13 August, 2014: The first generation of the Dell XPS 13 was so obvious in its intentions, we gave it the nickname DellBook Air.
Since its 2012 launch, the XPS 13 changed in small but important ways, while keeping its slim silhouette intact. In the intervening years, ultrabook and ultrabook-style laptops have become commonplace, so at least the XPS 13 now looks a lot like many other laptops, not just Apple’s.
I’ve liked previous incarnations of the XPS 13 well enough, but there were always a few missteps that kept it from being a top choice, usually because they left the system feeling like the last leg of the previous generation of hardware, not a high-end, high-price, cutting edge example of forward-looking technology. The silver aluminum look of the XPS 13 (largely the same at the 2012 original) is about as standard as laptops get, and frankly very MacBook like, which is usually the first observation out of anyone’s mouth seeing it for the first time. In the intervening two years, so many new ultrabooks have followed a similar design strategy that the XPS 13 just looks like part of the pack now, and less tightly tied to Apple’s design.
Most of us need to separate our hard drives into several partitions to manage our multiple data for different usage. But we accidently encounter a circumstance that when we try to access one of the partitions a dialogue box pops up: “Disk Disk/Drive is not Formatted…” or PC shows no partition. The above situation demonstrates that your partition table is broken. Do you have no idea about what caused these happened or how to recover the partition?
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