Dell Inspiron M101z review
Dell's Adamo ultraportables are right up there with the Apples of this world for aesthetics, but one thing they're not is cheap: precious few will ever be able to afford the stratospherically expensive Adamo XPS. Don't despair, though, as Dell's keen to spread some of that ultraportable class down the price scale. Meet the latest addition to its Inspiron range, the M101z.
First impressions are excellent. Many 11.6in portables look or feel cheap and unsubstantial, but not the M101z. Our review model came with the striking Tomato Red lid, and it looks fantastic. That paintjob does a great job of livening up proceedings - although you can opt for black, blue or pink if red's not to your tastes - and the interior oozes understated class. Chrome-effect plastic stretches around the Scrabble-tile keyboard, and gloss black surrounds the display and pools between the dainty, rounded keys.
The looks are backed up by strong build quality, too. Yanking the chassis with all our might revealed barely any flex, while even the lid - a common weak point of dainty ultraportables - proved reassuringly solid. For a laptop weighing just 1.56kg, Dell has done a great job.
For once, it's not a low-power Intel chip at the heart of things; instead, AMD's Vision platform steps up to the occasion. The top-end model on test has a dual-core 1.3GHz Athlon II Neo K325 processor, but those on a tighter budget can opt for one of the cheaper single-core Athlon Neo configurations.
The K325 helped the M101z along to a fine 0.67 in our benchmarks - just a few per cent slower than laptops we've seen with Intel's latest low-power chips - while the ATI graphics powered ahead. The Radeon HD 4225 eased through 1080p HD videos and even managed an average of 13fps in Crysis at 1,366 x 768 and Low detail settings.

