook Pro 15.

The MacBook Pro 15 is a familiar laptop, you’ve probably seen it in the background of many of your favorite YouTube content creators’ videos, especially “behind the scenes” videos illustrating just how they go about creating the content that keeps their lights on. For video editors, anyone who has ever fired up Adobe Premiere Pro in a professional setting, the MacBook Pro 15 is a very familiar platform.

Even fully-loaded though, video renders can take an awful long time if you’re working with long videos with complex editing timelines, or manipulating raw 4K, 5K, or 8K video. It’s not uncommon to see render times hit upward of an hour for videos as short as six or seven minutes. Scale that up to feature-length films and you can see why long render times are familiar enough for video editors that they’ve become meme-worthy.

First let’s go over the exact specs of our two test systems here. Our Alienware Area-51 R5 review unit featured an Intel Core i9-7980XE 18-core processor, 64GB of RAM, two Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 graphics cards running in SLI, and a 1TB M.2 SSD.

For our test project we stitched together three separate 8K raw R3D video files, threw on a bunch of extraneous color correction layers, and measured how long it took each system to finish an in-to-out render from the local drive. On top of that, we ran it a couple times just to be sure, and our numbers speak for themselves here.

Let’s just look at those numbers for a minute. An almost-fully-loaded MacBook Pro 15 took just over 25 minutes to crunch a sixty second raw 8K video. That’s actually not bad at all, that’s pretty quick for a laptop. But the Alienware Area-51 R5 with its 18-core processor, 64GB of RAM, and dual GeForce GTX 1080 graphics cards, just annihilated the MacBook Pro’s time here.

We could have run the Alienware through that same render about 76 times in the time it took the MacBook to crunch the same file. That’s right, the Alienware Area-51 R5 fully rendered sixty seconds of raw 8K video, with several color correction layers, in just 20 seconds.

Sure, contests of strength like these are fun, but they can serve an important purpose when determining how much you want to spend on computer hardware. The Alienware Area-51 R5 is an exceptionally powerful machine, and as such it’s exceptionally expensive. Our review unit would run you about $6,700. A fully-loaded MacBook Pro 15 is going to run you about half that, maybe $3,300 depending on the specs you choose.

They both have their advantages and disadvantages, you’re obviously not going to be carrying around the Area-51 in a svelte messenger bag as easily as you can a MacBook Pro 15. But when it comes to performing this kind of work, video editing, handling media, time is incredibly important.

If you spent an entire workday editing video on a MacBook Pro 15, you might end up spending half that time waiting for clips to render. Imagine how much work you could get done if your render times took one 76th the time they do now.

Time is valuable, and in the right professional setting, spending some extra cash for a powerful high-end desktop like the Area-51 R5 can give you a hell of a lot more of it.

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

Monitors–The Alienware 25” gaming monitor, with either NVIDIA G-SYNC (AW2518H) or AMD FreeSync, (AW2518HF), offers fast, responsive gameplay with virtually no input lag, at an extremely rapid 1 ms panel response time, and a native 240Hz refresh rate for sharp, clear graphics. With AlienFX lighting (AW2518H only), three preset display modes, full adjustability, single-diecast stand legs, and a seamless panoramic multi-monitor view with ultra-thin bezel, the Alienware 25” gaming monitor is perfect for any gamer. Available in the U.S. June 13, concurrent with E3: monitors ($499-699 USD).

Alienware Advanced Gaming Keyboard – The Alienware Advanced Gaming Keyboard with optional palm rest delivers a premium gaming experience at an affordable value. Featuring mechanical keys with brown switches, with more precise, responsive and consistent key strokes and five keys dedicated for macro commands that give gamers a competitive edge. Available in the U.S. June 13, concurrent with E3: Advanced Gaming Keyboard ($89.99 USD).

Alienware Pro Gaming Keyboard – The Alienware Pro Gaming Keyboard with optional palm rest exemplifies all the essential design components of the Advanced Gaming Keyboard, and elevates the engineering innovation with dedicated volume roller, onboard memory, 15 macro commands and 13 zone-based RGB backlit lighting options. Available in the U.S. June 13, concurrent with E3: Pro Gaming Keyboard ($119.99 USD).

Alienware Advanced Gaming Mouse – The Alienware Advanced Gaming Mouse offers multiple configurations with 3 on-the-fly DPI (dots per inch) levels to switch between precision and speed style gameplay.  Outfitted with nine unique buttons for in-game customization.Available in the U.S June 13 ($49.99 USD).

