Skip to main content

Dell imagines a more sustainable laptop design — and it’s a radical change

Dell has announced and demonstrated Concept Luna, a radical rethinking of how laptops are designed, with an emphasis on bolstering repairability and sustainability.

Companies like Dell have ambitious goals to go carbon neutral, and they’re well aware that recycling old tech won’t ever be enough to reach those goals. Concept Luna goes far beyond recycling, injecting sustainability into how laptops are designed to make them far more reusable in the future.

A deconstructed laptop part of Dell's Concept Luna project.

Concept Luna laptops don’t look all that different from a standard Dell laptop, but inside, they couldn’t be more different. These laptops put the majority of the device’s guts behind the screen rather than under the keyboard. The battery remains, but the motherboard and other components have all been moved to behind the screen and would be cooled passively. These laptops would be built more like a tablet in that regard.

Dell says this would dramatically increase both the long-term repairability of the laptops and the ability to reuse components. According to Dell, the goal is to get up to three complete life cycles from the motherboard, which would be harvested from laptops that are traded in.

For example, someone might buy a high-end XPS laptop one year, and then decide to trade it in for another just a year or two later. Hypothetically, Dell could then harvest the motherboard and reuse it in a cheaper product in the Inspiron line.

That also means all of the internal components are easily accessible and user replaceable, which greatly extends the life span of the device.

These would need to be marked down, of course, and Dell was aware that some discounts might be needed to entice consumers.

Dell claims this new design would reduces its carbon footprint by 50%, primarily due to the internals and motherboard.

None of this is set in stone, of course. Concept Luna is still just an idea, though Dell already had a working model of these laptops to show off.

As right to repair increasingly becomes a pressing issue for tech companies, we should expect to see more attempts to make meaningful improvements to repairability. The Framework Laptop is built entirely around this idea, and even the new MacBook Pro made some positive changes that impact repairability.

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Larsen
Senior Editor, Computing
Luke Larsen is the Senior editor of computing, managing all content covering laptops, monitors, PC hardware, Macs, and more.
Don’t just buy the latest version of a laptop. It’s not always worth it
The ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 laptop, opened with a colorful wallpaper on the screen.

When shopping for a laptop, it's hard not to get sucked into buying the latest model. They're often widely available and marketed as the next big thing.

But as a reviewer who tests dozens of new laptops every year, I know the secret that laptop brands don't want to tell you. It's that more often than not, the latest version of a laptop may offer a very mild update to the previous generation, often just swapping in one CPU for another. That means if you can find the previous generation for cheaper, it's often a better use of your money. The key, though, is learning how to recognize a minor spec update on a laptop from something that's actually worth paying more for.
When updates just aren't enough

Read more
Dell XPS 15 vs. XPS 17: high-performance siblings duke it out
Dell XPS 15 9520 front view showing display and keyboard deck.

You'd be forgiven for mistaking the Dell XPS 17 for only a slightly bigger XPS 15. Both have large displays packed into the smallest chassis possible, and both boast some ambitious performance claims. However, there's more going on between the two than meets the eye.

Just how big of a difference is there between the XPS 15 9530 and the XPS 17 9730? Here's everything you need to know about these two great laptops, and which you should buy. Note that both laptops received refreshes in 2023 that upped the CPU and GPU but left the rest of the laptop alone. Neither is as compelling compared to the competition as it was in previous generations.
Specs

Read more
Gaming laptops are still lying to us, and it’s getting even more complicated
A gaming laptop playing Horizon Zero Dawn.

Around a year ago, I claimed that gaming laptops were lying to us. It was hard not to when you couldn't trust the spec sheet to give you an idea about how a laptop would perform. I hoped my annual check-in would bring some improvements, but unfortunately, the situation with gaming laptops has only gotten more complicated.

Problems with graphics card power are still present, but now processors are dissuading buyers as well. The spec sheet should tell you a lot about how a gaming laptop performs, but the situation in 2023 is a lot more convoluted than that.
Graphics power is still a problem

Read more