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Notice: Discounted R500.00 for cosmetic imperfections.
No additional discounts applicable.
When you consider how similar the Latitude 7275 is designed compared to its rivals, it's hard not to get excited about this device. If it benchmarks well when we run our full review, you'll have a capable, long-lasting, stylish device that presents a nice business-class alternative to the more popular hybrids available.
The Latitude 7275 will likely be labeled a sure-fire competitor for 2016's best 2-in-1, especially if it benchmarks well. Although Dell's price tag is a bit on the high side, the Latitude 7275 is definitely a hybrid laptop you should keep your eye on.
The iPad Pro starts at 9 (A,A£679, AU,249), but you're only getting 32GB of storage and you'll still have to buy the optional keyboard. Sure, it's lighter and slimmer, but do you really want to run iOS instead of Windows 10 for everyday productivity?
The entry-level Surface Pro 4 is outfitted almost exactly the same as the Latitude, albeit a bit slimmer and lighter, but you're going to wind up spending almost 1/5th the price of the tablet to add the Type Cover.
Until we can test the Latitude, there's no way of knowing how it will perform in comparison to competing devices. However, given its gorgeous design and its easy-to-use folio, you'll definitely want to play with this device yourself when it hits stores later this year.
| SPECIFICATIONS |
| GENERIC |
| Ports | 4 x USB-3, 2 x USB-2 |
| Ethernet | 1000-GB |
| WIFI | 2.4GHz and 5GHz |
| CPU | 8-core I7 (4th gen) |
| Memory | 16Gb DDR-3 3200 |
| Keyboard | 102-key International, USB |
| Mouse | Standard USB office mouse |
| OS | Not Included |
| DISPLAY |
| Screen size | 1024 pixels |
| Pixel Depth | 64 bit |
| AntiAliasing | Supported |
| POWER USAGE |
| Wall power | 600W start-up, 300W coescient |
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