Alienware Elite Gaming Mouse – Additionally, the Alienware Elite Gaming Mouse leverages advanced custom ability innovation with swappable grips, up to 13 programmable buttons, adjustable palm rest and four variable levels of weight adjustment providing ultimate control over cursor precision and movement speed to dominate opponents. Available in the U.S. June 13 ($89.99 USD).

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

This is the comparison of Dell’s Alienware Area 51M R2 and Alienware M17 R3. Both the laptops are great ones in gaming but here, you can see which one is better for you in terms of features, performance, and price range.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6AMD Radeon RX 5500M 4GB GDDR6, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 6GB GDDR6 (OC Ready), NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 8GB GDDR6, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER 8GB GDDR6, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 – Max Performance

Camera720p at 30 fps HD camera, dual-array microphones, Tobii Eye TrackerAlienware HD (1280×720) resolution) camera with dual-array integrated microphones

It is quite nice to do a comparison review between the two laptops, in case anybody is trying to decide between the two of these laptops to buy. In this comparison, we have M17 R3 which is Dell’s slim and light gaming laptop, and we have the Area 51M R2 which is the heavyweight gaming laptop with great performance. This is the laptop that includes a desktop processor that is upgradable. It includes a GPU that you can remove in exchange for another, also plenty of storage bays as well as two RAM slots.

By contrast, the Alienware M17 R3 being a slim and light laptop, most of this is soldered onto the main board of the laptop so the processor, the GPU, and the RAM, and the Wi-Fi card is all soldered on. So, when you’re buying a slim and light laptop, you need to make sure you buy exactly what you need when you buy this laptop. Whereas with the Alienware 51M, you can buy a laptop and upgrade it at a later date if you wish.

You can obviously see how much chunkier the area 51M is. When you lift the lids up, both of these laptops got the Tron ring, they’ve got the same sort of aesthetics on these laptops and they’ve both got the lit Alienware head as a logo. But, you’ll notice that you’ve got a 17 like sort of lightly embossed logo on the M17 R3 and you’ve got an A51 slightly embossed on the Area 51M. Honestly, the Area 51M looks like a much chunkier version.

Weight-wise, the Alienware M17 weighs 2.8 kilograms, quite a normal sort of weight for a 17-inch laptop, and add an extra 1.3 kilogram for the power battery, it’s quite a heavy package to be carrying around with you in a bag. The Area 51M on its own weighs 4.3 kilograms and with both of these batteries you’re taking another 2.1 kilograms, so in total, you’re taking 6.4 kilograms in weight. This really isn’t a laptop you’d be lugging around everywhere with you, it’s fine to carry around your house or nearby places but I don’t think that it is much portable like other gaming laptops. So, if portability is the sort of the key feature that you’re buying for a gaming laptop, then clearly you could probably be looking at the M17.

On screens, they are offering the same sort of options between these two laptops. So, you’ve got a choice of between 144 hertz and 300 hertz, I think there’s a 360-hertz panel. Both of these are great screens, both these are the 144-hertz options, and my choice when buying any of these laptops is to go for the 144 hertz. The great advantage of the M17 R3 is if you buy the 144 hertz, you get g-sync but you can also press function f7 and switch to Optimus. So, you get slightly longer battery life by doing so and the Area 51M is more like a mobile UPS, so that’s not even worth worrying about which gives a terrible battery life but if you switch the M17 to the Optimus mode, you will likely give up four and a half hours of light use with a laptop.

Neither of these laptops is the highest-end option available, these are both quite mid-range for their respective laptops. With the M17 R3, we’re looking at a 10th generation 10750H 6-core processor with 12 threads and the 2070 Super from NVIDIA for the graphics card. On the Area 51M, we’ve got a desktop chip and in this one, I’ve chosen the 10700 which is an 8-core 16 thread processor and the reason I chose this is when you choose the high-end configurations with a laptop, the fans will run fast to cool the processor and all and for the GPU, I’m using the 2070 Super from NVIDIA and the one thing that’s disappointed me is on this laptop, it’s only have 115 watts and the M17 R3 is have 150 watts. So, the actual GPU performance between the two is exactly the same but when you’re buying such a powerhouse like this, I expect it to be at least 150 watts but if you buy the 2080 or 2080 Super, they put a much bigger thermal budget on it. So, if you are looking at to get the ultimate performance out of this, then I would recommend upgrading to that at least the 2080 and personally 2070 Super even 115 watts is more than adequate for what I need. The good thing about that is this laptop runs incredibly quiet.

