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Home » Reviews » Laptops PCs & Laptops » Dell Inspiron 1525
Dell Inspiron 1525
By: Jayesh Mansukhani   |   May 26, 2008
  • 4.5
Perfect pricing
Great battery life
Well-designed keyboard/touchpad
Extensive customization options
Monotonous design
Lack of discrete Nvidia graphics

There are very few brands in the PC industry that enjoy the acclaim and brand loyalty that Dell’s Inspiron range commands. This is a fame richly deserved, for products in this range are often segment leading and offer some of the very best VFM options. Couple it with Dell’s famous warranty options and after-sales service... and you've got yourself a winner.

The Inspiron 1525 is the latest laptop in this lineup. Does it live up to expectations or does it fall by the wayside? Let’s find out.

The 1525 is the direct successor to the rather popular 1520, and improves on that model in a couple of ways. First of all, in a positive step forward, Dell has borrowed elements directly from its XPS range and given the 1525 a tapered shape similar to the XPS M1330/1530. This is a direct departure from the 'fat boy' look of the 1520.

Secondly, the color range/finish options have been expanded and now includes a 'Satin' finish on the lid which gives the laptop a classy look, similar to the XPS M1530. However that remains the only change. Everything else remains the same – the solid construction, the silver matte finish around the LCD panel/keyboard area, and slim squeaky hinges. The build quality also remains the same, with no extra flex anywhere on the body.

The keyboard of the 1525 is also similar to that of the 1520. Anyone who has used the earlier series of Dell laptops (14xx/15xx) will know how good these are. The keys are well spaced out, have a nice matte finish that allows for easy typing, and offer great tactile feedback that makes pounding on the keyboard for hours a non-chore.

My only grouse was that for some reason the keyboard suffered from some strange lag, where the words I typed would register on screen only some seconds later. Despite reinstalling the OS to eliminate any glitches, this problem kept popping up every once in a while and was quite annoying.

In terms of its weight and finish, the laptop is strictly average. It weighs in at a little over 2.8 kilos, and with the 8-cell extended battery, can be a bit ungainly. The lid can be an area of irritation if one chooses to go for the satiny finish, as it’s a fingerprint magnet and seems to attract dust, like bees to honey.

Another thing we like about Dell is that apart from the media control keys, the rest of the keyboard area is clean and does not have any extra keys to accidentally hit with a shirt-sleeve. This is a major annoyance for me on quite a few other laptops. It can be very irritating to have media-center popup in the middle of important work, simply because you 'accidentally' hit a media key.

The touchpad of the 1525 is topnotch. It sports the same silver finish as the rest of the keyboard area, but is nevertheless very well positioned and has a good responsive set of mouse keys. By 'position' I refer to the physical placement of the touchpad. Usually these are placed bang in the center and can sometime get in the way when typing. The one on the 1525 is placed a little more towards the left and falls perfectly in place for manipulation with the thumb, without any need to lift one's hands from the keyboard.

The LCD panel on the 1525 is good, and offers decent levels of contrast, color, and brightness levels. The resolution on offer here is 1280 x 800 (with the standard panel). Dell offers a Tru-Life option on this panel, which increases the resolution to a respectable 1440 x 900 and offers far better levels of brightness, color and contrast. It can cost a fair bit more, if your budget allows it I suggest you simply get this upgrade with your eyes closed – it’s that good.

Wireless and peripheral connectivity have never really been an issue on Dell laptops. The 1525 comes with HDMI, D-SUB and S-Video for video, four USB ports along with FireWire and the standard Ethernet/modem ports. Also included are a 5-in-1 card reader, 8x dual-layer DVD-RW, 2x headphone ports, a mic-port, and 802.11/a/b/g/n support along with a 2MP webcam.


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Post a Comment on “Dell Inspiron 1525”
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hw this comp. About gaming?
suvedi @ Sep 06, 2008
my dell 1525 laptop have a sim solt what is its purpose?
jomon @ Aug 04, 2008
Does the dell inspiron 1525 have word or power point
sofia @ Jul 01, 2008
1420 is still available in Indian and US site and is the only 14" laptop in the home segment.
Salim @ Jun 24, 2008
the dell inspiron 1520 is not available anymore... in the us/india website... The 1420 disappeared from india website too, but not us... one question: should i get the 1525 or wait for the 1535 studio inspiron laptops? will there be options in the 35-40k range? waiting for the overpriced xps' to get merged into alienware, they only offer a discrete graphics option, other than that the 1525 is identical to the 1530, except for looks, and slot load drive in the xps.
INSPIRON GO GO GO @ Jun 22, 2008
I did some extensive trial on both 1520 and 1525. Without any doubt, 1520 is a better buy provided you are not very concerned about the weight. Both 1520 and 1525 weighs about 1 Kg more than the other laptops like HP or TOSHIBA. However, Dell Inspiron 1520 is much better in performance and value for money. Ideal if your work doesn not involve too much and too frequent travel.
Matthew @ Jun 18, 2008
the laptop is fine but it lack the graphics card,thet is why i still prefer 1520 which comes with nvidia graphics card
mukul @ Jun 02, 2008
no one mentions anything about the SIM slot. did anyone use it? how does it work.
Ramona @ May 30, 2008
An excellent review of an awesome notebook book. I still believe that the 1520 is a better choice, considering that it has the option of discrete graphics.

Also at one instance you've mentioned the 1525 has a "8-cell extended battery", later on you've mentioned 9-cell, so I guess it's a 9-cell battery right, cause my 1520 has a 9-cell battery too.
coolpcguy @ May 28, 2008
I bought a Dell Inspiron 1525 2 weeks ago. and i am extremely happy &
satisfied with it. Any other manufacturer charges Rs 5-10k extra for
same features/comparable product.Go for Dell & then 'Yours will be here'.
Balshine Singh @ May 27, 2008
I am a prod owner of Dell Inspiron 1525. Its a wonderful notebook with so many great features including a Travel REmote... Simply fabulous... Go for it, its a truly VFM...
Deepak Chaudhary @ May 27, 2008
15000, to2000 muje Dell chahie plz u'r contec nomber
plz
Daxa .C Raval @ May 27, 2008
It indeed is a Value-for-money product. At 41Ks, it is actually hard to find a notebook with so many features and such battery backup.
Storyteller @ May 27, 2008
It's a shame that there is no option of discrete Nvidia graphics, esp. when the 1520 still offers it...
Soumyadeep @ May 26, 2008
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