Released in 2003, Inspiron 11 series consisted of five models: the Inspiron 1100, 1150, 5100, 5150, and 5160. Storage: 30, 40, or 60 GB Ultra ATA hard drive.
Memory: 256 MB or 512 MB of DDR RAM, upgradable to 2 GB.It was branded as "Notebook Essentials" and started at $799. Released in 2005, the Inspiron 2200 is the successor to the Inspiron 1000. Battery: 29Wh Li-ion, 4-cell (Optional 6-cell available).Storage: 40 or 60GB Ultra ATA hard drive.Graphics: Intel GMA 900 with 128 MB of shared graphics memory.Memory: 256 MB, 512 MB, 1GB of DDR2 PC2-4200 RAM, upgradable to 2 GB.The Inspiron 1300 is available in both screen sizes. The Inspiron B120 is 14-inch, B130 is 15-inch. Released in late 2005, the Inspiron 1300/B130/B120 is the successor to the Inspiron 2200.
Display: 15.4 inch display in 1680x1050 or 1920x1200 w/WUXGA.ĭell Inspiron 1300 (right) next to a Inspiron 2200, both running Windows 7.Inspiron 8600: nVidia GeFoGo 64 MB, ATi Mobility Radeon 9600 128 MB, nVidia GeForce FX Go5650 128 MB. Graphics: Inspiron 8500: ATi Mobility Radeon 9000 32 MB, nVidia GeFoGo 64 MB.Additionally, snap-on faux-wood lid covers were an available accessory which allowed customers to customize the look of their Inspiron. Like the Inspiron 1100/5100 series that was also released in 2003, the 85 were among the first Dell laptops to be offered in Venice Blue and Moonlight Silver. Since they were clones of the D800/D810, they included many Latitude-specific features such as the Dell D-Dock and the D-bay (which allowed users to swap out the CD drive for a floppy drive or secondary battery). The Inspiron 8500 utilized am Intel Pentium 4 M processor, while the Inspiron 8600 was based off of Intel's Centrino Platform and utilized an Intel Pentium M/Centrino Processor. The Inspiron 85 were mainstream notebooks that were clones of the Latitude D800 and D810. Display: 14.1 inch display, 15 inch display, or 15 inch SXGA+ display.Graphics: Intel 3D AGP (32MB Shared Memory), nVidia GeForce2 Go 100 16 MB or 32 MB.Processor: Celeron M or Pentium 4 M 1.6, 1.7, or 1.9 GHz.The Inspiron 26 were clones of the Latitude V710 and V740, respectively. Graphics: ATI Mobility - M4 (with 8, 16 or 32 MB of video memory) or RADEON 7500 (with 64 MB of video memory), or NVIDIA GeForce2 Go (with 16 or 32 MB of video memory).Released in 2000, the Dell Inspiron 8000 was a mobile workstation that Dell branded as a mobile desktop. Storage: 5, 10, or 20gb Ultra ATA hard drive.Graphics: ATI RAGE Mobility 128 3D (with 8mb of video RAM, 2x AGP).
Graphics: ATI Rage Mobility (with 8MB of video memory, 2x AGP).Processor: Intel Pentium III or 600 MHz, Intel Celeron 700 MHz.Released in 2000, the Dell Inspiron 3800 was an affordable laptop that Dell branded as "Stylish and Affordable". Inspiron 3500 with accessories Inspiron 3800 Storage: 10 or 20gb Ultra ATA hard drive.Graphics: ATI Rage Mobility M (with 4MB of video memory).Processor: Intel Pentium III Memory: 128 or 256MB of DDR RAM.Released in 1998, the Dell Inspiron 2100 was a lightweight laptop that Dell branded as "Ultra-Thin & Light" and "Ultra Mobile". Storage: 4.8, 6, 10, 20 or 30GB Ultra ATA hard drive.Graphics: ATI Rage Mobility M (with 4 or 8MB of video memory).Released in 1999, the Dell Inspiron 7500 was a speedy laptop that Dell branded as "A Mobile Desktop". There are also some earlier models than these, but those have not been added to the list yet.
This list is incomplete the early Dell Inspiron models listed below went through a number of changes from 1999 to 2006, so the specifications on each model may be incomplete or incorrect.