At the back, this looks very similar, we’ve got HDMI-2 ports, mini display port on both of them, and on the M17, we’ve got the Thunderbolt 3 port and also has power delivery on this laptop. In the same area on the Area 51M, we’ve got the full-size ethernet or RJ45 slots then moving over we’ve got the Alienware graphics amplifier port and then lastly a single power adapter on the M17 and we’ve got the double power adapters on the Area 51M which leads me onto a big difference between the two and that is obviously the power delivery. The M17 has a single power battery which came with a 330 watt but it could vary depending on your configuration. The Area 51M came with a 330 and 180-watt power battery and if you want the full power of this laptop, you will need to use both those batteries.

Trackpads wise, the M17 R3 comes with a Microsoft precision trackpad, it’s quite large and it’s got inbuilt clicks. So, you click on the actual pad itself to activate it. In comparison to the Area 51M, you’re getting a much smaller trackpad with dedicated click buttons and it’s a Synaptics trackpad and the reason for that is this one lights up. So, as you touch it, you’ll notice the actual trackpad itself is an RGB trackpad and you can change that in the Alienware command center and you’ve got a number of different options for that. So, if you want the RGB trackpad, you can go for the Area 51M. The better trackpad of the two is probably the M17 R3 from my use between the two unless you really like having the dedicated click buttons.

They’re both very easy to open up. With the M17, you can see quite a large area which is obviously the vapor chamber cooling on the new models, decent size fans but everything’s very difficult to get to because the motherboard is flipped. So, if you want to replace something, you do have to take the entire motherboard out to do. You have got one SSD slot and another M.2 PCIe 2280 and then lastly over on this side, we’ve got 2230, so you’ve got a 30 millimeter SSD. So, they’re usually in smaller capacities but there’s no option often. We’ve got 86 watt-hour battery and this is changeable and then you’ve got your downward-firing speakers and some forward-firing speakers that’s why they’ve got a pretty good sound.

The performance is probably the main reason that you could be choosing one over the other if it isn’t portable. To start with the M17, it is using a mobile 45 watt CPU whereas the Area 51M is using a desktop processor and is pretty much unlimited with the watts it can pull from that processor and the desktop processor in this model is the intel 10th generation 10700. In Cinebench, the M17 scored 3106 points whereas the Area 51M scored 4765 points. So, you can see where the desktop-class processor absolutely destroys the M17s 45 watt CPU, this is obviously because it’s such a chunky machine and it can really push the wattage with no problem at all. Both of these machines do have vapor chambers. we ran the Geekbench CPU, the M17 scored 1212 on single-core and 6069 on the multi-core and the Area 51M scored 1302 on the single and 8970 on the multi-core, so you get some really good figures. Now When we look at the GPU between these two, they are both 115 watts NVIDIA 2070 Super, so they are pretty much identical. I would have expected a better performance from the Area 51M, it will run cooler but other than that they’re exactly the same scores.

I run Time Spy on both of these, the M17 R3 got a graphic score of 8571 whereas the Area 51M got 8615, so absolutely the nominal amount of difference. Now when we’re looking at the Fast Stroke graphics score, the M17 got 22052 points whereas the Area 51M scored 2256 points. So, it is absolutely good with regards to the GPU performance with these graphics cards, if you get 2080 that’s where I think you’re going to see a bigger difference because the Area 51M allows a much higher wattage budget for that GPU.

The Area 51M has much bigger fans pumping out that hot air at the back, now that does two things; the first one is it obviously keeps the temperatures down on the internal components so it does run cooler, especially the GPU than the M17 but more importantly and particularly in my case, it has a much more pleasant sound. The M17 R3 being thinner and having thinner fans is quite a lot louder with a different pitch to the fans and the Area 51M has got just a nice ‘whoosh’ sound to the fans. So, if you’re using these and you’re gaming them for a couple of hours, the Area 51M is a much nicer experience unless you’ve got some sort of closed headset on then you can’t hear the fan noise anyway. It would just probably bother the people around you.

Area 51M has a 330-watt battery, it is quite heavy weighing 1.3 kilograms, and in a lot of configurations, you’ll get at 240 which is a much better-sized battery to go with a laptop. When you get the Area 51M, not only do you get this 1.3-kilogram battery, you also get a 240-watt battery as well. If you’re buying these laptops bag wise, the Alienware M17 R3 will fit in most 17-inch laptop bags, the Area 51M realistically looking at an 18-inch laptop bag.

