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Dell has a troubled history with portable consumer electronics. Over the years, the company has dipped in and out of various markets, including portable MP3 players, PDAs and now phones.
The Dell Venue cell phone is a keyboardless, Android-powered version of the Venue Pro, which runs Windows Phone 7. Sadly, there’s little to distinguish the Venue from devices made by more established handset firms, and without an AT&T or T-Mobile subsidy, it costs much more up-front than competing products.
Design and Call Quality
The Dell Venue measures 4.8 by 2.5 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs a hefty 5.8 ounces. It’s made mostly of plastic, with thick chrome accent bands on the sides, a soft touch bumper on top, and a textured plastic back panel. I’m not sure why it’s so heavy. The 4.1-inch, 480-by-800-pixel, Gorilla Glass AMOLED capacitive touch screen looked good, if not quite as sharp, next to the Super AMOLED screen of a Samsung Galaxy S 4G ($199, 4 stars) I had on hand. But the Venue’s screen is slightly curved, and not as nice to touch as the one on the Galaxy S. There are only three function keys at the bottom; the usual Search key on Android phones is MIA. Typing on the Venue’s on-screen QWERTY Swype keypad was easy given the large screen. Dialing numbers was also simple. Dell snazzed up the dial and connect screens without slowing them down, which was a plus.
The Dell Venue I tested was set up for AT&T; it’s a quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) and tri-band HSDPA 7.2 (850/1900/2100 MHz) device. Dell also sells a separate version optimized for T-Mobile, with that carrier’s 3G band. There’s also 802.11b/g Wi-Fi; it connected to my WPA2-encrypted network without issue. You can also use the Venue as a mobile 3G hotspot for up to five devices with the appropriate AT&T data plan. The Venue doesn’t support 4G HSPA+ networks, but it does support high-speed HSUPA uploads, which the “4G” Motorola Atrix ($199, 4 stars) and HTC Inspire 4G ($199, 4 stars) don’t. I got 2.4Mbps down and 914Kbps up with the Ookla speed test app, which is good for an HSPA 7.2 phone.
Voice quality was about average. There was plenty of gain in the earpiece, and voices sounded bright, albeit a bit computery sounding. I also heard some static, even though I live in an area with solid AT&T coverage. Callers on the other end said I sounded as good as I do on other AT&T handsets. Calls sounded okay, albeit with some background static, through an Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset ($99, 4 stars). Voice dialing worked well over Bluetooth. The speakerphone sounded okay but didn’t go loud enough to use outside. The 1400mAh battery lasted a solid 6 hours and 23 minutes of talk time.
Specifications
Service Provider
AT&T
Operating System
Android OS
Screen Size
4.1 inches
Screen Details
480-by-800-pixel, 16.7M color TFT LCD capacitive touch screen
Camera
Yes
Network
GSM, UMTS
Bands
850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100
High-Speed Data
GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA
Processor Speed
1 GHz
More
OS, Dell Stage, and Apps
The Dell Venue runs Android 2.2, also known as Froyo. Dell has customized the OS rather heavily with what it calls Stage, a series of card-like widgets that give you home screen access to frequently used apps. It lets you swipe between photos, videos, social networking, music, and Web sites without diving into the menu system. The widgets aren’t particularly customizable, though, and there’s no landscape mode on any of the home screen panels. Dell’s deft programming kept the UI moving at a good clip.
The Dell Venue cell phone is a keyboardless, Android-powered version of the Venue Pro, which runs Windows Phone 7. Sadly, there’s little to distinguish the Venue from devices made by more established handset firms, and without an AT&T or T-Mobile subsidy, it costs much more up-front than competing products.
Design and Call Quality
The Dell Venue measures 4.8 by 2.5 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs a hefty 5.8 ounces. It’s made mostly of plastic, with thick chrome accent bands on the sides, a soft touch bumper on top, and a textured plastic back panel. I’m not sure why it’s so heavy. The 4.1-inch, 480-by-800-pixel, Gorilla Glass AMOLED capacitive touch screen looked good, if not quite as sharp, next to the Super AMOLED screen of a Samsung Galaxy S 4G ($199, 4 stars) I had on hand. But the Venue’s screen is slightly curved, and not as nice to touch as the one on the Galaxy S. There are only three function keys at the bottom; the usual Search key on Android phones is MIA. Typing on the Venue’s on-screen QWERTY Swype keypad was easy given the large screen. Dialing numbers was also simple. Dell snazzed up the dial and connect screens without slowing them down, which was a plus.
The Dell Venue I tested was set up for AT&T; it’s a quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) and tri-band HSDPA 7.2 (850/1900/2100 MHz) device. Dell also sells a separate version optimized for T-Mobile, with that carrier’s 3G band. There’s also 802.11b/g Wi-Fi; it connected to my WPA2-encrypted network without issue. You can also use the Venue as a mobile 3G hotspot for up to five devices with the appropriate AT&T data plan. The Venue doesn’t support 4G HSPA+ networks, but it does support high-speed HSUPA uploads, which the “4G” Motorola Atrix ($199, 4 stars) and HTC Inspire 4G ($199, 4 stars) don’t. I got 2.4Mbps down and 914Kbps up with the Ookla speed test app, which is good for an HSPA 7.2 phone.
Voice quality was about average. There was plenty of gain in the earpiece, and voices sounded bright, albeit a bit computery sounding. I also heard some static, even though I live in an area with solid AT&T coverage. Callers on the other end said I sounded as good as I do on other AT&T handsets. Calls sounded okay, albeit with some background static, through an Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset ($99, 4 stars). Voice dialing worked well over Bluetooth. The speakerphone sounded okay but didn’t go loud enough to use outside. The 1400mAh battery lasted a solid 6 hours and 23 minutes of talk time.
Specifications
Service Provider
AT&T
Operating System
Android OS
Screen Size
4.1 inches
Screen Details
480-by-800-pixel, 16.7M color TFT LCD capacitive touch screen
Camera
Yes
Network
GSM, UMTS
Bands
850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100
High-Speed Data
GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA
Processor Speed
1 GHz
More
OS, Dell Stage, and Apps
The Dell Venue runs Android 2.2, also known as Froyo. Dell has customized the OS rather heavily with what it calls Stage, a series of card-like widgets that give you home screen access to frequently used apps. It lets you swipe between photos, videos, social networking, music, and Web sites without diving into the menu system. The widgets aren’t particularly customizable, though, and there’s no landscape mode on any of the home screen panels. Dell’s deft programming kept the UI moving at a good clip.
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