Our Tiger Lake XPS 13 review shows how it also offers longer battery life (on a less-sharp screen). The Dell XPS 15 doesn't yet have support for Intel's 11th Gen Tiger Lake CPUs - but you can get modern processors if you go for a slightly smaller system. We reviewed a high-end $2,114 (MSRP: $2,408) version of the XPS 15, which packs an Intel Core i7-10750 GPU, 32GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, discrete Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Ti graphics and a 4K touch display. You can go even more all out than that if you need, with a $2,456 (normally $2,859) configuration that packs a Core i9 CPU and 1TB of storage. For $180 more you can double the memory and storage, for 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. ![]() Stepping up to the $1,305 (normally $1,659) configuration gets you a speedier Core i7-10750H CPU as well as discrete Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Ti graphics.
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