Dell OptiPlex 7000 Intel Alder Lake TinyMiniMicro PC Review (2024)

Today we are going to review the Dell OptiPlex 7000 series. This is Dell’s Alder Lake 1L-class PC that is designed for corporate desktops. In our review, we are going to focus on some of the interesting aspects and critique a number of parts of Dell’s design as we go in-depth into the system. Let us get to it!

Project TinyMiniMicro Background

InProject TinyMiniMicrowe are purchasing a large number of these devices from different sources. While a standard STH review is of a new product, these TMM nodes occasionally have specs that differ from what one would expect. In all of these pieces, we are going to talk about what makes the nodes unique. We are now well over 40 different nodes to increase diversity. We are testing these on a more circular economy/ extended lifecycle basis to see how they can be deployed after their initial use as corporate desktops. As always, we have a video version of this article.

We recommend opening this video in a YouTube tab, window, or app for a better viewing experience.

This configuration, at the time of publishing, is just over $2200 list, and $1475 after standard discounts, but before tax and shipping. For that, we had configured a Intel Core i7-12700, 16GB of DDR5 memory (2x 8GB), WiFi 6E, and a 512GB NVMe SSD.

A quick word here, the $1475 is out of our normal Project TinyMiniMicro budget. We actually have a HP EliteDesk system with a NVIDIA dGPU that was less than this system. In order to get this system tested, Dell reached out to us to review the system, and I agreed. As a quick point of disclosure, Dell typically pays review organizations to license awards. That mechanism allows review organizations to not say their review is sponsored but allows Dell to compensate review sites for their time. At STH, as of this writing, we have never participated in that program. While Dell sent us this unit for review, we are able to do our normal critical review of the product since Dell knows it is unlikely to get an award (our Editor’s Choice award is given to <4 products/ year.) This is different than many of our TinyMiniMicro reviews where we have purchased units, but Dell’s pricing on these is high enough that this was the option to get this system reviewed.

Project TinyMiniMicro has been a fun series for STH. This is perhaps the most interesting innovation in the series in many years with Intel Alder Lake processors. They have changed the game in terms of power consumption. With that, let us get to the hardware.

Dell OptiPlex 7000 Micro External Hardware Overview

On the front of the system, we have a layout that Dell has used previously. There is a power button, line out, headset jack, and two USB ports. Having the two audio jacks is probably a class-leading solution for audio. The USB is great with a 10Gbps Type-A and a 20Gbps Type-C port.

The other fun part of this is that Dell made a change several generations ago that has an interesting impact on the system. The Dell logo in older generations like the Dell OptiPlex 7060 Micro actually rotated so that it could be aligned in vertical or horizontal orientations. The current design has the Dell logo, OptiPlex 7000, headset/ line out, and HDD labels all oriented for vertical orientation. The USB labels are designed for horizonal orientation. There is a portion of the population that will not be able to un-see that and these systems are designed for mass appeal.

One other interesting part is that the front may look similar to, but it is a bit different from what we saw in ourDell OptiPlex 7090 Micro Review. We have the same port configuration but in a slightly different order. This is one of those where it is just a bummer that Dell could not keep the same port order. When these systems are deployed, IT organizations will have to do a little bit more re-work on existing documentation to update for this difference. Plus, it makes stacks less uniform, as can be seen below.

On the rear, we get three DisplayPorts. We also get three USB 3 Type-A ports. One is a 5Gbps port and two are 10Gbps ports. A quick thank you to the Dell engineers for just putting the speed number next to the port (5, 10, or 20) to indicate the speed. It seems as though Dell has found a better solution for USB naming.

On the right, we also get a HDMI optional port. There are options here for things like VGA, DisplayPort, and etc., but we did not see a 2nd NIC option listed as companies like HP have. The NIC is a 1GbE NIC still. The box on the edge is the WiFi antenna area.

Doing a quick comparison to the OptiPlex 7090 Micro, we can see that the previous generation we looked at has another USB port but one less DisplayPort. In the OptiPlex 7000 series, it seems like the 35W version also has 2 DP, 4x USB on the rear. It is too bad there is not more uniformity here.

Next, let us get to the internal hardware overview.

Dell OptiPlex 7000 Intel Alder Lake TinyMiniMicro PC Review (2024)
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