Funny comment about the avatar.
Most likely coming from someone bald with a beer-gut (not that there's anything wrong with that).
Wow!
Tell me again about disabling WiFi, Bluetooth, etc... and the importance of a quality audio interface.
What were those "audio guru" tweaks? Did you get those off the Sweetwater site?
Man... I just had no idea about those things. Thanks!
To the XPS-15's credit, it's one of the *few* off-the-shelf laptops that has BIOS parameters for disabling SpeedStep, C-states, etc. Most don't even expose those parameters.
Also to it's credit, it's a sleek looking machine.
On to the bad, it had a defective Bluetooth controller (to be fair, a rare issue)... and in no way could it playback The Grandeur completely glitch-free under the circumstances I've outlined. Not even close...
Show a video of your Dell playing The Grandeur under the circumstances I've mentioned.
In fact, show a video of of that... and zoom-in on the RME control-panel... where it lists errors (dropped samples).
Show the number of errors after running this test for an hour.
Never mind that. Make it easier on yourself.
Do the same with the Ableton Live onboard stress-test. You don't even have to be present while it's testing.
Let the sine wave run... with the RME set to a 48-sample ASIO buffer size... CPU load at 80%.
After an hour, zoom-in on the errors that have accumulated in the RME control panel.
Dropped samples may not matter to you.
They matter to me... and many of our clients.