
Dell recently announced its updated commercial lineup that includes Dell Pro laptops, Dell Pro Precision workstations, desktops, and monitors. Selected notebooks and desktops will be launching from 31 March, followed by additional systems and workstations in May, while the latest monitor lineup is now available globally.
Dell Pro 14 Premium & Dell Pro 7 / 5 / 3 Series Laptops
The Dell Pro series will be available in both Intel Core Ultra Series 3 and AMD Ryzen AI 400 series processors, which the company credited its “new modular design approach.” The result is smaller motherboards that free up more space for larger fans and improved thermals, more battery, and the capability to support “a wider range of silicon options within the same chassis.”

The Dell Pro 14 Premium targets “executives and customer-facing managers,” said Dell, with a 7% thinner profile than previous generation, magnesium alloy chassis (which makes it the lightest Dell Pro laptop to date at just 1.15kg), Tandem OLED display options, and a 8MP` HDR webcam. There is a wide range of configurations available on this laptop, along with Wi-Fi 7 and optional 5G support via eSIM.
Moving on, we have new Dell Pro 7, 5, and 3 models that represents the level of feature set and performance based on the given number. Dell Pro 7 are available in 13-inch and 14-inch variants, each split into traditional clamshell and 2-in-1 form factors; all four models can be configured with up to AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 470, or in Intel’s case, Core Ultra 7 366H vPro. Similar processor options are given to Dell Pro 5 laptops in 14-inch and 16-inch versions, though Core Ultra X7 with extra graphics horsepower is available for this lineup.

Taking a quick detour from the laptops, Dell also introduced a mini-PC dubbed Dell Pro 5 Micro, which packs either Intel Core Ultra 7 366H or Core Ultra 335 vPro processors, and is capable of running on a single USB-C port that receives power from compatible monitors (requires 100W PD). With just 1.2L of internal volume, it’s small enough to be mounted behind monitors, and it comes with a modular port that can be swapped to nine different types of I/O based on usage requirements.
Back to laptops – the Dell Pro 3 series is the budget-level offerings under Dell’s commercial lineup, in this case packing mid-range AMD laptop processors as well as undisclosed Intel processors that involves both Core Ultra 300 and Core 300 models (the latter of which Intel has not yet announce any model at this time). It can still be configured with very respectable storage and RAM options, including up to 2TB SSD and 64GB DDR5-5600 dual-channel SO-DIMM memory.
Dell Pro Precision Series Workstations



The new Dell Pro Precision lineup of mobile workstations are split into Precision 5S, 5, and 7 series, with the 5S serving as the entry-level lineup featuring ultra-lightweight form factors in both Intel and AMD processor options. Notably, this lineup will pack the new LPCAMM2 memory that boasts high capacity in ultra-low profile form factor and high clock speeds, in this case up to 64GB of LPDDR5X-8533 is available. As for the Precision 5 and 7 series, they feature NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell series GPUs for more demanding workloads.
Dell also briefly mentioned the new Precision 9 series desktop workstations, involving three models – T2, T4, and T6 – which is designed to handle the heaviest of workloads. This lineup is said to feature up to 15 PCIe slots for all kinds of expansion cards or multi-GPU setups, for which you can opt for the most powerful GPU on the planet Earth right now, better known as the power-guzzling, 600-watt NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation Edition (up to two of them, or five RTX PRO 6000 Max-Q 300W cards instead).
Pokdepinion: Boring names, but at least they make sense (I honestly don’t remember the 4-digit model names Dell used back then).




