My clients' use cases primarily highlight HCI, which would include VMware vSAN or Nutanix AHV.
The PowerEdge XE-Series caters to AI-centric workloads by offering exceptional GPU support and processing power for demanding tasks like inferencing and large-scale training, making it ideal for organizations aiming to innovate with AI.
| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| Dell PowerEdge XE-Series | 3.0% |
| Dell PowerEdge R-Series | 21.9% |
| HPE ProLiant DL Servers | 17.5% |
| Other | 57.6% |
| Type | Title | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Rack Servers | Jul 18, 2026 | Download |
| Product | Reviews, tips, and advice from real users | Jul 18, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Dell PowerEdge XE-Series vs Dell PowerEdge R-Series | Jul 18, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Dell PowerEdge XE-Series vs HPE ProLiant DL Servers | Jul 18, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Dell PowerEdge XE-Series vs Dell PowerEdge XR-Series | Jul 18, 2026 | Download |
| Title | Rating | Mindshare | Recommending | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dell PowerEdge R-Series | 4.5 | 21.9% | 99% | 307 interviewsAdd to research |
| HPE ProLiant DL Servers | 4.3 | 17.5% | 95% | 160 interviewsAdd to research |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 9 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 6 |
| Large Enterprise | 5 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 42 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 13 |
| Large Enterprise | 42 |
PowerEdge XE-Series stands out in modern GPU-centric computing with its purpose-built design for AI acceleration. Known for handling extreme workloads like model fine-tuning and AI-driven applications, it supports high-density GPU configurations and advanced thermal management. Its vast storage capacity and compatibility with VMware ensure reliable performance across virtualization, big data, and analytics while providing trusted security integration and robust scalability options. However, improvements in processor support, reliability, and management monitoring are sought by users.
What are the key features of PowerEdge XE-Series?In different industries, PowerEdge XE-Series is utilized for hosting SaaS, high-performance computing, and general-purpose servers. System integrators use it in client networks for applications like Hadoop, backup, and ERP. It supports virtualization and hyper-converged infrastructure solutions. Real estate sectors leverage iDRAC for efficient management, enhancing data security, power, and network redundancy.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series was previously known as PowerEdge XE Servers.
Epsilon, ROZETTA CORP, JIGUANG, RACKSPACE, NEW BELGIUM BREWING
| Author info | Rating | Review Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Senior Solution Architect at a computer software company with 51-200 employees | 4.5 | I appreciate the Dell PowerEdge XE-Series' reliability, flexible configurations, and excellent iDRAC management and customer service. My main concerns are Dell's direct sales impacting partners and their completeness of vision compared to competitors. |
| L3 Storage Engineer at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees | 4.5 | Having used Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for years, I find it stable and highly scalable for AI/HPC. Despite initial cost and complexity, its enterprise AI features, advanced cooling, and reliability offer significant time and cost savings. |
| Software Engineer at a marketing services firm with 1-10 employees | 4.0 | We use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for real-time edge AI inference, appreciating its GPU acceleration, rugged design, and remote management for faster insights and reduced costs. While stable, I'd like improved firmware updates and documentation for better planning. |
| Sr. Engineer at InterGlobe Technology Quotient | 4.5 | I find Dell PowerEdge XE-Series reliable, cost-effective, and flexible for hosting applications. Switching from HP for its value and energy efficiency, I experienced easy setup and good customer service. I'd appreciate dashboard and AI improvements. |
| Pre Sales Manager at a tech services company with 51-200 employees | 4.5 | I rate Dell PowerEdge XE-Series excellent for AI workloads, praising its stability, standardized GPU integration, and superior support. However, awareness for liquid cooling in high-density AI and relying on specialized ISVs for full AI solution ROI are crucial. |
| Managing Director at a consultancy with 1-10 employees | 4.0 | I use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for HPC and AI, finding it reliable, scalable, and cost-effective for on-prem AI. While pricing is volatile, it has reduced TCO, and I anticipate full ROI. Customer service is good. |
| Server Validation Engineer at UST Global | 4.0 | <p>I primarily use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for R&D testing of AI/ML workloads, valuing its excellent multi-GPU compatibility, stability, and scalability. It performs well for AI/ML, though I find it needs improved external storage protocol support beyond iSCSI.</p> |
