Beleaguered Dell quits smartphone business globally, dumps Android

“Dell is definitely pulling the plug on the smartphone business, globally” Jean-Baptiste Su reports for Forbes. “A tough decision, leaving a market that is expected to reach $150.3 billion in 2014, according to MarketsandMarkets.”

“Earlier this year, the Round Rock, Texas-based computer company stopped selling its mobile devices in the U.S. Although some could still be found in China where Dell hoped to continue,” Su reports. “But that’s all over now as well.”

Su reports, “So for Dell, it’s back to the future, I mean Microsoft with its latest tablet family, the XPS10, XPS12 and Latitude 10, all running Windows 8 or Windows RT.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Bloodbath. iPhone and iPad, killers. SIDAGTMBTTS.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Tayster” for the heads up.]

Related articles:
Beleaguered Dell discontinues all U.S. smartphone sales – March 29, 2012
More blood on Apple iPad’s touchscreen: Dell kills Streak 7, backs out of Android tablets in US – December 5, 2011
More blood on Apple iPad’s touchscreen: Dell’s Streak 5 tablet is dead – August 12, 2011
More blood on Apple iPod’s Click Wheel: Dell’s ‘DJ Ditty’ flash-based MP3 player is dead – August 22, 2006
More blood on Apple iPod’s Click Wheel: Dell dumps ‘DJ’ hard-drive MP3 player line – February 4, 2006

29 Comments

    1. Dell came up with the first phoblet (phone-tablet) the 5″ streak. I remember Walt Mossberg at the press release commenting on how stupid it looked to use it as a phone.

      Kinda funny when you think of it, samedung not only stole the interface from apple they copied the form factor from dell.

      The bright side is every time I see an apple hating geek walking around with a ~5″ phoblet held against the side of his head it make me chuckle.

    1. “Now if only Dell would dump the PC business.”

      It’s not up to Dell, it’s the PC business that is dumping Dell, just as the smartphone business dumped Dell, the tablet business dumped Dell and before that, the MP3 player business dumped Dell.

  1. The problem for Dell is that the brand equates to “cheap” and ” low quality.” No one wants to use a “Dell” phone. It’s the same problem Microsoft has with “Windows.” Most people do not want to use a phone (or tablet) that is “powered by Windows” or ” designed by Dell.”

  2. The point wasn’t android was only losing an insignificant amount of smartphone sales.
    It was that dell was switching tablets to windows. Which in the enterprise market it may gain some traction.

  3. Dell used to be industrial leader in build-to-order model in the mainly MSFT-PC world and it’s servers & related business are doing “well”. However, like HP, RIMM, Microsoft, Nokia…etc, Dell lacks the foresight to anticipate the explosive growth of mobile platforms and fail to innovate, it’s suffering from it’s own mistakes.

    With MSFT’s Windows 8 fails to gain significant traction in both consumer and business sectors, with Dell being one of the largest MSFT’s OEM partners, I doubt Dell’s long term survivability.

    my 2 cents…

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