To conclude, I love both of the laptops, their aesthetics, performance, and all the things. When it comes to the decision between these laptops then I would choose the Area 51M every time, it is incredibly bulky and it does need two power bricks and you need to take that into consideration but with regards to the build quality, the upgradeability, the speakers, it absolutely analytics the M17. Now, you do pay for that with the weight and the size of the laptop and it is quite a lot more expensive than the M17. This doesn’t mean that the Alienware M17 is not a good gaming laptop, it does have some pros like it’s a much thinner and portable version of the Alienware line up. So, you can also choose this one.

best lcd monitors for alienware area51 in stock

Graphics Adapter: ATI Mobility Radeon X1800, NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTX, NVIDIA GeForce 8800M GTX SLI, NVIDIA GeForce Go 7600, NVIDIA GeForce Go 7950 GTX, NVIDIA GeForce Go 7950 GTX SLI, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Mobile

Average of 117 scores (from 174 reviews)price: 50%, performance: 89%, features: 82%, display: 84%, mobility: 59%, workmanship: 79%, ergonomy: 74%, emissions: 60%

Make no mistake about it, Alienware makes distinctive notebooks that are head turners and the Area-51 m5550i is no exception. It is not a bleeding edge gaming enthused notebook unlike many of its Alienware brethren. In comparison to the monster gaming notebooks from Alienware like the Aurora m9700, this notebook"s graphics performance comes off as a bit puny. But as an office notebook, now that"s another story. With graphics performance that is superior to many office notebooks and a wickedly powerful CPU this notebook will lay waste to many office applications with ease (in office speak - "improve your overall productivity").

We actually took the m9750 with us to our family’s holiday celebration, and the reaction from our family members was priceless. They couldn’t believe a notebook could be this big and powerful. Everyone was impressed by its looks and its performance, including us. This is a seriously powerful notebook but it does have a few drawbacks. The first is that its cooling fans are almost always on, and they are noticeably loud. The second is the videocards are already a bit dated, though they were able to play Bioshock and CoD4, albeit at a low resolution. If you order an m9750 we highly recommend upgrading to the 8700M for maximum longevity. Third, we had issues with the webcam and system restore, which is disappointing. All-in-all we had a better-than-average experience with the m9750 though, and despite its flaws we would still put it near the top of our list of must-have desktop replacement notebooks.

The Alienware Area-51 m9750 leads the XPS M1730 in value by around 1% prior to overclocking, which then gives the XPS a victory of around 6%. With value leadership so close, we"d have to pick our system based on other criteria.

Gaming is the biggest advantage for SLI-equipped notebooks, but our XPS M1730 results were mixed with a huge loss in F.E.A.R. and moderate wins in Oblivion. Application performance provides a more convincing argument for the higher-priced Dell notebook.

If portability is a primary consideration, the XPS M1730"s added weight might be a concern. The notebook itself weighs two pounds more, and the power brick is also a pound heavier than the one included with Alienware"s Area-51 m9750. Part of its extra weight goes into the 11% higher-capacity battery, but we have to wonder how much the show lighting and support circuitry added.

You don"t have to be a sci-fi fan to be an admirer of Alienware"s computers but there"s no denying their otherworldly designs make the hairs rise on the back of your neck when you take the machines out the box.

The Area-51 m9750 is the Alien Queen of notebooks: black, striking, immensely powerful and bristling with unexpected weapons, er, features. For a start the colour is described as Stealth Black, a matt finish that cleverly resists leaving the mark of your fingerprints after you"ve touched it. The lid follows tradition with raised ‘ribs" pointing towards the trademark ET head that glows blue when switched on and the entire case features magnesium alloy which is 75 percent lighter than steel and more rigid than plastic. Unfortunately every Alien Queen has an acid side and m9750"s is the layout.

You don"t have to be a sci-fi fan to be an admirer of Alienware"s computers but there"s no denying their otherworldly designs make the hairs rise on the back of your neck when you take the machines out the box.

The Area-51 m9750 is the Alien Queen of notebooks: black, striking, immensely powerful and bristling with unexpected weapons, er, features. For a start the colour is described as Stealth Black, a matt finish that cleverly resists leaving the mark of your fingerprints after you"ve touched it. The lid follows tradition with raised ‘ribs" pointing towards the trademark ET head that glows blue when switched on and the entire case features magnesium alloy which is 75 percent lighter than steel and more rigid than plastic. Unfortunately every Alien Queen has an acid side and m9750"s is the layout.