| Lead Solution Architect at Avineon India Private Limited | 4.0 | I use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series on-premises with OpenManage for about 1,000 users and find them affordable, adaptable, easy to set up, manage, and restore, with good stability and ROI, but disk reads can be slow and upgrades feel limited; I rate them 8/10. |
| Manager at a computer software company with 501-1,000 employees | 3.5 | I find Dell PowerEdge XE-Series useful for cloud services, appreciating iDRAC and good customer support, with easy setup. However, it suffers from frequent GPU malfunctions and heat-related failures, leading to stability concerns despite sufficient scalability. |
| Ingénieur Commercial at REEL IT | 4.5 | I use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for research, valuing its performance and GPU for AI workloads. Setup is now simple and customer service is very good. I rate it nine out of ten and recommend it, despite wishing for a bigger rack. |
The most beneficial features in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, in terms of capabilities and functions, are the maturity of the management, particularly iDRAC. From an out-of-band management perspective, I rate iDRAC as the best. You can have a server from different vendors with the same specs, but the difference is in the maturity of the out-of-band management.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series impacts the flexibility of business operations positively. They are very flexible with the components; you can take one chassis and beef it up while having another chassis that is efficient and streamlined, not limited in configurations. They have models for all types of environments so you're not using a beefy server for something small. The flexibility does allow you to design for multiple different requirements.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series helps to reduce unplanned production downtime most certainly. They are known for their reliability; you don't get many failures on Dell servers. The difference between 99.9% and 99.99% uptime is just a couple of minutes, but it amounts to 0.01% of a percent. Compared to more low-end manufacturers, I would say it's about 5-10% better.
There are some areas for improvement with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series; it's more of a Dell issue. They've promised changes, but engaging with Dell sometimes means they will take the customer on a direct model and cut the partner out. This isn't a technical issue, but a business one. When architecting a solution and introducing Dell to a customer, you sometimes get an email saying the customer wants to buy directly from Dell, leaving all my hard work and introductions for nothing.
I believe Dell could add new features to Dell PowerEdge XE-Series in the future. There are many more CPU variants available than just Intel and AMD, and it would be nice to have a major vendor introduce another option outside of those. While I know it's difficult due to supportability and changes, that would just be a preference.
I have larger experience and expertise with Dell Technologies than with Portworx.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is a solution that is stable and reliable, hitting around 99.9% stability.
I find Dell PowerEdge XE-Series to be very scalable; there are no limitations on the scalability side.
My impression of customer service is very good; I would give them a 10. In South Africa, from a vendor perspective, they offer the best support for after-sales service, with a significant presence that isn't totally dependent on partners to manage the SLA.
In terms of return on investment when comparing Dell with other vendors, a lot depends on the pricing secured. If ROI was solely hardware-based, I would say Dell is top tier. However, ROI depends on the system being built; if you use a Dell solution for VMware, the ROI on the Dell portion might be good, but the ROI on VMware might be questionable. It's hard to rate one-on-one with maybe one or two other vendors.
Among the products I mentioned, mainly on the HCI side, my clients are dealing the most with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
Regarding the Rack series, I see basically two models or two series, and I need to get on to the configurator. When it comes to the XR and XC, I'm more focused on the XE.
As a reseller, the biggest advantage in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is our relationship with Dell. They are a partner that hasn't always been our best partner, but the skills that come with it are invaluable. We have a large network at Dell, through both Dell Direct and distribution. On the service side, being multi-vendor clouds my judgment a bit; you could see a difference in iDRAC and iLO, for instance. I might think iDRAC is a bit better than iLO, but otherwise, from an availability and pricing perspective, it's much of a muchness.
