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Dell Streak AT&T Tablet Smartphone, the problems and review

I had to sell mine, massive problems. I had a Dell Streak US AT&T version and I used it for a couple weeks before losing patience with it and selling it.

To list some massive problems.

1-It was almost unusable as a Speakerphone as it crackled at high volume and often was totally garbled, on the other end callers stated I sounded like I was speaking with a paper in front of my mouth.

2-Music also crackled every so slightly on high. As if the speaker was blown or complete garbage quality. This phone was new.. not 9years old.

3-Battery life didn’t get past 4-5hours of use. Some online reviews state it gets better after 4-5 full charge cycles but I didn’t see that.

4-Also when receiving a call the screen flashes, so you had to catch the Answer button in between flashes. This was very irritating.

5-The phone becomes unresponsive sometimes after you’ve just placed a call.. So it doesn’t register your END CALL keypress.. so numerous times I ended up leaving whitespace voicemails on peoples machines since my Dell Streak wouldn’t register end call…. it eventually allows you but what the hell ???

6-The ear slit was so small it’s ridiculous, You have to perfectly place it over your ear or you’ll not hear anything, it is a fraction the size of an iPhone ear speaker slit and I can’t fathom why. The phone has a massive footprint. Also the ear slit edges are sharper than they should be, I could feel a cutting sensation on my ear whilst trying to find the perfect position over my ear.

7-Because you’re pressing the phone to your head so unnaturally the Streak registers your cheek as key presses and does cool stuff like mute your call etc.

8-The native Dell keyboard is extremely poorly designed, using a third party keyboard such as Swype or Swiftkey was the only way to make text input manageable on the Streak. I’ve a very large hand as I’m 6′2. I can’t imagine the reach difficulties those with smaller hands would face attempting to reach over the numeric keypad in landscape mode. Yes try reaching over all that way on the keyboard and not pressing the menu/function keys that run across the right of the phone while in landscape.

9-The proprietary docking cable drove me mad, especially since the device needed to charge so frequently. Why Dell couldn’t opt for a micro-usb along side with their 30pin I can’t understand. So anybody thinking of purchasing this better get extra charging cables for your car, office, bathroom, etc

10-It may be a limitation of Android 1.6 but not being able to copy text from a webpage is frustrating.

11-The phone is finished in a sort of material that isn’t exactly anti-slip or easy to hold onto. This wouldn’t matter if you could easily handle the phone, but again with larger than average hands I was constantly concerned it would slip out of my hand and fall to its end.

12-The volume keys aren’t in the same direction for music and for call volume if I recall correctly, this was another quirk.

13-There’s some issue with menu’s and screen prompts being too narrow. With a massive 5inch screen I again don’t understand why menu items are so slender resulting in frequent mis-presses or repeat presses. The menu across the top is prime example.

14-The speaker is on the back.. so go ahead, set down your 5inch Dell streak to watch a video.. oh wait.. the sound just became muffled and almost inaudible. Yes you better pick it up and hold it just right so not to cover the speaker. Same goes for the speakerphone, you better keep the phone elevated. Again, design flaw, there is tons of underutilized space across the top and bottom of the phone where speakers could have been placed.

There is likely some issues that I can’t recall at the moment, but on the plus side.

1- the phone itself in handset mode had good quality voice calls. ONLY in handset, as speaker was beyond rubbish.

2-reception was good. I was on Rogers 3G 850mHz and had no issues at all.

3-Android made the world of difference, allowing you to download third party apps and do things like connect over wifi to a internal network to copy media/music files directly over to the Dell Streaks memory card.

4-5inches of real estate were great. Made browsing very pleasant.

I realize Dell isn’t an experienced mobile phone manufacturer. Perhaps a wee bit more work into this product and they’d have brought to market a very decent device. Sadly the issues are likely far too great to simply overlook as quirks.

-Ravi Shanghavi, Ottawa

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It Will Never End: Mercedes-Benz reportedly working on nine-speed automatic

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According to Autocar, an admission by a Mercedes-Benz engineer proves that the company is working on a nine-speed automatic transmission. That isn't exactly new, since talk of such a beast has been broached before. The difference this time is that Autocar's sources says the gearbox will be "introduced on large-capacity engines."

With no numbers for context we can't be sure what's meant by "large-capacity." However, Motor Trend reported that the baby SLS would get a nine-speed double-clutch transmission for it's twin-turbo-V6-hybrid engine, and Automobile said that all of the next generation S-Classes, arriving in 2012, would "have hybrid powertrains and a new nine-speed automatic transmission."

We don't expect any of those engines to be of particularly large displacement, especially now that the SSK AMG appears to have gone from a twin-turbo V8 to a V6 twin turbo with electric assistance. Still, we have no doubt we'll see a nine-speed transmission somewhere. And when the Mercedes engineers opine that "nine ratios is the maximum that is technically possible, as well as being the most that customers will be able to cope with," we believe they're wrong. A company is really going to leave double-digit transmission bragging rights on the table? Uh, no. Can I get a ten-speed... anyone...?

[Source: Autocar]

It Will Never End: Mercedes-Benz reportedly working on nine-speed automatic originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 16:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Skobbler first totally free turn-by-turn navigation app for iPhone

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Skobbler has introduced a completely free, turn-by-turn navigation app for the iPhone, with one new and unusual detail: you help play the role of cartographer. Sort of like Linux for thoroughfares, you download the Skobbler app and then use CloudMade, a community-sourced mapping to add "hyperlocal" detail to the map, which Skrobbler then updates on its servers. The more information gets added by community mappers, the more detailed and up-to-date the instructions are available to the nav-app's users, with updates pushed to the program in real-time. We're unsure of how granular the details are in the current CloudMade maps, but the app is free and this could be your chance to be a pioneer.

[Source: Mac Daily News]

Skobbler first totally free turn-by-turn navigation app for iPhone originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 08:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Roewe 350: The first car to run on Android

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Google and the Chinese government are having a little row right now, but that hasn't stopped China's love for Google goods. The production lines for the Roewe 350 have started rolling out sedans, and the little four-door, designed as a sign of SAIC's automotive futur,e is certainly headed for hundreds of thousands of Chinese homes. In the process, it will employ Google's Android operating system, up until now only seen primarily on mobile phones and a handful of cheap PCs.

Android was developed from Linux, and is a highly customizable OS with a huge range of adaptability. In the Roewe 350, the Android interface running through the DVD system will give occupants web access and even online chatting, in addition to mundane things like real-time traffic. It's a neat choice to make, and with Android's app possibilities it might mean you could share information from car to car and skip the step of reading directions and other information from your phone. And if there's a virus... well, we won't worry about that just yet...

[Source: China Car Times]

Roewe 350: The first car to run on Android originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 17:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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