Dell Goes Small in Tablets as It Prepares iPad Competition

It’s like Groundhog Day for touch-screen PCs.

Yesterday’s device of tomorrow (see Bill Gates’s 2001 prediction that tablet PCs would outstrip laptops and of course the Apple Newton) is once again hot stuff, thanks to Apple’s (AAPL) iPad launch last month.

Now, other PC makers are hoping they can finally create a market for technology that’s been languishing for years.

But while Apple’s gotten the buzz, and H-P (HPQ) has gotten attention for its Windows-based Slate, which it previewed three weeks before the iPad, Dell (DELL) has taken a different approach.

The Texas PC giant has been showing its Mini 5–a much smaller touch-screen gadget than Apple’s or H-P’s–since early January. The device looks like a big iPhone and uses Google’s (GOOG) Android operating system. Dell says the Mini 5 will go on sale later this year. When that happens, it will end what John Thode, Dell’s vice president in charge of mobile devices, describes as a two-year process to figure out what people who’ve already got a smart phone and a laptop would be willing to buy.

Read the rest of this post on the original site


Must-Reads from other Web sites

Mitch Lasky

Should Venture Capital Fund Games Companies?

Jill Lepore

Privacy in an Age of Publicity

Chris Dannen

Guys, Who Isn’t Excited for a Facebook RSS Reader?

Rob Walker

15 Ways BuzzFeed Is Toying With Your Faith in Humanity

Nathaniel Mott

Fred Wilson on Twitter’s “Huge, Enormous” Mistake

About Voices

Along with original content and posts from across the Dow Jones network, this section of AllThingsD includes Must-Reads From Other Web Sites — pieces we’ve read, discussions we’ve followed, stuff we like. Six posts from external sites are included here each weekday, but we only run the headlines. We link to the original sites for the rest. These posts are explicitly labeled, so it’s clear that the content comes from other Web sites, and for clarity’s sake, all outside posts run against a pink background.

We also solicit original full-length posts and accept some unsolicited submissions.

Voices is edited by Beth Callaghan.

Partner Advertisement

VentureBeat