Regarding Total Cost of Ownership, I would say Dell PowerEdge XE-Series can reduce it if it's designed right. It's difficult because it depends on the system that goes on top of it. From a hardware perspective, I give it about a 5% reduction because the Dell after-sale service is among the best in South Africa, whereas HPE is very partner-dependent, and if the partner manages the service delivery, it's good, but not as comprehensive as Dell.
About artificial intelligence running AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I am a bit skeptical overall. I see a lot of money flowing in and not much going out, and I'm waiting to see who the winners and losers are. This is an interesting question because I think a lot depends on partnerships; Dell obviously has a partnership with NVIDIA and AMD, and you're more dependent on the NVIDIA toolsets rather than the underlying infrastructure.
In terms of the energy consumption part, I can speak generally; it depends a lot on the server design. From an efficiency perspective, it depends on the PSU and CPU selected. The power draw and heat are more dependent on the likes of Intel or AMD chipsets. For our customers, we typically turn off all power-saving features; if you buy a Ferrari to get the speed, you don't limit it to something a Ford Focus.
My impression of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series regarding sustainability goals is that it meets the requirements. It comes down to configuration, and the mindset in Africa is that if you buy something fast, you use the power when it's available.
About the price for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I'd say it's fair. I might have had a different opinion before AI made everything hellishly expensive, but being a partner, a lot depends on how early you are to the deal, and overall, it's definitely fair.
If I compare Dell with other vendors on the market, I would say Dell is probably not the leader. The reason is that if you look at what HPE has been doing—they now have their own hypervisor, ops management tooling, and monitoring tooling through acquisitions including OpsRamp and Morpheus. Dell is lacking in the completeness of vision side, not necessarily the hardware side. When they had VMware, they had the most complete vision under one umbrella, but since selling VMware, they lack some completeness, especially now that HPE has their own hypervisor and management tools.
My overall review rating for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is 9.
The use case for this product suggests it has the same characteristics as high GPU compute power. We are using a lot of AI in this, and we are using Generative AI here as well. I also talked about high-performance computing, or HPC, which is applicable here. It has more memory capacity and large memory capacity. Even though it has fast data processing capability, these features make it suitable for demanding workloads.
The biggest advantage for the clients is that it is an enterprise AI interface. That major advantage is that it has AI interface, which means it reduces the time to market. It has support for growth from enterprise AI projects to large-scale GenAI deployments. This is the main scalability I have observed in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
In terms of features and capability, it has an advanced cooling feature and large memory capacity. It accelerates AI analytics and HPC workloads under GPU performance. It supports larger data sets and reduces processing time.
The cooling feature in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is used to cool environments and keep performance maintained during intensive AI and GPU workloads.
Regarding flexibility on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, it supports NVIDIA, which allows customers to choose the platform that is best and fits for AI HPC. It is scalable and versatile as well. In terms of workload, it is versatile because it supports AI training and AI interface. Unplanned production downtime will not happen as expected because it has continuous operation capability and reliability. Throughout monitoring and resilient hardware, it has security features that help business maintain continuous operations where we can meet critical service level agreements.
In terms of disadvantages and improvements, we can say it has highly initial cost, as I mentioned for the MX series as well. For improvement complexity, it has challenges because AI requires skills, GPUs, AI frameworks, networking, and storage. The primary trade-offs are higher cost and power requirements. It is complex, but it is faster in AI processing, scalability, and business continuity outcomes when deployed.
It has been more than four years since I began using this solution.
It is a stable product. I do not have any doubt in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series because I have been working with this XE and MX series for four to five years. It is stable.
It is highly scalable.
Support is good because they are available 24/7.
Installation is straightforward. It is a rack installation, and we can install it. Overall, we require iDRAC and overall Open Management tool, which I discussed previously.
Time saving and money saving and reduction regarding return of investment—I will say it is time saving first because we are using faster AI models with the help of NVIDIA. For cost saving, there is lower total cost of ownership, or TCO.
