The Dell Mini 5 Tablet
An article by PCMag.com
The Mini 5 is even more intriguing. It's a 5-inch, touchscreen Android tablet, with a wide screen, a slim body, and both HSDPA and WiFi connectivity. The Mini 5 has a 5-megapixel camera with LED flash on the back, and a smaller camera on the front. It supports multitouch and works with Android Market applications. While AT&T didn't announce support for the Mini 5, Dell said it would sell it both through carriers and directly at retail stores.
The Mini 5 also works as a phone—it has a microphone in it, but Dell expects most people to use a Bluetooth headset as it's rather awkward to hold up to your head.
While Dell talked a lot about customizing Android for their carrier partners, the Mini 5's version of Android didn't seem highly customized. There were definitely some new touches, such as popping the applications tray down from a menu button on the upper left hand corner of the screen. But the Mini 5 seemed to be running much more straight-up Android than, say, Dell's Chinese Mini 3i phone or the Lenovo Le Phone.
Dell execs couldn't quite articulate why someone would want a 5-inch tablet, except to say that it was a new product category with unforeseen uses. I definitely liked using it, but it's too large to fit in a pocket. It would definitely have to be an additional device, not replacing anything you already use.
Thode said that Mini 5 demand will flourish once wireless carriers stop charging high monthly fees for every device you want to put on its network. "Carrier business models are completely changing; you see this in Europe where you see prepaid data minutes everywhere. I wouldn't assume that you're going to be paying $60 per device very much longer," Thode said.
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