Design
Sporting a Tri-metal chassis--a mineral magnesium steel shape, strengthened steel relies and a flat firefox bumper--the Permission E6430s goes MIL-STD-810G ecological examining. Inside, the key pad outdoor patio of the Permission E6430s has a nice soft-touch complete, which was comfortable while entering.
The Permission E6430s actions 13.19 x 8.8 x 1.1 - 1.2 inches wide and is 4.6 weight. That makes it less heavy and smaller than the Permission E6430 (13.9 x 9.5 x 1.3 inches wide and 5.4 pounds), which needs a bigger framework to provide its 9-cell power supply as well as the option to add distinct design. However, the E6430s is bigger and bulkier than the Lenovo ThinkPad T430s (13.5 x 9.1 x 0.83 - 1 inches wide and 4.4 pounds), even when that system has an optionally available bay power supply placed.
Display
We calculated the screen's lighting at 165 lux, which places it 48 lux behind the normal as well as the ThinkPad T430s (249 lux), which also has a better excellent 1600 x 900 board.
Audio
The Latitude E6430s' speakers, mounted on the front lip, were fairly loud and accurate. We listened to the live version of "Move to the City" by Guns ‘n' Roses and studio recordings of "Dreamer Deceiver" by Judas Priest and "Becoming" by Pantera. Whether it was on our lap or on a desk, all instruments, vocals and crowd noise sounded very clear. While this business machine's pipes won't fill a large room, they were loud enough for a small office.Keyboard and Touchpad
Like its Dell kin, the Latitude E6430s sports a black pointing stick in between the G and H keys. Unlike those on Lenovo ThinkPads, the Latitudes' pointing stick is concave, making it more difficult to navigate the desktop.
Heat
After running a full-screen Hulu video for 15 minutes, the Latitude E6430s' touchpad and center underside were 78 and 84 degrees Fahrenheit, respectively. The space between the G and H keys was 83 degrees. We consider anything higher than 95 degrees to be uncomfortable.Ports
Webcam
Performance
The Latitude E6430s took 29 seconds to boot the 64-bit version of Windows 7 Professional, breezing by the 52-second category average. Still, the T430s took just 34 seconds with its traditional hard drive.
In our File Transfer Test, the Latitude E6430s copied our 4.97GB test folder (comprised of photos, music and videos) in 30 seconds for a 169.6 MBps average transfer rate. That crushed the category average of 39 MBps.
During our OpenOffice Spreadsheet test, in which we match 20,000 names to their corresponding addresses, the Latitude E6430s finished in 4 minutes and 19 seconds. The ThinkPad T430s wasn't far behind, crossing the finish line in 4:26. Both bested the category average of 5:57 by a wide margin.
Graphics
In our 3DMark11 test, a synthetic benchmark that measures overall graphics performance, the Latitude E6430s' integrated Intel HD Graphics 4000 GPU scored 690, slightly below the category average of 748. The ThinkPad T430s, which has Nvidia NVS 5200M discrete graphics, nearly doubled it, with a score of 1,105.Still, gaming is possible on the E6430s. In our "World of Warcraft" tests, the notebook ran the game at 64 frames per second on the "Good" setting at a resolution of 1366 x 768. That's a fair amount above the 52 fps category average and very good for a machine without discrete graphics. However, with settings maxed, the frame rate dipped down to 25, which is barely playable. By comparison, the T430s averaged 44 fps on the same settings, and at its native screen resolution of 1600 x 900.
Battery Life
Security, Software and Warranty
The third-generation Intel processor that our review unit shipped with has Intel Anti-Theft Technology. In the event your notebook is stolen, your provider can send a lockdown command to your machine, which will prevent the thief from using it at all. However, this tech requires you to subscribe with a service provider. A one-year subscription with Norton Anti-Theft will run you $39.99 and can be used with up to three devices. The cheapest LoJack subscription costs $29.99 per year.
For presenters, Intel's Wireless Display tech is also enabled with the E6430s, which lets you stream content from the laptop to a WiDi-enabled TV or device.
We would have liked to see a fingerprint reader, a $29 option, at this price. Doing so also adds a contactless SmartCard reader and Dell ControlVault hardware-based security.
A 30-day trial of Trend Micro Client-Server Security is also included for use with up to three machines.
The E6430s' warranty offers three years of basic hardware service in conjunction with three years of limited onsite service following a remote diagnosis.
Configuration Options
Our review configuration of the E6430s (2.8-GHz Intel Core i5-3360M processor, 6GB of RAM, a 128GB Samsung SSD and an Intel HD Graphics 4000 GPU) costs $1,678. The $969 base model packs a second-generation 2.3-GHz Intel Core i3-2350M processor, 2GB of RAM, a 320GB 5,400RPM hard drive, an 8X DVD drive, Intel Graphics 3000 GPU and a 3-cell battery.You can swap the removable optical drive for an extra 3-cell battery or a 320GB 7,200 rpm hard drive. They cost $60 and $160, respectively. You can also add a 9-cell slice battery, but it's an expensive $249. We wish there was an option for a higher-resolution display.

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