TCO percentage shows up to 73, 75, 80% improvement in power efficiency.
The XE-Series has competitors, and HPE is one of them because they have strong HPE heritage and liquid cooling expertise. However, Dell has simplified management with iDRAC OpenManage tools.
I am aware of PowerProtect Backup service, but I have not had hands-on experience with it. Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has multiple series within it. For the MX series, I have not received the reward. The major advantage, as I mentioned, is that it has AI interface. Regarding how much reduced unplanned production downtime, I would say it is not percentage-wise, but it is improving infrastructure reliability. As a percentage, I am not sure about the exact percentage, but downtime percentage is reduced. We can consider approximately 10 hours of downtime per year as a reference. Sustainability goals include energy efficiency, as we initially discussed. It has a platform that improves power efficiency where we can reduce energy consumption for workloads. My overall rating for this product is 9 out of 10.
Our main use case for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is that we use it for AI inference and some edge analytics close to our data sources. We focus on real-time processing for shipment tracking and sensor data, where low latency matters.
For one lane, we ingest IoT sensor data from trucks, including temperature, door status, and GPS, and we run lightweight inference at the edge to flag excursions in seconds, not minutes. This triggers an alert to Ops, so they can intervene fast, and we forward the summarized data upstream to the central platform.
The best features Dell PowerEdge XE-Series offers include significant GPU acceleration, which has been substantial for us, plus the rugged design since some units sit in less than ideal environments. Remote management is solid as well; we can patch, monitor, and troubleshoot without rolling a truck.
GPU acceleration specifically benefits our workflow because it lets us run inference on video and sensor streams locally, which cuts round-trip latency and cloud costs. The rugged design has made a difference in our deployment because a few nodes are in facilities with dust and temperature swings, and they have held up without issues. This results in fewer site visits and less downtime.
The remote management is invaluable to us. Out-of-band access and hardware health telemetry allow us to push updates and spot issues before they impact Ops. This proactive view has prevented a couple of late-night fire drills.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has positively impacted my organization by providing faster insights at the edge, which have helped reduce response times to temperature excursions. We have seen fewer spoiled shipments and less manual checking, which has improved both customer satisfaction and costs.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series could be improved with more streamlined firmware and driver updates. Right now, compatibility checks across components take time, and clearer guidance on long-term support timelines would help with planning.
The documentation is adequate, but a more prescriptive compatibility matrix and update playbooks for common stacks would save time. Additionally, more proactive health insights baked into the management stack would be beneficial, especially anomaly detection across hardware logs.
I have been using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for roughly eighteen months.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has been reliable in terms of accuracy and reliability of output. Accuracy is more about our models and data than the hardware, but the platform has been stable with no unexpected edge case failures.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is very stable in our environment.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series scalability is good so far; we can add nodes as needed and manage them consistently without major blockers, though we plan capacity carefully.
Customer support for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is responsive, and I rate it at nine out of ten.
We have seen a return on investment. I would say around twenty percent less IT admin time and roughly fifteen percent better infrastructure efficiency. There is no reduction in headcount, but we handle more with the same team, and we also save on cloud processing and data transfer by running inference locally.
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series was that pricing was in line with expectations for this class. Setup costs were predictable, and licensing was not difficult; it was straightforward with nothing unexpected.
We looked at alternatives such as HPE Edgeline, Lenovo ThinkSystem, and some cloud-only approaches before choosing Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for its GPU density, remote management, and how cleanly it fit our environment. Operationally, it aligned best.
Before choosing Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I evaluated other options, including HPE Edgeline and Lenovo ThinkSystem, plus a cloud-only approach. We went with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for fit, management, and GPU options.
My advice to others looking into using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is to be clear on which workloads truly benefit from edge. Loop in compliance and security early and plan your management processes upfront, as that will save time and headaches.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has been a strong fit for us. It is reliable where it counts. I would rate this review an eight out of ten.

