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Dell XPS 17 9710 Touchscreen Laptop, 17 inch UHD+ Display - Intel Core i9-11900H, 32GB DDR4 RAM, 1TB SSD, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 6GB GDDR6, Windows 10 Pro - Platinum Silver

  • Based on 77 reviews
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CPU: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-11900H


RAM Size: 32 GB


Hard Disk Size: 1 TB


Graphics Description: RTX 3060


Features

  • Touch Screen Type :Capacitive.Aspect Ratio:16:9
  • Free Upgrade to Windows 11 when available (see below).
  • POWERFUL PERFORMANCE: 11th Generation Intel Core i7 processors and NVIDIA RTX graphics power the most intensive creative pursuits
  • STUNNING SCREEN: A 16:10 4-sided InfinityEdge display provides stunning edge-to-edge view. Plus, with 921k more pixels on UHD-plus, youll be more productive than ever
  • EASY ON THE EYES: Eyesafe technology built into the screen reduces harmful blue light all while maintaining vivid color
  • UP YOUR CREATIVE GAME: Take your creative projects to a new level with GeForce RTX 30 Series laptops delivering AI-acceleration in top creative apps
  • IMMERSIVE SOUND: Expand audio into an immersive 3D soundscape with our quad speaker design and Waves Nx 3D audio for speakers

Description

The Dell XPS 17 9710 is engineered with high-performance 11th Generation Intel Core™ processors and powerful NVIDIA graphics to power the most intensive creative pursuits. The XPS 17 delivers powerful performance in an incredibly thin form factor. Optional discrete graphics feature unique dual opposite outlet fans, that increase fan airflow by approximately 30% and drive cooling airflow in both directions, resulting in more airflow overall and improved skin temperatures. A 16:10 4-sided InfinityEdge display is designed to make you more productive and provide a stunning edge-to-edge view. The 4K Ultra HD+ (3840x2400) touch display offers pinpoint accuracy for all of your computing needs. See the detail of every pixel in photos without needing to zoom in or see more content while browsing the web. An Eyesafe display reduces harmful blue light and maintains vivid color.

Brand: Dell


Model Name: XPS 17 9710


Screen Size: 17 Inches


Color: Silver


Hard Disk Size: 1 TB


CPU Model: Core i9


Ram Memory Installed Size: 32 GB


Operating System: Windows 10 Pro


Graphics Card Description: RTX 3060


Graphics Coprocessor: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060


Standing screen display size: ‎17 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎3840 x 2400 pixels


Max Screen Resolution: ‎3840x2400 Pixels


Processor: ‎4.9 GHz core_i9


RAM: ‎32 GB DDR4


Memory Speed: ‎3200 MHz


Hard Drive: ‎1 TB SSD


Graphics Coprocessor: ‎NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060


Chipset Brand: ‎NVIDIA


Card Description: ‎RTX 3060


Graphics Card Ram Size: ‎6 GB


Wireless Type: ‎Bluetooth


Average Battery Life (in hours): ‎7 Hours


Brand: ‎Dell


Series: ‎XPS 17 9710


Item model number: ‎6R7X0


Hardware Platform: ‎PC


Operating System: ‎Windows 10 Pro


Item Weight: ‎5.53 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎9.76 x 14.74 x 0.77 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎9.76 x 14.74 x 0.77 inches


