19 July, 2014: The XPS 18 looks like a smaller all-in-one desktop at first glance. Sitting on a hefty industrial-looking stand is a featureless black screen, with only a Dell logo in the upper left corner and a Windows 8 flag logo below the screen. From the side, it’s as thin as or thinner than most non-tablet all-in-one systems, and feels designed to fade nicely into the background. An 18-inch screen is on the small side for an all-in-one, but conversely it’s large for a tablet, making this either bigger or smaller than you might expect, depending on whether you’re viewing it primarily as a desktop or portable device.

As mentioned above, other examples of this hybrid genre so far have been the 20-inch Sony Vaio Tap 20 and the Asus Transformer AIO, which has an 18.4-inch display. Each of those systems has a near-fatal flaw, making the Dell XPS 18 the best of this new breed. In the case of the Vaio Tap 20, the slightly larger tablet display weighs nearly 12 pounds, while the 18-inch Dell tablet weighs closer to 5 pounds. As you can imagine, the Dell lends itself to casual household carry-around sessions much more easily.

Use “Undelete” to recover deleted files from Dell XPS 18 hard drive.

Use “Unformat” to recover data after format Dell XPS 18 hard drive.

Use “Recover partition” to recover files if Dell XPS 18 hard drive partition changed or damaged or deleted.

Use “Full Scan” to recover lost files Dell XPS 18 if partitions show as “raw” or recover files which can not be found with “undelete”and “unformat” and “recover partition”, recover files from raw partition, recover files of partitons which are not NTFS, nor exfat, nor fat32.

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