I have used Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, which is a bit different series of rack server. The primary purposes of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series in my case are for servers, as we host multiple applications. We are a travel domain company, and multiple booking engine tools are hosted in Dell infrastructure.
Using PowerEdge servers has affected the overall flexibility of my business operations positively.
The main benefits of using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series were good resources, cost optimization, and a reliable product. It is a trustworthy and reliable product. I mention cost optimization because, compared to other OEMs, Dell offers better value. To be frank, there are no drawbacks of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series product. We have not faced any challenges.
In future updates of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I would appreciate dashboard optimization and AI integration. I am not utilizing any AI functionality of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series at this time.
I have been using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for more than five years.
I only book a ticket when I face a technical challenge, such as not being able to understand something or when a problem occurs with the hardware. There were some hardware compatibility issues when migrating from HP devices to Dell, but apart from that, I do not face any challenges.
I evaluate customer service and technical support when working with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series as good. If I were to give a rating, it would be almost nine. When working with Dell products, I only open tickets with the Dell technical team in case of emergency or any problem, such as hardware resources issues.
Before using Dell, I was using HP.
There were no complexities with the implementation phase of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series. It took only three to four hours to deploy it compared to other products.
The same engineers and the same count were used for deployment as I mentioned for C-series.
My experience with the pricing for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is that I am overall satisfied with their license. When I consider the long run, Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is cost-effective. When I compare it over a five-year tenure, it is always a cost-effective solution.
I switched from HP to Dell because of cost optimization. There was a significant difference when we were refreshing our on-premises hardware. We took quotations from HP and Dell, and the comparison showed that Dell provided us with a substantial discount. The pricing as well as the resources, such as CPU, RAM, and cores, were provided in a bundled way, so we received a significant benefit from Dell's side. I assess the new PowerEdge servers for energy consumption as having reduced energy consumption compared to HP. There was 15% less power consumption from Dell's side.
I am not aware of the Dell Data Protection Suite product, as I have not used that. My overall review rating for this product is 9.
The use case is mainly AI for AI workloads, specifically for GPU-based platforms.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series platform has standardized the way GPUs are implemented. They have standardized GPU sockets from NVIDIA and built a certified hardware configuration. There is an OEM version of NVIDIA servers that provides much more flexibility and is more cost-effective compared to NVIDIA's direct offering.
Dell EMC OpenManage Enterprise integrated with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series streamlines IT operations and provides excellent scalability.
Customer awareness about air cooling compared to liquid cooling is an area that needs attention. Liquid cooling requires existing setups, and since AI workloads are significantly different from traditional workloads, a single rack can now have more than 600 kW, which is much higher than traditional workloads. Current data centers are not ready to support heavy AI HPC clusters. If you have requirements from that perspective, you need to understand that you must build new data centers that are liquid cooling ready. This ensures you can have high-density GPUs in a single rack to save space rather than having multiple semi-empty racks with only one or two air-cooled servers.
I have used the solution for around six years.
The stability is excellent. The system is fully redundant with every component protected. Everything is redundant to ensure the product works without any downtime. Since we are speaking about enterprise production, we make sure that stability is number one priority.
Technical support from Dell is the best when compared to other vendors. When speaking about platforms, customers can choose from Dell PowerEdge XE-Series to competitors based on price and matching specs. However, technical support and professional services are what make the difference. What matters is reliability, response time, solving issues quickly, and the professionalism in deployment. Some people view servers as commodities, but what makes these platforms different is that if you have a problem, you can pick up the phone, file a technical ticket, and have it solved immediately. Even if a device has super performance but has no local support, I would avoid it because hardware will eventually fail. Technical support is very important.
The ROI is not about the GPU server or Dell PowerEdge XE-Series server itself. The ROI is about the use case running on that GPU server. When we speak about Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, we are speaking about AI workloads. The ROI is determined by what is actually implemented on that server. The GPU part has high value, but the ROI is determined by the software and the use case the customer implements. The server part, GPU part, and use case are all related. For success, there must be a use case to achieve, clean data that the customer already has accessibility to, and the GPU infrastructure. GPU at the end of the day is about good data in and good data out; garbage in results in garbage out.