Its giant dimensions seem like overkill: the Alienware Area-51 m9750 is a 17in laptop yet it is more than 20mm deeper than the 17in Samsung M60 we recently tested and, at 5.4kg, is more than 2kg heavier than the M60. The Alienware, then, is a laptop designed for static use, rather than being carted about from place to place. Its ridged, all black casing is certainly durable, but the brutish Alienware Area-51 m9750 doesn"t look all that attractive, particularly when set alongside similarly sized laptops. When it comes to its main selling point – entertainment – the Alienware Area-51 m9750 is hard to fault. The large speakers with subwoofers at the front produce full and booming surround sound, while Alienware has crammed in a multi-format drive that includes DVD-RAM (useful for archiving video you"ve edited), a TV tuner and 1.3Mp webcam.

Drop the Warhammer! Alienware has gone crazy with its latest flagship laptop. Without a doubt the most powerful Windows Vista-based laptop on the market, the manufacturer of choice for speed freaks has achieved another industry first with the Area-51 m9750 (starting at £1148). The breakthrough offering is the first 17-inch laptop to fuse the astounding graphics capabilities of dual 512MB nVidia GeForce Go 7950 GTX graphics cards and the blazing speed of Intel Core 2 Duo mobile processors, making it a dream system for mobile gamers and design professionals. The unprecedented combination of dual GeForce Go 7950 GTX graphics and Core 2 Duo mobile processors at the heart of Alienware’s Area-51 m9750 epitomises the power and innovation that encompasses the entire system.

The Alienware Area-51 m9750 and Eurocom M570RU Divine-X provided similar performance value, with the more expensive Alienware system providing an overall performance gain almost equal to its price premium. The Area-51 m9750 is easily the better value for people who only want to game and can afford its higher price, while the M570RU Divine-X is the better value for general purpose users who can live with a little less gaming power. One thing we didn"t graph was battery life, as the Alienware was tested using Mobile Mark"s DVD playback, while the Eurocom was tested using a DVD playback test developed internally. The difference between these tests could be as much as a few percent, but both systems will apparently play a DVD for just under 1.5 hours using the battery. The Alienware system"s larger battery is able to keep it going this long because the cards are both in power-saving 2D mode.

Well, I didn’t think it was possible for Alienware to step it up so much with the Area-51 m9750. There wasn’t one single instance where it didn’t completely beat the snot out of its predecessor, the Aurora m9700. All I can say is if I were a consumer who bought the m9700, I’d be pretty pissed after reading this review.

Had I been using a USB keyboard instead of the integrated one, I really might have thought I was using a nice desktop gaming rig. The system performance speaks for itself; the inclusion of the Core 2 Duo CPU was a very welcome one, and the 7950GTX SLI GPUs show why they’re the king of the hill of mobile graphics world. There’s really little to fault the m9750 for. I didn’t want to send it back.

I think that the level of performance I’ve seen with the Area-51 m9750 warrants the coveted Laptop Logic “Editor’s Choice” award, which is sparingly used around here.

Alienware’s reputation precedes the market when it comes to notebooks and gaming. They have a history of offering top of the line gaming rigs, that look great and offer customization to any customer needs. The new Alienware Area-51m 9750 plunges head first into the HD market as to one of the first laptops that offer an optional blu-ray drive for early adopters, while still providing gamers with dual graphic cards with SLI support. This is one mean machine.

Like my Alienware m5750, the m9750 is a step between a midsized laptop and a “desktop replacement”. With the unprecedented versatility of the Intel Core 2 Duo Chip, dueling nVidia video cards with SLI enabled and an HD 17 inch screen, there is very little this notebook cannot achieve when it comes to gaming.

One word can describe the Alienware Area-51 m9750: big. It"s as if the person designing it thought they were in Burger King and decided to Go Large at every opportunity. It"s got two hard drives, two graphics cards, two processor cores and a whopping 17in screen. There"s another thing that"s big about the m9750 - its price. There"s no skirting around the subject - £2,491 is a lot of money to pay for a laptop, no matter how you look at it. If you strip it back to its barest elements it can be yours for £1,197 but you"ll have to pare down the specifications to just one hard drive and graphics card and lower the screen resolution, among other things. There is no denying that Alienware has thrown a huge amount of technology into the m9750. Its 17in screen runs at an HD friendly WUXGA resolution of 1,920 x 1,200 pixels.

