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Dell Revives XPS Brand With New Laptops to Regain PC Market Share

Dell has brought back its XPS laptop lineup, reversing a decision made last year to retire the premium brand, as it seeks to revive demand in a sluggish global PC market.

Unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show, the new XPS 14 and XPS 16 are Dell’s thinnest laptops yet, with plans to introduce a lighter XPS 13 later this year. The move follows what Dell executives described as “very broad” feedback from partners and customers who favored the XPS name.

Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke acknowledged the misstep, saying Dell had been wrong to abandon the brand when it consolidated products under the Dell and Dell Pro labels.

The revived XPS models target the premium segment, where Dell faces stiff competition from HP and Lenovo. Prices start at $2,049.99 for the XPS 14 and $2,199.99 for the XPS 16 in the U.S. and Canada.

Both laptops use Intel’s Core Ultra Series 3 processors with integrated Arc graphics, which Dell says significantly boost AI and graphics performance over prior generations.

Dell also said it is simplifying its branding strategy, keeping entry-level and mainstream devices under the Dell name, premium systems under XPS, and gaming products under Alienware, as it looks to better position itself in a crowded PC market.

OpenAI Launches Open-Weight Reasoning Models Optimized for Laptop Use

OpenAI announced on Tuesday the release of two open-weight language models designed for advanced reasoning tasks and optimized to run efficiently on laptops, delivering performance comparable to its smaller proprietary reasoning models. Unlike fully open-source models, open-weight models provide publicly accessible trained parameters (weights) but do not include full source code or training data, allowing developers to run and fine-tune them locally or behind their own firewalls.

OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman highlighted that the ability to operate these models locally offers users greater control over security and infrastructure. The two models, gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b, differ in size: the larger model runs on a single GPU, while the smaller one can run directly on personal computers. Both excel at coding, competitive mathematics, and health-related questions, having been trained on text-focused datasets with an emphasis on science and math.

Separately, Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced that OpenAI’s open-weight models are now available on its Bedrock generative AI marketplace—a first for OpenAI on the platform. Bedrock director Atul Deo praised the models as strong open-weight options for AWS customers.

This launch marks OpenAI’s first release of open models since GPT-2 in 2019, entering a competitive landscape that includes Meta’s Llama series and China’s DeepSeek-R1, both of which have influenced open-weight and open-source AI development trajectories this year.

OpenAI, backed by Microsoft and valued at around $300 billion, is currently seeking to raise up to $40 billion in a funding round led by Softbank Group.

Dell XPS 13 and Inspiron 14 Plus Copilot+ AI PCs Debut in India: Pricing and Specifications

Dell XPS 13 Laptop Priced from Rs. 1,39,990 Devamını Oku