The ROI is determined mainly on the full AI story. Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is sold as part of an AI factory. We do not go to a customer to sell a Dell PowerEdge XE-Series server with GPUs. Instead, we tell customers that we help them clean their data and identify what AI use cases they can implement for their business. Then we provide the right infrastructure, which includes Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers, networking, operating systems, hypervisors, and Kubernetes. On top of this, ISVs and Dell services integrate all these components together to give the customer a success story, which is the secret sauce.
Early engagement on these projects is essential, and many vendors now work early on data center facilities and data center management to help customers build liquid cooling environments. Vendors like Vertiv provide products that can help. Dell provides integrated racks with liquid cooling already pre-integrated, allowing customers to just plug the servers in. The racks have power and pipes already integrated. However, you need to ensure that the data center is equipped to remove cold water and exit hot water in a proper cycle.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is meant for enterprise. Some customers who need to do small inferencing deployment can use workstations rather than high-end servers. We have the same options on Dell servers. There are different platforms available, including Supermicro and Lenovo, though I am not directly engaging with these platforms.
We have multiple platforms depending on sizing, with different CPUs and silicon models. We have Intel platforms and AMD platforms, and we support different GPUs including Intel Gaudi accelerators and AMD GPUs. This diversity in configuration gives us an advantage compared to the competition.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is part of the enterprise AI story deployment. Customers do not trust a normal service provider; they need a customer service provider or service arm that has success stories in these areas. This is why you need specialized AI or ISVs that work in AI infrastructure. While Dell PowerEdge XE-Series itself can be straightforward and a certified engineer can handle it, delivering a successful project requires proper AI ISVs to integrate everything together. The overall review rating for this solution is 9.
We've seen benefits from running AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series because it's been really reliable, and we've been able to utilize on-premises AI with OpenFaaS, and it's been able to cut a bit of cost for all the token usage.
We've seen benefits from running AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series because it's been really reliable, and we've been able to utilize on-premises AI with OpenFaaS. It's been able to cut a bit of cost for all the token usage.
Running AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has been good value and reliable, with no issues so far.
For the next release of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I cannot think of anything that should be included.
I think we're starting to see ROI with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, but we probably won't see the full ROI for a couple of years.
What stood out to me in my evaluation process, both positive and negative, when comparing Lenovo and Dell was that Lenovo didn't have the full features that we really wanted. They were price conscious, but Dell had the reputation as well as good customer support.

The usual use cases for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series that I have been working with mostly involve testing, end-to-end testing of the platform for different features like functional testing and also for stability testing.
I am working on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for end-to-end testing, functional and stress and stability testing as well. I am part of the R&D team where we work on all the components of the server like GPU, memory, CPU, PCI card, and BMC, and all other components for the testing. This testing is an end-to-end testing before it is released to the customer.
There are a couple of features of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series that I have found the most valuable. One is for the GPU, which is very good for the AI/ML workload. The network bandwidth and how the network card is supported are quite good and very helpful for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series platform, basically for the AI/ML and data center trend. The supported network card in the system and the drive are also quite good.
The benefits from running AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge XE-Series are the benchmark and the compatibility with the different GPUs. Dell PowerEdge XE-Series supports NVIDIA GPUs, AMD GPUs, and also Intel GPUs, so the compatibility of all three GPUs in the platform is quite good. The benchmark claimed by the different GPUs is also exceptional, and for the workload training, there is very less latency for the AI/ML workload training, whether it is a Llama or DeepSeek or the other workload that we usually run. The platform is supported with different various OS and it supports all the features claimed by the different vendors of GPUs.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has reduced my total cost of ownership. There are a couple of points where it has reduced cost, one is on the networking side and also on the GPU side, as it supports various vendors of GPUs, and the benchmark and workload handling are quite good.