Color: ‎Silver


Processor Brand: ‎Intel


Number of Processors: ‎8


Computer Memory Type: ‎DDR4 SDRAM


Flash Memory Size: ‎1 TB


Hard Drive Interface: ‎Solid State


Optical Drive Type: ‎No Optical Drive


Batteries: ‎1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: May 10, 2021


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sep 3 – Sep 7

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I cant say enough about this laptop
CPU: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-11900H RAM Size: 32 GB Hard Disk Size: 1 TB Graphics Description: RTX 3060
I work outside the home and am constantly remoting into work. I am also an amateur photographer who is always editing and touching up photos. my previous cheaper laptops couldn't keep up with working on so many projects at once and would end up freezing on me. I hesitated about spending so much on a laptop. The reviews all seemed to be from teckie reviewers who elaborated on internal workings that quite frankly went over my head ... i began doing a lot of research and kept coming back to this one. When my cheaper laptop froze and I lost several pictures I decided to step up and purchase this model. From the moment I took it out of the box, I was in love with it. It came on instantly and the large end to end screen is phenomenal. I always buy a 17" and this laptop is the same size as my girlfriend's 15 inch which means there are more laptop purses it will fit into! Not having the keypad on the side has taken some time to get used to, however, i will take the smaller overall size, along with being able to maintain a 17" screen any day. If you are debating on purchasing this laptop, don't ... you won't be sorry! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2022 by JuzPatti

  • I buy a open box and the laptop had swap components inside
I buy a open box for $1000 after a few months it started to give me problems, open the laptop and notice it had fake ram and a super slow SSD
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2024 by jorge

  • Powerhouse, but serious touchpad issue.
CPU: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-11900H RAM Size: 32 GB Hard Disk Size: 1 TB Graphics Description: RTX 3060
Overall, bit of a diva : incredibly powerful, but lots of silly little issues. More like a temperamental semi-portable gaming PC than a "laptop". I couldn't even log in when i first got it because the mouse was borked & kept moving to the side. Even when plugging in an external mouse. It comes with a good warranty & so I sent it back and got it fixed. Became usable, but still bad. External mouse & keyboard is a must. Basically needs to be plugged in to function. Make sure if you buy another charger, it's high-wattage. Specs are incredible, of course. Runs graphically intensive applications with no lag, though it must be plugged in (battery mode will engage power-saver and slow everything to a crawl), and you will need to manually set applications to run on the NVIDIA card. Don't confine it when running : don't block the fan ports, or leave it running in your backpack. It will get hot enough to fry an egg. On that note, be careful when turning it off : leave it open until you are sure it is off, otherwise it might just sleep instead. It automatically turns on when opening it, which is very annoying. Power button is not marked, but is the featureless rectangle to the right of the delete key. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2024 by Consumer