Alienware has long been the first name in big-budget gaming rigs, straddling the line between the mainstream and enthusiast markets with flashy ads, high-end components, and just enough hand-holding for novices. We first laid eyes on the company"s flagship laptop, the Area-51 m9750, at CES 2007 back in January and came away impressed with its array of high-end components. Its huge, high-resolution display, twin SLI video cards, and a Blu-ray drive, along with a promise that its starting price would approach a reasonable $2,000 earned it a Best of CES nod in the gaming category.

Alienware has finally released the system, and its performance in CNET Labs more than lived up to expectations. Our review system included a host of upgrades that more than double the baseline model"s price and we can"t help but wish that a $4,000-plus laptop would have a slightly more sophisticated look.

The Area-51 M9750 is a top-of-the-line gaming notebook from Alienware. It features an Intel Core 2 Duo processor and is available with dual Nvidia high-performance video cards.

The Alienware M 9750 has a select user base. The main reason to buy this notebook is for extreme gaming. With the kind of components this notebook has, it is tough to beat. Its main competitor is the Clevo D900C (commonly known as the Sager NP 9260). Although the Clevo is slightly more powerful overall, the M9750 is significantly slimmer and lighter. For gamers who want the ultimate power in a reasonably portable package, the Alienware M9750 is the machine to beat. The Alienware Area-51 M9750 definitely ranks as one of the most impressive systems I have used in almost every aspect, from its striking visual appearance to the fast overall performance. The M9750’s beautiful customized case design is only half of the experience – the other half belongs to the array of top-of-the-line components inside.

Alienware machines aren"t known for skimping on performance, and the much-delayed Area-51 m9750 looks set to keep up this reputation. Announced in January of this year, it"s not designed with the latest technologies. The m9750 relies on the old Intel 945PM Napa chipset rather than the updated Santa Rosa platform. What is new about this notebook design, though, is that it"s the first to put two graphics cards on an Intel motherboard with a Core 2 Duo processor. Until now, AMD has had mobile multi-graphics card functionality all to itself, despite having slower and less energy-efficient mobile processors. Inside there"s a T7200 2GHz processor backed up with 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 Ram. This is pushed to the side lines by the two headline grabbing Geforce Go 7950GTX cards in SLI mode, each with 512MB Ram; mobile versions of the faster 8800GTX aren"t due until later this year.

Alienware has a knack for creating gaming designs that"ll appeal to just about anyone. The Alienware Area-51 m9750 ($4,708 direct), for instance, is a testament to how a touch of simplicity can enhance the design. It moves away from the flashy neon paint jobs in favor of a stealthier look Batman would love. Stealth Black, as Alienware likes to call it, is an intuitive approach to adding subtlety while retaining the unearthly look of an Alienware gaming rig. There"s a lot to like about the design, but pulverizing the gaming opposition is still the main objective. That"s why an SLI-enabled graphics chipset and a high-performance, mobile dual-core processor are ready for the task at hand. For this, the m9750 supplants the Dell XPS M1710 as the gaming king, or at least until Dell can come up with a new rig.

Now for the pictures of the lovely machine: (also please forgive any bad pictures im not sure what others would like to see, any requests and ill do my best)

This is my second computer, and my first time purchasing from Alienware. My old computer is a Dell Inspiron 5100. After a considerable amount of reading and research, I realized I was far more into computers now than four years ago. I needed a real gaming laptop, rather than just the plain old laptop on sale at the nearest Best Buy.

Exploring companies such as Dell (again), WidowPC, Falcon Northwest, Voodoo PC, Sager, and a few others, I was very impressed by both NVIDIA"s SLI and Intel"s Core 2 Duo processor, but I could not find any computer that offered both beasts in one laptop. Just as I was about to settle with an SLI machine without dual core, Alienware"s newest juggernaut came along: the Area-51 m9750. Intel"s Core 2 Duo, Dual 7950 GTX"s, a breathtaking 1920x1200 display.. Fruitless searches and uncertainty were over. It was perfect.

So if you want a no-compromise gaming rig you can actually take with you, the Area-51 m9750 is currently the best machine available. It isn"t cheap, but the full complement of gaming and multimedia features makes it the only PC you"ll need for years to come.

As with anything, there is always room for improvement, but the few problems are vastly outweighed by the positives and this machine rocks. I would recommend this computer to anyone that is considering going with a semi-portable machine, suitable for all purposes. If you require a machine that SCREAMS with power for games, this is probably not the one you want. Alienware has others that do that. If you want something that"s ultra portable, this is not that. Alienware has a nifty little 15 incher for that. But if you want something that is great at home, giving the full power you need along with something to take on the road while not sacrificing in terms of power, then here it is.