Regarding how Dell PowerEdge XE-Series could be improved or enhanced, I do not see much improvement is required at this time. One requirement is the storage protocol, as the external storage protocol is not much used in the platform; only iSCSI is used and there is no support for FC or FC over NVMe. This is one area that needs to be improved or have features added. The storage capacity is a point where if the external storage protocol comes into the picture, then the storage issue will be resolved.
I have been working with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for more than a year.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is quite stable. Once all firmware and drivers are in place with the signed firmware, the system barely goes down. It has high availability, 24/7 for 365 days, most of the time without any power failure, and even when running heavy workloads with either GPUs or storage, the system remains stable without issues.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is very much scalable, as I can connect one unit, two units, three units, or four units at the same time. The systems will be interconnected between each other on the same network, allowing me to run multiple workloads. For example, if I connect two systems, it will allow me 16 GPUs, and similarly for three or four units, multiplying the available GPUs, which is great for AI/ML workloads.
I do not often communicate with the technical support of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
Before using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I worked on HPE ProLiant servers, but they did not have GPUs.
Before choosing Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I worked for HPE but I did not work on the XE or GPU platform. Inside Dell, I have also worked on other platforms, but those also did not have GPUs; I worked on CPU and memory configurations with loaded network card platforms.
I participated in the initial setup of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, starting with CPU and memory placement followed by the required drives, network card, and cable connections. I powered on the server, placed all the firmware of the system, BIOS, FPGA, and other component firmware, followed by installing the OS and drivers, and this is the initial configuration for the system.
I have used official documentation and guides for some of the configurations, which are quite easy to understand, crisp to the point, and very understandable for both the customer and engineering team perspective.
I would rate Dell PowerEdge XE-Series around 8.5 or 9 based on my experience with it.
Dell PowerStore and Dell PowerEdge XE-Series are the only Dell tools that I have been working with within the last 12 months.
I am working on the BMC, specifically with Dell iDRAC BMC.

I deal mostly with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, specifically the XE-Series. My team uses Dell EMC OpenManage Enterprise with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers, but I have not used it much myself. We have a lot of workloads in-house with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers, and we have around 1,000 users running different applications, including desktop, web, and other workloads.
In Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers, the control is good, and they are very adaptable, affordable, and easy to learn. The initial setup for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is easy, and management is also easy, which is why the team prefers it. Maintainability is easy, and even when there are network issues, restoring it is easy for us.
There is a return on investment (ROI) with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, and that is why we were long starting with Dell.
What I found in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers is the disk reading; sometimes with heavy imagery, we find it to be slow. Some of our workloads utilize heavy imagery, which could be several terabytes or gigabytes in size, so when accessing imagery, we find disk read to be a bit slow.
I need to check with my team, but I recently noticed some compatibility issues with disk upgrades and RAM upgrades in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, and limitations were there. In the upcoming series, I hope to see flexibility in adding GPUs and similar features.
I would rate the stability of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers around nine.
I am not sure how important multi-vector cooling technologies are in maintaining performance; I may need to check with my team.
We do not have any specific tools for measuring the efficiency of NVIDIA GPUs in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, but it also depends on the tools using that imagery and the data from it. We have some applications utilizing them, so in case we find users mentioning slowness, we can address it.
For technical support, I would rate it about eight.
Positive
Before Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, I mostly worked with our PowerEdge servers, but previously we were using some old series and different servers from Dell.
The initial setup for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is easy, and management is also easy, which is why the team prefers it. Maintainability is easy, and even when there are network issues, restoring it is easy for us.
Generally, we complete the implementation of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series in two days.
We implemented it with our vendor; their support engineer assists us in the setup.
It typically depends on the procurement for how many people we need for the implementation; if we have two or three servers, maybe two or three people come to do it. Sometimes, it is only a new upgrade or something happening, and it depends upon the number of servers the support team deploys.
