Today I’m traveling to Bremerton Island to visit a customer, so I decided to leave my giant Dell Precision M4400 laptop at home and take my new Dell 11z along with me. I’m only doing a Powerpoint presentation on this day trip so I don’t need to use my mega work laptop. As such, I’m taking my Dell 11z on its first field trip.
From Seattle I take the Ferry over to Bremerton which is about an 1 hour ride. During the journey, I proceeded to the passenger deck and settle in at a table with my new Dell 11z out and ready. The ship has WiFi provided by Boingo, however I don’t have a Boingo account so I can’t utilize it. I do have my Verizon USB Broadband adapter, but in this case I really don’t need to be connected to the Internet.
Instead, I’ve got the WiFi turned off and I’m typing this blog in my Evernote application locally on my 11z. Note, that with WiFi turned off my Vista system showed 3 hours of battery life, which isn’t too shabby.
Now, I’m a stickler for being able to see a lot of content on the screen vertically, and with most Netbooks that have a 600 pixel vertical resolution that really is bothersome to me. In fact, I returned a Dell Mini 9 several months ago for that very reason. I’m happy to say that the 1366 x 768 resolution of my 11z works just fine. Especially when I fine tune FireFox to hide the top menubar. And again, the nearly full-sized keyboard is wonderful, and as a touch typist it works great.
The compact size of the 11z makes it a very welcomed travel companion. The only thing I’m missing is a DVD drive, but that isn’t a big deal since I normally don’t use one on a routine basis. If I ever wanted to watch movies or videos, I could certainly rip the video from a DVD to my PC and convert it to WMV or MP4 format (lessons I’ve learned for my Zune HD media player).
After getting off the ship in Bremerton, I have about an hour to kill before my customer visit so I stopped in at the local Starbucks for a small coffee. While there, I pulled out my 11z and tried to connect to the WiFi available at Starbucks (through AT&T). Fortunately, I can get 2 hours of free WiFi access because I have a registered Starbucks gift card. I highly recommend travelers to getting such a gift card, as it doesn’t cost you anything (other than the amount you put on the card) and it gives you free WiFi access at most Starbucks stores.
With the Starbucks WiFi connection, I do a quick speed test (using www.speedtest.net) and get the following results:

Don’t you just love free WiFi? While connected, I fire up Evernote on my 11z and do a quick syncing to save all the notes I’ve type in while on the Ferry ride (just in case). Evernote is a great place to place all my ideas that I can access later on my PC, and I highly recommend using it for note takers.
Carrying the 11z around in my travel bag is certainly nicer than the 10+ lbs Dell M4400 laptop. I’ll need to get a smaller travel bag that can hold my Dell 11z, its power cord, mouse, small notebook, and a few other minor accessories. Maybe a nice messenger bag of some sort. One thing I will look into, is getting an extra 3-cell battery pack. I could have ordered the 6-cell battery when I originally bought my 11z, but the battery just seemed too bulky and angled the keyboard up too high for my taste. An extra 3-cell battery would give me another 2.5 hours or so of power, so that should be long enough to be untethered from an AC outlet.
So, that was my first outing with my Dell 11z. It worked out well, and I very much appreciated the reduced weight in comparison to my usual Dell M4400 companion. This netbook would be the prefect machine for a traveling business person, except that it doesn’t have a VGA video port (which is necessary for Powerpoint presentations on most video projectors). A HDMI-to-VGA cable is a must for such a task (I wonder if Dell sells one?).