  • Gorgeous design, criminally bad trackpad
Update: Not sure what happened to my previous review for this. TLDR, I had the infamous trackpad wobble. I managed to get it replaced by Dell; the warranty service was a bit frustrating at the start but they did get me depot repair w/ Fedex Overnight boxes. I don't like how at this price point you're going for the trackpad lottery, although this is an excellent-looking design with good performance despite the weight. As a disclaimer before, I did get this unit from Vine. I am not sponsored by Dell nor Amazon in any sort of way, I just one day went on Vine after meeting at work and found this available for review. This review is also really lengthy so read at your own risk. Short version: I got the infamous trackpad wobble after a few hours. Dell your QC sucks, your customers are paying this much money and you can’t even get the trackpad right. Apart from that, this is one of the most stylish and capable Windows laptops out there. Performance is definitely a worthy update from the 2020 models, the 3050 model is fine and apparently the 3060 model no longer has battery drain issues while on the charger. It’s pricey with a good design, but Dell’s quality control, especially with the trackpad design, holds this thing back as much as the butterfly keyboard on MacBooks . If you use the expresscharge setting it goes from 10%-80% in 50 minutes on idle/web browsing. Battery life is decent The keyboard is good. I wouldn’t say it’s as good as a Thinkpad, the key travel is comparable to a standard Thinkpad keyboard but with more actuation force, or a longer, stiffer Magic Keyboard. The display is excellent If price is not an issue, and you want one of the best-looking windows laptops, and you need great CPU performance and not too much GPU performance or casually game, or you need one of the largest displays you can get on a laptop in this form factor with performance to back it up, this is a good option. However if you need more performance and don’t care about the form factor, some gaming laptops are 60% of the price. If you only need a large display and don’t care about the performance just go for the LG Gram 17 to also get a massive battery and weight savings. If you need reliability, I mean Thinkpads have one of the best included warranties if something does go wrong, and the latest X1 Extreme/P1 has a 16in display while being lighter than the 15in XPS 9510. There’s also waiting until the latest Macbook Pros with Apple Silicon to come out, which will probably cost approximately the same, should offer similar performance, and should have better battery life. Long version: With that out of the way, let’s get started to how this is actually my “2nd unit”. So one thing that plagues the XPS 17 (and the newer XPS 15 when they switched to all type-C) is the trackpad. Both of my units had problems. The first one I received had thermal issues as well (where the CPU package would thermal-throttle prematurely, more on this later) and left side of the trackpad behaved differently than the right. So I returned and requested another unit, and guess what, the left side of the trackpad has a tiny rattle when pressed down… Both of these happened within a few hours of opening, so yeah. I understand how nicer a bigger trackpad seems on paper and on looks, but as someone with a Macbook Pro 16 for a work laptop, a large trackpad doesn’t mean a good thing, and it’s even worse for an XPS. Oh also 2 finger operation is a bit bad, where sometimes your clicks don’t register. This I feel like is something that you shouldn’t have to deal with when you’re paying this much for a laptop, hence my main criticism of this device. Come on Dell, keep your act together for once that’s not about selling warranties… About that point btw, I did kind of “fix it” myself. If you search up Dell XPS 17 trackpad wobble, there’s a video about fixing the trackpad for the 15in 9500 from Mash IT. He added some tape to the chassis to basically pad against the battery. For the 17in there’s foam surrounding it, so instead I put a layer of electrical tape on the back of the battery, where there’s an indent where the trackpad metal clips sinks into. Don’t block that part up, but on the battery put a layer of tape. I mostly fixed it with 1 layer, 2 layer was too stiff, but you might want to put 2 layers instead of 1 on the caps-lock side of the trackpad. I ended up taking it apart and putting 2 layers on the caps-lock side and so far the wobble seems to be gone. If your right side wobbles you might want to place the extra layer on the backspace-side of the battery. You may still end up with residual rattle, but it’s much less than before. Beyond the critical failure on Dell for their quality control on the trackpads, let’s first talk about its appearance. This has to be one of the most gorgeous looking laptops. The bezels are very thin, typical of the XPS line. The keyboard looks great and as someone who doesn’t like numpads I’m perfectly fine with the layout. The display can be opened with one hand. I use a skin because I’m actually not a fan of aluminum, but the quality is very much there, unlike the trackpad. Now the keyboard. Like I said before, I’m fine with no numpad, because it doesn’t offset my hands on the left/right. Palm rejection on the trackpad is actually okay, but because it’s so big sometimes using it with 2 fingers can cause the palm rejection to trigger because another part of your hand is resting on the trackpad. The keys are decent, but then again I swear by Thinkpads, so I would give it a feel of a stiffer Thinkpad keyboard. The travel feels more similar to the Magic Keyboard or the X1 Nano (which has a reduced travel compared to the rest of the Thinkpad lineup), but because of that stiffness I does feel better than the X1 Nano because the keys don’t bottom out faster, but that stiffness feels tiring because I feel I need to apply extra force on the keys. Compared to the Macbook Pro 16 it is “quieter” because the keys have less of a “clack” sound to them. Brightness is now on F6 and F7 instead of arrow-up and down, which means I can