I am absolutely thrilled with this system. I will say that Vista is causing some issues, however, I"m confident that these will be cleared up with patches/driver upgrades in the near future. Also, part of this is the learning curve of running a new OS. As I familiarize myself with Vista and learn to tweak it better I suspect performance can also be improved there. I will strongly recommend that you get 2GB of memory for Vista. I know I"ll be ordering some next week to replace the stock 1GB. I"ll also be getting a high speed read/write USB flash drive to experiment with Vista"s ReadyBoost feature. I"m curious to see some benchmark comparisons between 1GB and 2GB of system memory and then 2GB w/ ReadyBoost enabled and the optimum amount of flash memory dedicated to Vista.

The good: Optional Blu-ray drive; roomy keyboard; included separate number pad; DVI output; excellent screen. The bad: Expensive overclocking option not worth it; unimpressive scores on gaming tests. The bottom line: The Alienware Area-51 m5790 Special Edition is a big, expensive, powerful system, but its merely average performance falls a bit short of its "special" moniker.

As a desktop replacement for those thinking of doing so, You can NOT go wrong here. This thing is built like a 1974 Cadillac, and has the speed, power, and looks of a BMW 850. My problems aside, there is nothing on this machine that I can find as an issue or a negative thus far. I do have these STERN recommendations tho.. If you are going to purchase, GO ALL THE WAY, and don’t skimp like I did…

Finally, the 5750 can"t quite match the finer entertainment features of its competitors. The laptop offers no option for a TV tuner, so it can"t double as a portable TV like the Qosmio and Pavilion notebooks. And oddly, its volume wheel doesn"t work in quick-play mode. Small things for some people, perhaps, but for multimedia aficionados, these deficiencies might make the Area-51m 5750 a disappointment.

I would recommend this computer to anyone that is the above average serious computer enthusiast. It is not the top-shelf computer at Alienware; it is one of their mid-range laptop. It suits my needs very well. It doesn"t come feature heavy like other laptops coming out today (there is no camera and no bluetooth for instance), but it does come complete with better basic materials: an above average screen resolution, great video card, great sound, and of course the best processor on the market today. I"m very happy with my purchase. I would say that it is a little more money than other machines, but I can"t find a mainstream manufacturer with similar specs to really do a fair comparison. I"m confident that this machine will last. The case design and components are just what I was looking for and should keep me with a grin on my face for many years to come.

The components of the Alienware Area-51 m9750 thrill gamers: Especially the two Geforce 7950 GTX in SLI-mode and the solid state disk as system hard disk stand for excellent performance. But, also the equipment is brilliant. There are ports for a surround sound system, a 200 GB data hard disk, a TV card, which are even not standard in 17" notebooks. The following comprehensive review explains, whether the Alienware can really set new standards.

Its giant dimensions seem like overkill: the Alienware Area-51 m9750 is a 17in laptop yet it is more than 20mm deeper than the 17in Samsung M60 we recently tested and, at 5.4kg, is more than 2kg heavier than the M60. The Alienware, then, is a laptop designed for static use, rather than being carted about from place to place. Its ridged, all black casing is certainly durable, but the brutish Alienware Area-51 m9750 doesn"t look all that attractive, particularly when set alongside similarly sized laptops. When it comes to its main selling point – entertainment – the Alienware Area-51 m9750 is hard to fault. The large speakers with subwoofers at the front produce full and booming surround sound, while Alienware has crammed in a multi-format drive that includes DVD-RAM (useful for archiving video you"ve edited), a TV tuner and 1.3Mp webcam.

The empire strikes back. Alienware announced a compact high performance notebook a long time ago. But although it was already available in the USA for quite a while, it is just now finally coming to Europe. The Area-51 m15x notebook makes Alienware the first producer that offers a 15" gaming notebook with a 8800 GTX graphics card and Intel Core 2 extreme processor. This is also the current maximum of what"s possible in the compact multimedia class.

You pay a steep price for the Alienware m15x with all the bells and whistles and in return you get a colossal amount of gaming power with graphics that would shame many a desktop PC.

You pay a steep price for the Alienware m15x with all the bells and whistles and in return you get a colossal amount of gaming power with graphics that would shame many a desktop PC.

The only potential downer here, besides the laptop"s price, is that all of the LED lighting that helps you customize your machine also makes the top of the display feel a little flimsy. Yep, the display, probably the most susceptible part of the computer, creaks when you lift it. Honestly, that"s the most disconcerting thing about the Alienware Area 51 m15x--and, considering the portable"s cost, I can"t help but notice it.

