

When we watched 1080p QuickTime trailers for both "The Avengers" and "The Expendables 2," most images stayed true at greater than 45 degrees, though dark scenes occasionally washed out. The configuration of the T430 we reviewed had a 1366 x 768 display, and was rather dim at 147 lux. At 237 lux on our light meter, the Latitude E6430's screen is brighter than the 203 lux thin-and-light notebook category average. We consider temperatures below 95 degrees comfortable.Ĭlick to EnlargeThe 1600 x 900 matte 14-inch screen provided bright, sharp images and solid viewing angles, though its colors seemed muted at times. After 15 minutes of streaming a video at full screen, the touchpad measured just 80 degrees, the keyboard was a mere 82 degrees and the bottom clocked in at 87 degrees Fahrenheit. The Dell Latitude E6430 stayed pleasantly cool throughout our tests. If Dell wants to continue offering pointing sticks on its business notebooks, it needs to revisit this annoying design. While we're huge fans of the TrackPoint sticks that Lenovo puts on its ThinkPads, Dell's rubber nub sits too low relative to the keys around it, making it uncomfortable to touch. In addition to its touchpad, the Latitude E6430 includes another navigation option: a pointing stick between its G and H keys.

The two discrete buttons offered just the right amount of feedback. Pinch-to-zoom, rotate and three-finger flicks all worked smoothly. Click to EnlargeThe 3.2 x 1.75-inch touchpad provided accurate navigation around the desktop, and even provided reliable multitouch gesture support.