reach the display brightness adjustment on a Dell laptop with one hand. Something I found weird, it’s either the size of the laptop or the unusually large trackpad, but I’ve found myself to tilt my hand a lot more compared to typing on usual laptops, even on my Macbook Pro 16 work laptop, maybe it’s just instinct from typical Windows trackpad palm rejection problems, or I’m used to smaller laptops, but I do seem to have more typos, not because of the keys, but this weird quirk. No fault of the laptop I would say, just an observation. A lot of people say the XPS 17 is the best speakers pretty much in its class on the Windows side, well I fired up Gregoire Blanc’s Clair de Lune and Uamee’s Il-76 on both the XPS and my Macbook Pro 16 work laptop. It was no contest, the Macbook blows the XPS out of the water. Sure, the sound is okay, but as soon as you go over 40% volume you can really feel that the speakers are straining and becoming more grainy, where as the Macbook had no problems. I mean sure, it’s one of the best sounding Windows laptop I’ve heard, but going from Il-76 on the Macbook to the XPS sounded like a muddy mess, the XPS just can’t keep up on the speaker department. If I want to be Dankpods about it I guess the XPS prioritizes on the higher-end instead of having a heavier bass, but these are laptop speakers, most of the time you want volume and bass in the first place… The display is just awesome with a bit of an asterisk. Sure it’s a lot of extra money for the 4k touch, which isn’t even that useful for most people and is kind of there to just hog battery life (Dell rates max power consumption for the 1200p at 5.06W, and the 4k at 13.73W, to give you an idea). Touch is nice, it is bright and colors are very vibrant, so it’s really just if you want to get it because you want “4k”. The response isn’t that great though so don’t expect it to be really good for gaming. Why I say an asterisk is because it can look overly saturated, and the reflective display can look not so uniform when auto-brightness kicks in. On the topic of the display though I do need to bring something that I had major complaints about back when I had a 2018 Macbook Pro 13. The display cable. If you look at the vents in the back, you can see the very large, exposed display cable that stretches across that gap, very similar to the Type-C Macbook Pros have their display. I had the 2018 which was “Free” from flexgate, aka stagelight, but I was shooketh back then at the thought of Apple putting exposed display cables. Well Dell managed to outdo Apple this time. Unlike Apple however, you can very easily grab the laptop by that gap in the back when it’s folded, and possibly touch and damage the display cable. I don’t think this is an issue observed by the XPS 17 from the previous year’s model, but having that thought is a bit unnerving. The camera is fine. I don’t care about webcam quality as much, but it is just 720p and there are better options out there. Windows Hello IR is a nice touch, although this is one of those IR cameras that have both the IR combined with the normal camera, so you can’t just cover the normal camera and still get facial recognition. I also wished it had a shutter like almost every Lenovo laptop nowadays, although I can understand how difficult that might be with how little the bezels are. One thing I do have to mention, is something I’ve seen on Macbook Pros since 2008, but only twice on Windows, specifically the X1 Carbon 2nd gen (yes the touchbar one), and the X380 Yoga: an ambient light sensor. There’s not that many windows laptops out there with this sensor for automatic brighrness adjustment that Macbooks pretty much had for over 10 years now. The XPS 17 has it, and although sometimes it can be a bit choppy, it’s still a nice feature that may be a gimmick, but I’m a sucker for gimmicks and as a Mac user I will take every opportunity to strike back at Apple. I/O is tricky. Dell basically went XPS 15 2-in-1 (the 9575) on their newer XPS 15 and 17. My friend who has a 2017 XPS 15 doesn’t want to upgrade because of the lack of type-A ports (and the smaller battery too for the 15in). I used a Macbook Pro 13 from 2019 so I made the type-C transition, so type-C ports isn’t really a problem for me. If it is though, the older XPS still has type-A, the LG gram is still an option if you don’t need too much performance, or go for anything Thinkpad that isn’t the X1 Nano. There is a full-size SD card, it doesn’t fit flush but it’s better than not having any. Speeds maxed out at 100mbps for my Lexar 1066x, and I swear there’s no card reader that maxes out its “advertised max read” of 160mbps so I’ll blame the card since the card reader is supposed to do better than that. At least they didn’t remove the headphone jack. I did end up upgrading the RAM and storage, to 32GB of Gskill 3200mhz ram, and adding in a Crucial P5 1TB. It does take a bit of work taking this apart. You need a pretty sharp, plastic spudger, and then slide it along the edges to “pop” or “prop” the bottom chassis out (Dell has a guide on it). After that, just pull up on the battery to disconnect power (or not if your name is Linus Sebastian). You do need to remove the battery screw to remove the heat spreader for the SSD. They didn’t put a plastic layer for mine on the empty slot so it’s kind of just drop-in, then putting the heat spreader back on. I don’t have a PCIE gen-4 SSD, so I couldn’t test compatibility, but technically it should be compatible according to Dell. Since we are on disassembly I should talk about repasting. I didn’t do it, because I know someone who also bought this, repasted it, and got WAYYY worse results on CPU. Apparently (and this is backed up by someone on reddit), the area of the heatsink that makes contact with the CPU is very “rough”, and repasting may not be able to get into the small imperfections that are there on the heatsink. This is kind of confirmed by my friend who recovered back to 97% of his pre-repaste performance by using a thinner paste like Arctic MX4 instead of Noctua NT-H1. Apparently he did get 5C cooler on the RTX 3050, but for me