As a journalist and an editor that in any given year travels around the world to attend events, having the best device that helps me write news and generate content is always on my mind. Having a device with more battery life, or more performance, or can deal with dodgy Wi-Fi connections, or can process photos and video while having a good display at a nice price are all factors. Weight is also an important one, as it gets lugged around for 12+ hours a day, and I don’t want to be carrying around too many dongles for everything. The new XMG DJ 15 might be a contender for one of the best devices to do this with.

The XMG DJ 15 is a 15-inch notebook that is designed to be light but also has an array of connectivity unlike any other notebooks I’ve seen in this segment. Despite the size, there is no discrete graphics card in this design, saving space and also allowing the cooling system to be reduced from a typical gaming notebook. This keeps it thin, measuring only 19.9mm at its tallest point, but the use of aluminium keeps it light, weighing in at only 1.6 kg.

For connectivity, the unit has two USB 3.1 Type-A ports, a Thunderbolt 3/Type-C with 60W fast charging, a full-sized HDMI port, a mini-DisplayPort, an SD card reader, a gigabit Ethernet port (!), two 3.5mm jacks for headphone/microphone, and a USB 2.0 Type-A port for legacy.

Inside is an Intel 10th Gen Comet Lake processor, with the base specification using the Core i5-10210U, 16 GB of DDR4-2666 memory, and a 1 TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus PCIe 3.0 x4 NVMe storage drive, all for a pre-tax price 1052 Euro / $1237. The memory is SO-DIMM and the storage is M.2, making both upgradeable. 

That also gets Wi-Fi 5, the 15.6-inch 1920x1080 IPS thin-bezel display, a HD webcam, a backlit keyboard with number pad, a Microsoft Precision Touchpad with a fingerprint sensor, and a 54.4 Wh battery. Moving up to Wi-Fi 6 is another $5.

This device isn’t so much aimed at workers, but DJs. XMG claims the unit is built with components that minimise DPC latency, even when Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are enabled. It is pre-tested with all the major DJ software, such as Serato, Traktor, Rekordbox and Virtual DJ. This makes it suitable even for simple DAW projects. It will ship with an optimized installation of Windows 10 Pro, and XMG quotes a maximum DPC Latency of a millisecond. XMG will also work with DJs that have custom needs and offers a bespoke service for those that might need additional features.

The XMG DJ 15 will be available in a traditional silver color or a more striking red design. Even in the base configuration, that price seems great for a workhorse machine on the road, and hopefully the display quality is decent. The version I’d be interested in, with the i7-10510U, Wi-Fi 6, and 32 GB of memory, runs at €1,337 (incl. tax). That can’t be a coincidence.

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  • Lord of the Bored - Saturday, October 3, 2020 - link

    Because people seem to complain about any port on a laptop that isn't USB-C, and get even louder if they see a charging port that isn't USB-C.
    Read as: because people are dumb.
  • Spunjji - Friday, October 2, 2020 - link

    Stick Renoir in this and I'd be all over it. Heck, I'd even give Tiger Lake some thought.

    Comet Lake, though? Big no-no.
  • GreenReaper - Monday, October 5, 2020 - link

    DJs can be workers, too! Some make big money, though only really at the top of the game. Otherwise, it can still be a job.
  • jabber - Tuesday, October 6, 2020 - link

    Create a 3 hour Spotify playlist of tunes that the target audience will recognise (that's quite important, a lot of 'DJs' forget that point and then wonder why a bunch of middle aged party folks wont get up and dance to the latest dance tunes), slap the crossfader to maximum, volume leveller set, hook the laptop into the PA, hit play and then head to the bar.

    Simple. No DJ required!
  • scineram - Wednesday, October 7, 2020 - link

    Not Renoir, not interesting.
  • dotjaz - Wednesday, October 7, 2020 - link

    What's the point of having miniDP when HDMI is already available? They need to get rid of the power connector and miniDP and add USB-C instead.

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