REVIEW FOR REFERENCE PURPOSE ONLY
Business notebooks such as the 14-inch Dell Latitude 7490 put productivity first and foremost. This machine not only offers tons of speed and a comfy keyboard that’s made for epic typing sessions but also lasts nearly 9 hours on a single charge. The Latitude 7490’s battery life doesn’t match that of some competitors, and its underside can get warm, but this laptop packs nearly everything you need to become your team’s MVP.
Design
The plain and simple look of the Latitude 7490 does little for me beyond saying, “Dude, you’ve gotten a Dell.” The magnesium alloy exterior feels durable, the keyboard deck is coated in soft-touch paint and it has a woven carbon-fiber lid, which offers a grainy texture that makes the laptop feel more substantial.
Weighing 3.5 pounds and measuring 0.7 inches thick, the Latitude 7490 is heavier than the Huawei MateBook X Pro (2.9 pounds, 0.6 inches), lighter than the Lenovo ThinkPad T480 (3.6 to 4.0 pounds, with and without extended battery, respectively; 0.8 inches) and similar to the HP EliteBook 1040 G4 (3.4 pounds, 0.6 inches).
The left side houses two USB 3.0 ports, an HDMI out port, a power adapter port and a Thunderbolt 3 port. Depending on your configuration, you may get a plain USB Type-C port featuring DisplayPort technology, as the Thunderbolt 3 port upgrade costs $35.
On the right side, you’ll find a Noble-branded security lock slot, an Ethernet port, a third USB 3.0 port, SD and SIM readers, and a headphone jack.
Display
The 14-inch matte touch-screen display in our Dell Latitude 7490 configuration offered solid color and crisp detail. When watching an Avengers: Infinity War trailer on the notebook, I was impressed by the vivid purple glow that lit up Gamora and the accurate reds and golds of the Dora Milaje’s uniform. Also, when I paused the trailer during a flyby shot of the iconic Manhattan skyline, the 1080p panel allowed me to easily distinguish faraway skyscrapers.
According to our colorimeter, the Latitude 7490 reproduces 118 percent of the sRGB spectrum — a measurement that rises above the 113-percent premium-notebook average. It’s close to the 124-percent rating from the Huawei MateBook X Pro and the 114-percent rating from the HP EliteBook 1040 G4. The Lenovo ThinkPad T480 posted a less-colorful 77 percent.
Wi-Fi
While all Latitudes appear equal, the 7490 is the first laptop to offer the option of an Active Steering Antenna, which Dell says improves your connection throughput by 40 percent, compared with normal Wi-Fi cards. How does it work? The card intelligently adjusts to the wireless signals around it, to decrease email latency and file-upload drops. We don’t have a Wi-Fi benchmark, so we can’t verify this claim.
Keyboard, Touchpad and Pointing Stick
The Dell Latitude 7490 features a comfy keyboard and plenty of input options. Testing the Latitude 7490 out on the 10fastfingers.com typing test, I hit a rate of 72 words per minute, which isn’t too far from my 80-wpm average. This speedy rate and my relative comfort were due to the deep 1.8 millimeters of travel and 69 grams of actuation force required to press the keys.
The laptop’s 3.9 x 2.0-inch touchpad, which is sandwiched by pairs of left and right mouse buttons, offered accurate tracking as I navigated the desktop. It also correctly registered Windows 10’s scrolling and window navigation gestures.
Smack-dab in the middle of the G, H and B keys is the black-and-blue, concave pointing stick that smoothly moves the cursor as pressure is applied. A dozen small, black dots on the nub keep your finger steady while you move the cursor.
Audio
The Dell Latitude 7490 pumps out sweet sound, enough to fill a medium-size office. As I listened to a solid reproduction of Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Run Away with Me” on the notebook, I noted that her vocals sounded clear, the bass hit well and the synths sounded accurate.
The included Waves MaxxAudio Pro sound utility allows you to disable its sound-boosting presets, but I recommend you leave it as is. You’ll see options for adjusting width, detail and bass, but the default settings are just right.
Performance
The Dell Latitude 7490 we tested features an 8th Gen Intel Core i5-8650U processor and 8GB of RAM — a combination that makes for brisk speed and solid multitasking. Splitting my screen between a 1080p YouTube video and a dozen Google Chrome tabs (including Giphy, Slack and Google Docs), I saw no stutter or pause in the video and experienced smooth scrolling in my TweetDeck columns.
Battery Life
The Dell Latitude 7490 offers decent battery life, but we’ve seen better. When running the Laptop Mag Battery Test (web browsing at 150 nits), Dell’s laptop burned through its charge in 8 hours and 55 minutes, which is pretty close to the 8:50 average for premium notebooks. The Huawei MateBook X Pro (9:55) lasted an hour longer, while the Lenovo ThinkPad T480 lasted less time in the default configuration (8:07) but provided many more hours of activity with its extended battery (17:19).
Webcam
The 0.9-megapixel webcam in the Dell Latitude 7490 is, unsurprisingly, average. The selfies I took in front of a window at our Midtown Manhattan office sure look like me. But there are blown-out spots from when daylight hit my face, and my sweater lacks detail. I should note that I had to take the photo in front of the window, where I had natural light, because images taken at my desk were far darker.
Heat
The Dell Latitude 7490 gets warm, but only on the bottom . After we streamed 15 minutes of HD video on the notebook, our heat gun captured a temperature of 99 degrees Fahrenheit on the center of its underside, and up to 107 degrees closer to its hinge. Both temperatures exceed our 95-degree comfort threshold, while the readings from the touchpad (84 degrees) and keyboard (93 degrees) did not.
Software
The Dell Latitude 7490 comes with a standard set of utilities and proprietary software if you opt for the company’s encryption and threat-prevention services. Dell Command Power Manager switches from standard energy-management rules to those that optimize battery life for long-term usage, or cool or quiet conditions, so its fans and heat don’t distract. SupportAssist packages system-optimization tools, a driver download section and tech support links into an easy-to-read interface.
And if you opt for Dell Encryption and Threat Prevention, you get tools for setting up security policies (a must for IT managers) and Advanced Authentication for drive encryption.
Of course, you’ll see the same apps you find in all Windows PCs, such as Candy Crush Soda Saga, March of Empires: War of Lords and Autodesk SketchBook.
Configuration Options
The Dell Latitude 7490 we tested features an 8th Gen Core i7-8650U processor, 8 GB of RAM, a 256GB NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD, a 14.1-inch 1920 x 1080 pixels) touch screen, a Thunderbolt 3 port, ASA-equipped WLAN and the narrow border frame and carbon-fiber back. It costs a whopping $2,114.
Stripping out the touch screen and ASA perks brings the price down to a more affordable $1,869 while still giving you the same speed and storage. The entry-level, $1,049 Latitude 7490 includes a 7th Gen Core i3-7130U processor, 4GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD. For an 8th Gen Intel CPU, pricing starts at $1,259 for the configuration with a Core i5-8250, 4GB of RAM and 128GB SSD.
Bottom Line
The Dell Latitude 7490’s got the speed you need (and then some), a keyboard that’s comfortable enough for writing all day long and a battery that supports a full 8-hour workday. If only the display were brighter and it managed heat better.
If you need every minute of battery life you can get, the extended-battery version of the Lenovo ThinkPad T480 lasts 8 hours longer than the Latitude 7490, but its display is much less colorful. The EliteBook 1040 G4 has a brighter display, but its keyboard is mediocre. But the Latitude 7490 begs consideration, as it’s a business laptop that offers practically everything you need to be productivity.
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