I’m just not going to repaste until a few years down the line, assuming this thing makes it that far :/ Oh also I’ve taken it apart 5 times and the clips at the front for the bottom panel are already wearing out. Thankfully the bottom are held by the screws, magnets, and the design is much better than the XPS 15 9575 (the 15in 2-in-1) where one side of the laptop is held by clips, where if those clips break, you need to replace the keyboard assembly. Now for performance and thermals. For CPU, I went with Cinebench R20 which it scored over 4800. It’s pretty good, but it also did that at a peak boost power consumption of a whopping 116W. And I thought a 4800/5800H doing 80W was extreme (I come from either desktops, where power consumption matters less than temps, or ultrabooks, where boosting to 45W for 2 seconds is like...a really high number). Of course it doesn’t stay boosted like that forever, it settles down to more ~90ishW, which still feels like a lot to me. Thermals at that time was 91C on the CPU and 100C on the CPU package, so it was very much redlining itself. The vapor chamber cooling I think is doing its work, as this kind of power consumption and temps would probably not be possible on any mere mortal heatsink design. You can’t undervolt because Tiger Lake doesn’t support SGX, and even if it did it probably would’ve been locked because of the Plundervolt vulnerability. As for the GPU, it was 70C while running Unigine Heaven and scored a 3036. Most reviews out there have the 3060 unit, which is very capable. The 3050 however as expected, not that much. I mean sure, at fullscreen 1200p Minecraft w/ optifine it will hit over 270fps and ~110fps in Payday 2, it’s probably better than the 1650ti. It should also support DLSS which is good. Just don’t expect it to be revolutionary compared to something like a 1660ti. If you curb your enthusiasm and compare it to the older 1650 or the 1650ti, you should be okay. The stock RAM is the Samsung m471a1g44ab0-cwe, which use the worse 16gb chips. This isn’t surprising even if it wasn’t a Dell, since the industry seems to be saving a few bucks on larger-capacity chips at the cost of bandwidth. I don’t remember the exact difference, but The stock SSD is the Micron 2300. It seems to be an OEM version of the Crucial P5, since they both use the exact same controller. At least this isn’t something Dell cheaped out on, but that doesn’t deserve anything special since computers of this class should have this type of SSD performance. Performance is typical of a good gen 3 NVME SSD. One thing to note is like usual, Dell sets drives to RAID mode in the bios, so if you switch it back to AHCI, you will get the typical blue screen about device not found. It happened to me, I couldn’t fix it, realized that the bloatware was not worth going through anyways, and just did a clean reinstall on the 1TB Crucial P5 I added in. Do be warned, Dell hardware seems to be EXTREMELY driver dependent, to the point after a new windows install the touchscreen didn’t even work. Windows updates did solve all those problems, so don’t be afraid if things act up after a clean install. I used the stock drive, and then did a clean-reinstall. Dell includes incredible amounts of bloatware in the stock install. It’s not as annoying as other Dell apps that I’ve seen, but it does get pretty annoying. The only 2 you really need are the Dell Update and Power Manager. The Power Manager gives you some bios power settings (like battery charge behavior) and performance (optimized, quiet, performance, etc) in Windows instead of going to the bios. I would’ve liked the power manager if it had a taskbar feature like Lenovo Vantage where I can change power options on-the-fly, instead of spending a “pretty long time” to launch the app. Linux support can be described in 1 word: yesn’t. Sure there’s plenty of info and solutions out there, there’s even a driver for the fingerprint sensor, but you have a lot of hoops to jump through, especially on Ubuntu 21.04 (I use PopOS); the speakers doesn’t even work out of the box on Linux, just be prepared to go through the typical cycle of configuration. This isn’t an old Thinkpad with god-tier driver support. Charging speed was 50 minutes from 10% to 80% on the express-charge setting while idling and web browsing, so the charger can cram a lot of power to the battery (it went to 100% after 1 hour and 46 minutes btw). I’m not sure how healthy this is for the battery, and I normally use the custom threshold 50%-80% (because I use it on a desk a lot), even though charging speed on that setting is much slower. The ultimate problem with this is both the unreliable trackpad quality, and the price. As a long-time Thinkpad user I tend to look at equivalent Thinkpad options, and the new 4th gen X1 Extreme got upgraded to a 16in display, at a weight 0.5lbs lighter than the XPS15, and even has up to the RTX 3070. The base model is 1600p instead of 1200p for the display w/ a 3050ti instead of 3050, at a price (At the time of writing this review) of <$2000. The stock 1-year warranty for Thinkpads based on my experience, compared to my friend’s experience with a 3-year Dell warranty, is much better in terms of getting service if something breaks. It doesn’t matter for the XPS 17 to have a massive trackpad if the design is as flawed as the butterfly keyboard. So overall, as much as I want to like this device, having to deal with a defective trackpad and trackpad design makes it really unsavory. At this amount of money I’m honestly going to say just spend the extra and get the 3060 model, you’re already paying this much. There are plenty of options out there that are cheaper with more performance. The Gigabyte Aero comes with the same CPU w/ a RTX 3060 as low as $1350. The HP Omen w/ the R5 5600H and the 3060 can go as low as <$1100. Even a “thin and light” gaming laptop like the Legion 7 Slim w/ the R7 5800H and the 3060 goes on sale for $1400. You do get a very sleek design, but in terms of reliability, well the trackpad isn’t. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2021 by Ovaltine Jenkins Ovaltine Jenkins