The only potential downer here, besides the laptop"s price, is that all of the LED lighting that helps you customize your machine also makes the top of the display feel a little flimsy. Yep, the display, probably the most susceptible part of the computer, creaks when you lift it. Honestly, that"s the most disconcerting thing about the Alienware Area 51 m15x--and, considering the portable"s cost, I can"t help but notice it.

Alienware has long been recognised as a premium brand for gaming enthusiasts, especially for desktop PCs, but its history with gaming laptops has been less impressive. This is due to the company using generic chassis designs, rather than opting to design their own. This has all changed with the launch of the Alienware Area-51 m51x (£2136 inc. VAT), its first real gaming laptop.

Alienware has long been recognised as a premium brand for gaming enthusiasts, especially for desktop PCs, but its history with gaming laptops has been less impressive. This is due to the company using generic chassis designs, rather than opting to design their own. This has all changed with the launch of the Alienware Area-51 m51x (£2136 inc. VAT), its first real gaming laptop.

Almost two years after reviewing a flagship notebook like Alienware"s own Aurora m9700 SLI, it seems little has changed in the notebook world if you are a gamer. Although the Area-51 m15x is considerably more powerful than the Aurora, it still suffers from many of the same problems we complained about back then.

The performance of the Alienware Area-51 m15x is impressive for a notebook, we will give it that much. However, when compared to a budget desktop gaming system, it did not fair all that well and for the most part it was slightly slower. As noted before, there are obvious implications on why we shouldn"t be comparing a notebook to a desktop system, but having that said, we feel that the comparison needs to be made. As we see it, the Area-51 m15x is intended to be a desktop replacement for LAN goers. Rather than packing up your desktop case, LCD screen, keyboard, mouse, and cables, it is much easier and nicer to simply unfold a notebook and get it on. Unfortunately for gamers this has become a bit of a pipe dream, as most notebooks are grossly underpowered, and those that come close, like the Area-51 m15x, cost a small fortune.

Almost two years after reviewing a flagship notebook like Alienware"s own Aurora m9700 SLI, it seems little has changed in the notebook world if you are a gamer. Although the Area-51 m15x is considerably more powerful than the Aurora, it still suffers from many of the same problems we complained about back then.

The performance of the Alienware Area-51 m15x is impressive for a notebook, we will give it that much. However, when compared to a budget desktop gaming system, it did not fair all that well and for the most part it was slightly slower. As noted before, there are obvious implications on why we shouldn"t be comparing a notebook to a desktop system, but having that said, we feel that the comparison needs to be made. As we see it, the Area-51 m15x is intended to be a desktop replacement for LAN goers. Rather than packing up your desktop case, LCD screen, keyboard, mouse, and cables, it is much easier and nicer to simply unfold a notebook and get it on. Unfortunately for gamers this has become a bit of a pipe dream, as most notebooks are grossly underpowered, and those that come close, like the Area-51 m15x, cost a small fortune.

There"s plenty of love for this version of Alienware, it’s size factor and perfect blend of power and mobility will appeal to many. Pairing the lightning-fast Core2Duo Xtreme processor with a speedy 512 MB 8800m GTX video card and 4 GB of RAM - it makes for a very quick, very satisfying laptop experience, which is often reserved for larger notebooks, or even mid-range desktops. However, the base point starts at $1,799, and like Mt Everest – can climb to unreachable heights for many consumers, nearing our model price at $4,808.00. Granted our m15x came with all the extras, like a seconday hard drive, Blu-ray disc burner, and an extra battery. We love the addition of an HDMI port, and we think it’s a great idea to connect your laptop to your home theater, an option that"s a little tougher to find in the competition, and we’re guessing you have plenty of fun toys to connect that HDMI port if you can buy this laptop. Simply stated, If you"re in the market for a high-class gaming laptop, have the money to spend, and love the “new” Alienware design, this is an excellent purchase.

There"s plenty of love for this version of Alienware, it’s size factor and perfect blend of power and mobility will appeal to many. Pairing the lightning-fast Core2Duo Xtreme processor with a speedy 512 MB 8800m GTX video card and 4 GB of RAM - it makes for a very quick, very satisfying laptop experience, which is often reserved for larger notebooks, or even mid-range desktops. However, the base point starts at $1,799, and like Mt Everest – can climb to unreachable heights for many consumers, nearing our model price at $4,808.00. Granted our m15x came with all the extr