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After first reviewing the 15.6" E5510 , we are now taking a look at the E5410 which along with the 13 is placed within the "Standard" category. In addition to the somewhat higher-end and so-called "mainstream" E6410 and E6510 notebooks, the Latitude famil...

Good application performance, Thanks to a 9-cell battery, battery life is relatively long, Elegant, timeless design, Comprehensive communication equipment...

No eSATA or USB 3.0, No HDMI or Display Port, 3D performance...

Like its larger pedant, the E5510, the Latitude E410 from Dell proves itself to be a well-designed and thought-out office laptop. But thanks its smaller form factor, larger battery and optional broadband module, it even trumps its bigger brother in terms...
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With lower power usage and fairly basic system components the E5410's cooling system was barely stressed during our review. Under normal conditions the case temperatures barely crept above room temperature, while under...

Good overall performance, ExpressCard or PC card slot option, Low starting price...

Flexible plastic construction, Average screen, Average battery life...

Overall the Dell Latitude E5410 has a lot to offer if you don't need the features or semi-rugged build quality of the more expensive E6410. With the plastic body and budget-oriented parts configurations, Dell is able to have a much lower starting price on the E5410, coming in with a base sale price of $519 right now. This system is targeted directly at small and medium business, who want a step u...
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According to the E5500 range and the related 14-inch equivalent, the E5400, Dell now gives its business series a refresh. Not only the inside of the laptop gets a refresh, but the outside also gets revamped. The most important improvement for the user is perhaps the latest Intel CPU technology...
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In addition to the mandatory security enhancements of the Latitude series, you get the Dell Optimizer, which… well, optimizes the performance of the laptop with an AI, which analyzes your behavior and provides more power where you need, and more battery l...

Strong body build of carbon, Exceptional battery life, Wide range of connectivity options, Easy to upgrade, Fingerprint reader embedded in the power button + IR face recognition (both are optional), PCIe x4, (optional) Thunderbolt 3 and (optional) LTE sup...

Uses aggressive PWM to adjust its brightness up the maximum level of brightness (fixed by our Health-Guard profile) (BOE NV14N4F-HN4TM (BOE07BB)), Covers only 51% of sRGB (BOE NV14N4F-HN4TM (BOE07BB))...

Surprisingly, the Latitude 14 5410 delivers a very decent performance from the 15W quad-core CPUs. And to our relief, it provides memory upgrades up to 32GB of dual-channel DDR4 RAM, thanks to its two SODIMM slots.The chassis, itself is very good, althoug...
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What the EliteBook is for HP and the ThinkPad for Lenovo, the Latitude is for Dell - Dell's business series. Within the Latitude lineup, there's a clear gradation. The Dell Latitude 9000 and Latitude 7000 are the high-end models. If you buy a Dell Latitud...

robust plastic case, good typing experience, very enduring thanks to large battery, fast microSD reader, many ports and business features, high upgradeability, cool and quiet...

no AMD Ryzen option, rather high weight, bad display, below-average mouse replacement, Thunderbolt 3 only optional, keyboard is not exchangeable, short warranty period...

In review: Dell Latitude 14 5410. Test device provided byDell's newest Latitude 14 5410 is an interesting business laptop: It's placed between Lenovo's ThinkPad T and L series in terms of quality, price, and configuration. Dell trumps with a significantly...
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