  • Awesome Laptop
CPU: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-11900H RAM Size: 32 GB Hard Disk Size: 1 TB Graphics Description: RTX 3060
I use this XPS 17" studio/creator laptop mostly for AutoCAD, some Photoshop and other everyday Office/web use. The i9 processor, nvidia 3060 graphics, 32GB memory and 1TB SSD are all super fast, brings up huge assemblies/files fast and renders plenty fast... much faster than my XPS 15" that it replaced. This 17" UHD+ screen has lots of pixels and everything on the screen looks crisp. I have it connected to an external 28" 4K monitor and it's great too. The laptop's dimensions/size and weight are acceptable/great for a mobile powerhouse with touchscreen. I got it here cheaper on Thanksgiving holiday sale and with lots of cashback :) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2022 by Phil

  • Awesome specs, actual performance not even close.
CPU: 11th Generation Intel® Core™ i9-11900H RAM Size: 32 GB Hard Disk Size: 1 TB Graphics Description: RTX 3060
I bought this for the extra processing power needed for post processing large amounts of photo data. The touchpad failures requied me to reload the OS a couple of times to resolve, finally I just gave up and started using a bluetooth mouse. The machine also has a serious overheating problem even when simply downloading. For some reason the GPU takes up almost all the resources and overheats, resulting in a shutdown due to the overheating. As a former Dell employee I am more than a little dissapointed in this design, especially given how much I paid for this pc. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2025 by AnyS

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