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September 25th, 2008

Seeing the light: Dell makes major commitment to LED displays

Posted by Heather Clancy @ 1:16 am

Categories: energy, green tech

Tags: Notebook, Dell Computer Corp., Light-emitting Diode, Engineering, Heather Clancy

Within the next 12 months, Dell plans to adopt displays that use light emitting diodes as a standard feature across its entire notebook product line.

The first milestone in this transition will come on Dec. 15 of this year, when the company estimates that about two-thirds of its Dell Latitude E-family series will be shipped with mercury-free LED back-lighting as a standard feature. Models affected in that first wave should include Latitude E4200, E4300, E6400, E6400 ATG and E6500. The Dell Precision M2400 and M4400 systems will also use LED displays as a standard feature sooner rather than later.

At least 80 percent of all the laptops shipped by Dell by the end of 2009 will use LED displays as a standard option; come 2010, 100 percent of Dell’s laptops will ship with LED as a standard option.

What does this mean for the user? Dell estimates that an LED display on a standard 15-inch configuration notebook will eat up about 43 percent of the power that current screens use, even at the maximum brightness level. The company is estimating that the switch will result in savings of 220 million kilowatt-hours in 2010 and 2011 combined, which is roughly the amount of power needed to run 10,000 homes.

Based on my recent research about LED technology, the other big benefit that a notebook user can expect is a brighter display that also offers more clarity is less-than-ideal settings (such as when you decide to work under a tree outside).

Saving more power while gaining a better display? Who can argue with that?

Heather ClancyHeather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist in the New York area with more than 20 years experience covering the high-tech industry. See her full profile and disclosure of her industry affiliations. See her full profile and disclosure of her industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 18 Talkback(s)
No GW soapbox
First off, these are not LED displays. They are LED-backlit displays. LED displays aren't quite here yet.

Ignoring both sides of the global warming debate, reduced power consumption translates ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Get-Smart Posted on: 10/14/09  (Edited: 10/14/09 @ 09:44) You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
What's the life-expectancy of an LED display?  Zogg | 09/25/08
What's the life-expectancy of an LED display?  ShadowGIATL | 10/05/08
RE: Seeing the light: Dell makes major commitment to LED displays  Monosdeja | 09/25/08
Please go somewhere else to rant.  IT_Guy_z | 09/25/08
Might be a tangent...  techboy_z | 09/25/08
I am a GW skeptic  frylock | 09/25/08
No GW soapbox  Get-Smart | 10/14/09
RE: Seeing the light: Dell makes major commitment to LED displays  ellsanto | 09/25/08
And what about other display specs? Timings? FPS?  techboy_z | 09/25/08
This has to do with the back lighting, not performance  drakoes | 10/07/08
It's about time!  cd2_z | 09/25/08
Guys, these are NOT LED Displays!  wolf_z | 09/25/08
Exactly. So you still have an LCD to worry about cracking  Johnny Vegas | 09/25/08
I'd like a display that was LESS bright, thanks.  cquirke1 | 09/27/08
change your color scheme  dgurney | 09/28/08
That may be...  Core2uu | 10/05/08
Great Suggestion  softwareFlunky | 10/18/08
Misplaced emphasis  riredale | 10/25/08

What do you think?

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