Hands on with the Dell Mini 3i smartphone
IDG News Service - The first Dell Mini 3i smartphone to go on sale anywhere in the world will be available in China this December for 4800 Chinese yuan (US$704) without a mobile phone contract, China Mobile representatives said Thursday.
The smartphone is one of the first Ophones in the world, a brand promoted by China Mobile to make sure consumers know it uses the Linux-based Open Mobile System (OMS) developed by the company. OMS is very similar to Android, the reason Dell will release the handset elsewhere with Google's popular mobile phone OS inside.
The Dell Mini 3i will not work on China Mobile's 3G network, which is based on China's home grown TD-SCDMA (Time-Division Synchronous Code Division Multiple Access) technology. The Dell handset currently operates on Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE networks, but a new TD-SCDMA version of the smartphone will launch in February in China, the China Mobile representatives said.
I had a chance to try out the Dell Mini 3i briefly in China Mobile's offices in Shenzhen.
The smartphone sports an attractive 3.5-inch touchscreen and was surprisingly thin and light. The device appears to be made of plastic, which is light and glossy, similar to that used in many netbooks today. One drawback of the handset's casing was that fingerprints mucked up the shine and it required constant wiping off.
The touchscreen functionality was smooth, but I could not get a stylus to work on it. The screen only responded to finger touch. It doesn't appear to come with a stylus, so I used one from my smartphone just to test it out.
I was not able to obtain a specification sheet for the smartphone, so could not closely check many additional features. It does, however, have a digital camera on the backside, which is reportedly 3-megapixels, and it has a flash beside the camera.
One of the Mini 3i's I played with was black, while the other was burgundy. The handsets had mini-USB ports and several buttons on the sides, including volume and power.



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Maximizing Smartphone Value: Standardize and Simplify
- In today's tough economic climate, no company can afford to let the opportunities mobility presents pass it by. For that reason, implementing a...
- Choosing an Enterprise-Class Wireless Operating System: A Comparison of Blackberry, iPhone, and Windows Mobile
- This whitepaper will explore some of the key criteria necessary in selecting, deploying and managing a mobile operating system.
- Embracing Employee-Acquired Smartphones without Compromising Security
- More and more users are using their own smartphones at work - and it's crucial that IT departments have a clearly defined strategy...
- Employee-Owned Smartphones: Seize the Opportunity
- It's no longer feasible for an IT department, regardless of company size, to ignore the smartphone push from the majority of the employee...
- Smart Policies for Personal-Liable Smartphones
- Prohibiting the use of personal smartphones on the corporate network is a best practice that addresses security concerns, and it's one that's widely... All Smartphones White Papers
- QNX® and BlackBerry® PlayBook™ Tablet.
- RIM's multi-processor, multi-tasking BlackBerry PlayBook runs a new Tablet OS powered by QNX, a bullet-proof microkernel operating system. This track will take a...
- A Close Look at Tablets
- Learn More
- BlackBerry® PlayBook™: Deployment Opportunities
- Many enterprise customers have already deployed the BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet and understand there are several options about how to do it. Find out...
- WorkFlow in the Enterprise
- Enhance productivity for your executives and give them access to common workflow requests that sometimes takes days to get their attention. Allow them...
- BlackBerry® PlayBook™ Security
- Learn More All Smartphones Webcasts