There is a return on investment (ROI) with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, and that is why we were long starting with Dell.
I would say we regularly see return on investment with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series around four years.
In my region, Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is popular, but I think HP also plays a decent market size. From what I heard, talking to other teams and organizations, I think HP is doing a bit more in marketing.
I think most of them are in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
What I found in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series servers is the disk reading; sometimes with heavy imagery, we find it to be slow. Some of our workloads utilize heavy imagery, which could be several terabytes or gigabytes in size, so when accessing imagery, we find disk read to be a bit slow.
I need to check with my team, but I recently noticed some compatibility issues with disk upgrades and RAM upgrades in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, and limitations were there. In the upcoming series, I hope to see flexibility in adding GPUs and similar features.
I would rate this review an overall eight out of ten.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series main use cases include cloud computing services. One concrete example is our GPU cloud service. Another main use case is HPC.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series best feature is iDRAC. Regarding iDRAC, you can flexibly manage power, and it has measurement and telemetry functions. Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has contributed positively to the development of our cloud services. As an outcome, many customers have used our cloud services.
I would like to see improvements in Dell PowerEdge XE-Series because there are many GPU malfunctions. There are many failures due to heat, so I think it would be good if that aspect were improved.
I have been using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for three years.
I don't think Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is very stable; there are many failures. I don't feel that unplanned downtime has decreased since introducing Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
I think the scalability of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is sufficient.
I think the support from the sales representatives and technical staff is appropriate. My experience with customer support for Dell PowerEdge XE-Series was fine. If I were to rate customer support on a scale of 1 to 10, I would give it a 9.
I was using other solutions previously.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has the same operability as other Dell PowerEdge series, so we had no particular difficulties with implementation.
I don't have any particular metrics or concrete results to share regarding ROI.
We didn't really consider whether TCO was higher or lower compared to competitors when we introduced Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
Before choosing Dell PowerEdge XE-Series, we considered NVIDIA DGX and HPE Cray, among others.
Even though we're a cloud provider and don't use it ourselves directly, many of our customers use Dell PowerEdge XE-Series and say it's very well received and easy to use.
I think the power consumption of the new Dell PowerEdge X-Series is average for the industry.
As a project manager, I'm not directly involved in management, but I do receive reports about Dell PowerEdge X-Series.
I haven't particularly felt that Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has improved my company's business or operational flexibility.
There's nothing in particular that indicates Dell PowerEdge XE-Series has had an impact on my company's sustainability goals.
I would rate this review a 7 overall.
The features of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series that I like the most are the performance and the GPU.
These features have benefited my organization; however, it is not within my organization, it is for the customer.
The benefits I have seen from running AI workloads on PowerEdge servers include high performance.
My impressions of Dell PowerEdge XE-Series' impact on my organization's sustainability goals include the possibility of having eight GPUs on the XE.
Dell PowerEdge XE-Series can be improved by adding features such as a big rack in the new XE.
I have been using Dell PowerEdge XE-Series for approximately three to four years.
I am uncertain if using PowerEdge servers has helped reduce unplanned production downtime.
I evaluate customer service and technical support as very good. Dell provides very good services.
I am uncertain if I was using any other solution prior to adopting Dell PowerEdge XE-Series to address similar needs.
Today, my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is difficult, but since one to two years ago, it has been very simple with Dell.
I do not have sufficient information to respond about whether I have seen ROI with Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
It is difficult to respond to whether using Dell PowerEdge servers has helped reduce my total cost of ownership, TCO, because it is for the customer and I do not have access to the cost and TCO data.
I am uncertain regarding the assessment of the new PowerEdge servers for energy consumption.
It is positive for all the reasons I considered before selecting Dell PowerEdge XE-Series.
On a scale of one to ten, I would rate Dell PowerEdge XE-Series a nine, because perfection does not exist, and my advice for organizations considering Dell PowerEdge XE-Series is to go for it. I give this product an overall rating of nine out of ten.