Business centric laptops are something most people have used at some point or another, but they're not always the first devices to get reviewed. The reason is pretty simple: businesses are conservative in nature, so they generally don't want to jump on the latest and greatest technology until they've let it mature a bit. Consumer devices are thus the first to move to new CPUs, GPUs, etc. while the enterprise-class laptops in particular will lag behind and continue to sell long after they're "outdated". The upside to business laptops is that they're built to last, making the plastic consumer laptops look flimsy and weak by comparison.
Packing one of Intel's reasonably fast i5 CPUs and a 1440x900 matte LCD in a mag-alloy chassis, with nary a glossy surface in sight, this is a business laptop in every sense of the word. And if your general use case is Office and Internet work rather than gaming and movies, there's a lot to like with the E6410. Of course, with Sandy Bridge right around the corner this is more about setting the stage to see just how far Intel's new platform improves on the current Arrandale offerings, but we'll have to wait another month before we can take the wraps off of Sandy Bridge laptops.
Source: http://www.anandtech.com/show/4044/dell-latitude-e6410-minding-intels-business
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